Zlatograd
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Zlatograd Златоград |
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Zlatograd - Ethnological Complex
Zlatograd - Ethnological Complex
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Country | Bulgaria |
Province (Oblast) |
Smolyan |
Elevation | 521 m (1,709 ft) |
Population (December 2009)[1] | |
• City | 7,110 |
• Urban | 12,087 |
Time zone | EET (UTC+2) |
• Summer (DST) | EEST (UTC+3) |
Postal Code | 4980 |
Area code(s) | 03071 |
Zlatograd (Bulgarian: Златоград, literally Gold town) is a town in Smolyan Province, Southern-central Bulgaria. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous Zlatograd Municipality. As of December 2009, the town has a population of 7,110 inhabitants.[1]
Zlatograd is located in a valley between the eastern and central massif of the Rhodope mountains, 60 km away from the province centre - Smolyan. The Greek border lies just 5 km away from the town and on 15 January 2010 the cross-border Zlatograd - Thermes (Greece) road was inaugurated.
During the rule of the Ottoman Empire, the area was a township of the Ottoman Sanjak of Gümülcine in Adrianople Vilayet between 1867 and 1912 known as Darıdere. The town still retains its characteristic Ottoman-era architecture, with numerous old buildings as well as two 19th-century Orthodox churches and a mosque.
Description
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Climate: The municipality is included in the transient-Mediterranean climate region.
Mineral resources: lead-zinc ore;
Water resources:: The territory of the municipality is crossed by Varbitza river which is 98.1 km long and its catchment basin is 1202.8 km. Nedelinska and Kushlenska rivers are tributaries of Varbitza. There is a dam lake called "Zlatograd" with water capacity of 4,4.106 m . and a micro dam lake called "Hasidere" (0,4.106 m).
Soils: maroon forest leached (97.59 km²); brown forest-dark (12 km²); brown forest-transient (83.37 km²); brown forest light (117.59 km²); alluvial-delluvial (0.59 km²); humus-carbonate (11.07 km²);
Forest Fund: It covers an area of 144.60 km². The following species like beech, hornbeam, oak, birch and cornel-tree are mostly spread among the broad-leaved forests. Prevailing coniferous trees are spruce, fir-tree, white and black pine.
Environment: There is a tailings pond called "Erma Reka" which is 8 km away from the town of Zlatograd and 5 km away from the village of Erma Reka. The municipality is rich in underground resources. In the surroundings of Erma Reka there is a geothermal deposit of hot mineral water.
Labour force and unemployment: The rate of unemployment is 32.64%,[when?] which is the highest since 1990. The active population is 8,063 citizens of whom 50,97% are employed in the public sector and 49.03% in the private sector.
Agricultural Fund: It covers 25 km² and the arable land is 12 km². The cultures grown in the municipality are tobacco, potatoes, vegetables and strawberries (representatives of perennial plants).
Honour
Zlatograd Rock on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Zlatograd.
Gallery
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20100213 Zlatograd Bulgaria 1.jpg
Traditional architecture - Zlatograd.
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20100213 Zlatograd Bulgaria 3.jpg
River - old town - Zlatograd.
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20100213 Zlatograd Orthodox Church.jpg
Orthodox church "Saint George" - Zlatograd.
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20100214 Zlatograd Mosque.jpg
Mosque - Zlatograd.
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20100214 Zlatograd Ethnological Complex 1.jpg
Ethnological complex - Zlatograd.
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20100214 Zlatograd Ethnological Complex 3.jpg
Ethnological complex - Zlatograd.
References
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zlatograd. |
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External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Pages with reference errors
- Articles in need of cleanup
- Articles containing Bulgarian-language text
- Vague or ambiguous time from September 2014
- Commons category link is defined as the pagename
- Towns in Bulgaria
- Cities and towns in the Rhodopes
- Populated places in Smolyan Province
- 100 Tourist Sites of Bulgaria
- Bulgaria–Greece border crossings