Sofia
Sofia
София | |
---|---|
Nickname(s): Serdica, Sredetz (older names)[1] | |
Motto(s): Grows, but does not age[2] (Расте, но не старее, Raste, no ne staree) | |
Country | Bulgaria |
Province | Sofia City |
Settled (by Thracians) | 7000 years ago |
Government | |
• Mayor | Yordanka Fandakova (GERB) |
Area | |
• City | 492 km2 (190 sq mi) |
• Municipality/Province | 1,344 km2 (519 sq mi) |
Elevation | 500–800 m (1,707–2,888 ft) |
Population (31 December 2014)[3] | |
• City | 1,228,282 |
• Rank | 17% of national |
• Density | 2,496/km2 (6,460/sq mi) |
• Municipality/Province | 1,316,557 |
Time zone | UTC+2 (EET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+3 (EEST) |
Postal code | 1000 |
Area code | (+359) 02 |
Car plate prefix | С, СА, СВ |
Website | www.sofia.bg |
Sofia (/ˈsoʊfiə/) (Template:Lang-bg, Sofiya,[4][5]pronounced [ˈsɔfijɐ] ) is the capital and largest city of Bulgaria. Sofia is the 15th largest city in the European Union with population of more than 1.2 million people. The city is located at the foot of Vitosha Mountain in the western part of the country, within less than 50 kilometres (31 mi) drive from the Serbian border. Its location in the centre of the Balkan peninsula means that it is the midway between the Black Sea and the Adriatic Sea, whereas the Aegean Sea is the closest to it.[6][7]
Sofia has been an area of human habitation since at least 7000 BCE.[8] Many of the major universities, cultural institutions and commercial companies of Bulgaria are concentrated in Sofia.[9] Sofia is one of the top 10 best places for start-up bussiness in the world, especially in IT technologies.[10] Sofia is Europe's most affordable capital to visit as of 2013[update].[11]
Names
For the longest time the city possessed a Thracian name, derived from the tribe Serdi, who today are most often defined as a Thracian tribe,[4][6][13] whereas it is also speculated that the Serdi were Celts.[14] The Serdi and the name of emperor Marcus Ulpius Traianus (53 – 117 AD) prompted the Romans to give the city the combinative name of Ulpia Serdica;[15][16] Ulpia is derived from an Umbrian cognate of the Latin word lupus, meaning "wolf."[17] It seems that the first written mention of Serdica was made during his reign and the last mention was in the 19th century in a Bulgarian text (САРДАКІИ, Sardaki). During the Romans civitas Serdenisium was mentioned the "brightest city of the Serdi" in official inscriptions. The city was major throughout the past ever since Antiquity,[citation needed] when Roman emperor Constantine the Great referred to it as "my Rome", and it nearly became a capital of the Eastern Roman Empire.[13]
Other names given to Sofia, such as Serdonpolis(Σερδών πόλις, "City of the Serdi") and Triaditsa(Τριάδιτζα, "Trinity"), were mentioned by Byzantine Greek sources or coins. The Slavic name Sredets (СРѢДЄЦЪ), which is related to "middle" (среда, "sreda") and to the city's earliest name, first appeared on paper in an 11th-century text. The city was called Atralissa by the Arab traveler Idrisi and Strelisa, Stralitsa or Stralitsion by the Crusaders.[18]
The name Sofia comes from the Saint Sofia Church,[19] as opposed to the prevailing Slavic etymology among Bulgarian cities and towns. It is ultimately derived from the Egyptian Kemetic word sbÅ (𓋴𓃀𓄿𓇼𓇳), meaning "star, door, teaching and wisdom" and attested first in the 20th century BC in the tomb of Intef I.[20] [21][22][23] This was a tradition of collection of wise literature, shared between Mediterranean cultures, which was called sopʰia (σοφία) in Greek.[24] The earliest works where this latest name is registered are the duplicate of the Gospel of Serdica, in a dialog between two salesmen from Dubrovnik around 1359, in the 14th-century Vitosha Charter of Bulgarian tsar Ivan Shishman and in a Ragusan merchant's notes of 1376.[25] In these documents the city is called Sofia, but at the same time the region and the city's inhabitants are still called Sredecheski (срѣдечьскои, "of Sredets"), which continued until the 20th century. The city became somehow popular to the Ottomans by the name Sofya (صوفيا). In 1879 there was a dispute about what the name of the new Bulgarian capital should be, when the citizens created a committee of famous people, insisting for the Slavic name. Gradually, a compromise arose, officialisation of Sofia for the nationwide institutions, while legitimating the title Sredets for the administrative and church institutions, before the latter was abandoned through the years.[26]
The city's name is pronounced by Bulgarians with a stress on the 'o', in contrast with the tendency of foreigners to place the stress on 'i'. The female given name "Sofia" is pronounced by Bulgarians with a stress on the 'i'.
Geography
Sofia has an area of 492 km2, while Sofia City Province has an area of 1344 km2.[27] Sofia's development as a significant settlement owes much to its central position in the Balkans. It is situated in western Bulgaria, at the northern foot of the Vitosha mountain, in the Sofia Valley that is surrounded by the Balkan mountains to the north. The valley has an average altitude of 550 metres (1,800 ft). Unlike most European capitals, Sofia does not have any large rivers or bridges, but is surrounded by comparatively high mountains on all sides. Three mountain passes lead to the city, which have been key roads since antiquity, Vitosha being the watershed between Black and Aegean Seas. A number of low rivers cross the city, including the Vladayska and the Perlovska. The Iskar River in its upper course flows near eastern Sofia. The city is known for its 49 mineral and thermal springs. Artificial and dam lakes were built in the twentieth century. The 1818 Sofia earthquake was a 6,0-7,2 Medvedev–Sponheuer–Karnik Scale earthquake, the 1858 earthquake was an 6,6 same scale earthquake though reaching up to 10 in parts such as Boyana, this was followed by a 7-8 MSK Sofia earthquake in 1917 and finally by the 2012 Pernik earthquake which was a 5.6 Mw (or 5.8 ML)[28] magnitude earthquake. The 2014 Aegean Sea earthquake was also noticed in the city.
A problem of air pollution of Sofia is its location in the Sofia valley which is surrounded by mountains on the sides and this reduces the ability of the air to self-clean. The air is polluted mostly by particulate matters and nitrogen oxides.[29] Sofia is the capital with most polluted air in the EU.[30]
Climate
Sofia has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfb) with an average annual temperature of 10.6 °C (51.1 °F), using the coldest month being below 0 °C (32 °F) isotherm preferred by some meteorologists. Using the traditional −3 °C (27 °F) model Sofia is transitional between oceanic and humid subtropical climate, leaning towards a marine variety due to the cooler summer nights.
Winters are cold and snowy. In the coldest days temperatures can drop below −15 °C (5 °F), most notably in January. The lowest recorded temperature is −28.3 °C (−19 °F) (January 24, 1942).[31] Fog is not unusual, especially in the beginning of the season. On average, Sofia receives a total snowfall of 99 cm (39 in) and 60 days with snow cover.[32][33] The snowiest recorded winter was 1939/1940 with a total snowfall of 198 cm (78 in).[34] The record snow depth is 57 cm (22.4 in) (December 25, 2001).[35]
Summers are warm and sunny. In summer, the city generally remains slightly cooler than other parts of Bulgaria, due to its higher altitude. However, the city is also subjected to heat waves with high temperatures reaching or exceeding 35 °C (95 °F) in the hottest days, particularly in July and August. The highest recorded temperature is 41 °C (106 °F) (July 5, 2000 and July 24, 2007).[36][37] The hottest recorded summer was in 2012 with a daily average July temperature of 24.8 °C (76.6 °F).[38]
Springs and autumns in Sofia are relatively short with variable and dynamic weather.
The city receives an average precipitation of 581.8 mm (22.91 in) a year, reaching its peak in late spring and early summer when thunderstorms are not uncommon. The wettest recorded year was 2014 with a total precipitation of 1,066.6 mm (41.99 in).[39]
Climate data for Sofia (NIMH−BAS) 1981−2010 normals, extremes 1941−present | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °C (°F) | 19 (66) |
22 (72) |
27.5 (81.5) |
31 (88) |
34 (93) |
38 (100) |
41 (106) |
39.4 (102.9) |
36.1 (97.0) |
33.9 (93.0) |
25.5 (77.9) |
23 (73) |
41 (106) |
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) | 3.4 (38.1) |
5.6 (42.1) |
10.6 (51.1) |
16.2 (61.2) |
21.1 (70.0) |
24.7 (76.5) |
27.3 (81.1) |
27.5 (81.5) |
22.9 (73.2) |
17.1 (62.8) |
9.7 (49.5) |
4.3 (39.7) |
15.9 (60.6) |
Daily mean °C (°F) | −0.5 (31.1) |
1.1 (34.0) |
5.4 (41.7) |
10.6 (51.1) |
15.4 (59.7) |
18.9 (66.0) |
21.2 (70.2) |
21 (70) |
16.5 (61.7) |
11.3 (52.3) |
5.1 (41.2) |
0.7 (33.3) |
10.6 (51.1) |
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) | −3.9 (25.0) |
−2.9 (26.8) |
0.8 (33.4) |
5.4 (41.7) |
9.8 (49.6) |
13.2 (55.8) |
15.1 (59.2) |
14.9 (58.8) |
11 (52) |
6.6 (43.9) |
1.4 (34.5) |
−2.4 (27.7) |
5.8 (42.4) |
Record low °C (°F) | −28.3 (−18.9) |
−25 (−13) |
−16.1 (3.0) |
−6 (21) |
−2.2 (28.0) |
1.4 (34.5) |
2 (36) |
3.5 (38.3) |
−2 (28) |
−6 (21) |
−15.3 (4.5) |
−21.1 (−6.0) |
−28.3 (−18.9) |
Average precipitation mm (inches) | 33.2 (1.31) |
31.5 (1.24) |
38.1 (1.50) |
50.7 (2.00) |
67 (2.6) |
75.4 (2.97) |
52.6 (2.07) |
57.6 (2.27) |
45.7 (1.80) |
45 (1.8) |
43.3 (1.70) |
41.7 (1.64) |
581.8 (22.91) |
Average snowfall cm (inches) | 23.6 (9.3) |
19.3 (7.6) |
15.4 (6.1) |
3 (1.2) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
1.9 (0.7) |
10.8 (4.3) |
24.8 (9.8) |
98.8 (38.9) |
Average precipitation days | 9 | 10 | 10 | 12 | 13 | 12 | 10 | 9 | 7 | 11 | 10 | 12 | 125 |
Average snowy days | 7.2 | 6.3 | 5.8 | 1.4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0.8 | 3 | 7.2 | 31.7 |
Mean monthly sunshine hours | 87.8 | 114.3 | 159.6 | 182.2 | 229.6 | 257.7 | 302.1 | 288.3 | 220.1 | 163.6 | 105.5 | 66.1 | 2,177 |
Source 1: [40] | |||||||||||||
Source 2: precipitation days[41] and extremes[31][42][43][44][45] |
History
Prehistory and antiquity
Sofia has a history of nearly 7000 years and it is the second oldest city in Europe according to the city's official website and other sources, though the meaning of the claim is unclear as in the world there were hardly any cities at the time. In the context, certainly the neolithic village in Slatina, dating to the 5th-6th millennium BC, is described.[46][46][47][48][49][50] hence the motto of the city is "grows, but does not age". The city's earliest official mention was in the 7th century BCE.[48] Remains from another neolihic settlement around the National Art Gallery are traced to the 3rd-4th millennium BC, which has been the traditional center of the city ever since and is not changed today.[51] Sofia was originally a Thracian settlement populated by the tribe Serdi throughout the Bronze Age and the Antiquity. In the 8th century BCE, the tribe Serdi established a settlement[4][52] which prompted the city's earliest official mention in the 7th century BCE.[48] The findings lead to the conclusion that the area of the settlement was between TZUM, Sheraton Hotel and the Presidency.[51][53] In the 500s BC, the area became part of a Thracian tribal union, called the Odrysian kingdom, when another Thracian tribe appeared in the city, the Odrysses. For a short period the Thracian rule was possibly interrupted by the Achaemenid Empire and Macedonia.
Around BC 29, Serdica was conquered by the Romans, gradually becoming the most important Roman city of the region.[15][16] It became a municipium during the reign of Emperor Trajan (98–117). Serdica expanded, as turrets, protective walls, public baths, administrative and cult buildings, a civic basilica, an amphitheatre, a circus, the City Council (Boulé), a large forum, a big circus (theatre), etc. were built. Serdica was a significant midway city on the Roman road Via Militaris, connecting Singidunum and Byzantium. In the 3rd century, it became the capital of Dacia Aureliana,[54] and when Emperor Diocletian divided the province of Dacia Aureliana into Dacia Ripensis (at the banks of the Danube) and Dacia Mediterranea, Serdica became the capital of the latter.
Roman emperors Aurelian (215-275)[55] and Galerius (260-311)[56] were from Serdica. The city subsequently expanded for a century and a half, it became a significant political and economical centre, more so — it became one of the first Roman cities where Christianity was recognized as an official religion (under Galerius). The Edict of Toleration by Galerius was issued in 311 in Serdica by the Roman emperor Galerius, officially ending the Diocletianic persecution of Christianity. The Edict implicitly granted Christianity the status of "religio licita", a worship recognized and accepted by the Roman Empire. It was the first edict legalizing Christianity, preceding the Edict of Milan by two years. For Constantine the Great it was 'Sardica mea Roma est' (Serdica is my Rome). In 343 AD, the Council of Sardica was held in the city, in a church located where the current 6th century Church of Saint Sophia was later built.
The city was destroyed in the 447 invasion of the Huns.[57] It was rebuilt by Byzantine Emperor Justinian I. During the reign of Justinian it flourished, being surrounded with great fortress walls whose remnants can still be seen today.
Middle Ages, Renaissance and early modern history
The city first became part of the First Bulgarian Empire during the reign of Khan Krum in 809, after a long siege.[58] Afterwаrds, it grew into an important fortress and administrative centre when Khan Omurtag made it a center of Sredets province (Sredetski komitat, Средецки комитат). After the conquest of the Bulgarian capital Preslav by Sviatoslav I of Kiev and John I Tzimiskes' armies in 970-971, the Bulgarian Patriarch Damyan chose Sofia for his seat in the next year and the capital of Bulgaria was first moved to Sredets.[59] In the second half of 10th century the city was ruled by Komit Nikola and his sons, popular as "Komitopuli". One of them is Samuil, who became an Emperor of Bulgaria in 997. After a number of unsuccessful sieges, the city fell to the Byzantine Empire in 1018, but once again was incorporated into the restored Bulgarian Empire at the time of Tsar Ivan Asen I.
In 1382, Sofia was seized by the Ottoman Empire in the course of the Bulgarian-Ottoman Wars after a long siege. Around 1393 it became the seat of newly established Sanjak of Sofia.[60]
The city was occupied by Hungarian forces for a short time in 1443. After the failed crusade of Władysław III of Poland in 1443 towards Sofia, the city's Christian elite was annihilated and the city became the capital of the Ottoman province (beylerbeylik) of Rumelia for more than four centuries. In the 16th century, Sofia's urban layout and appearance began to exhibit a clear Ottoman style.
There were fountains, hamams (bathhouses), prominent churches such as Saint Sofia were converted into mosques and in total there were 11 big and over 100 small mosques by the 17th century,[61] of which only the Banya Bashi remains as a mosque today. During that time the town had a population of around 7,000.
The town was seized for several weeks by Bulgarian hajduks in 1599. In 1610 the Vatican established the See of Sofia for Catholics of Rumelia, which existed until 1715 when most Catholics had emigrated.[62] The town was the center of Sofia Eyalet (1826–1864). 4). Nedelya Petkova created the first Bulgarian school for women in the city. The Ottomans hanged in Sofia the most honored Bulgarian revolutionary of all time Levski in 1873.
Modern and contemporary history
During the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78, Suleiman Pasha was going to burn the city, unless the foreign councils Leandre Legay, Vito Positano, Rabbi Gabriel Almosnino and Josef Valdhart interceded for the salvation of the city. However this salvation did not apply to the Bulgarian citizens who faced executions.[63] Sofia was taken by Russian forces on January 4, 1878. It was proposed as a capital by Marin Drinov and was accepted as such on 3 April 1879. By the time of its liberation the population of the city was 11,649.[64] For a few decades after the liberation the city experienced large population growth mainly from other regions of the country. In 1900 the first electric bulb in the city was turned on.[65]
In the Second Balkan War Bulgaria was warring alone against five neighboring countries and the Romanian Army entered Vrazhdebna in 1913, then a village seven miles from Sofia, now a suburb,[66] which prompted Bulgaria to capitulate. In the following wars, Sofia was invaded by an at least nominally peaceful Soviet Red Army and was bombed by Allied US and UK aircraft in late 1943 and early 1944. Then 40,000 editions of books were destroyed along with the Capital Library and 12,656 more buildings, additionally over 2000 people died.
In 1925 a terrorist act of ultra-leftists failed their attempted assassination of the king but resulted in the destruction of a church and many victims. It took 20 years to 1945 when the communist Fatherland Front took power and executed several thousand people. The transformations of Bulgaria into the People's Republic of Bulgaria in 1946 and into the Republic of Bulgaria in 1990 marked significant changes in the city's appearance. The population of Sofia expanded rapidly due to migration from the country. Whole new residential areas were built in the outskirts of the city, like Druzhba, Mladost and Lyulin. The Georgi Dimitrov Mausoleum, where Dimitrov's body had been preserved in a similar way to the Lenin mausoleum, was detonated in 1999.
Cityscape
In Sofia there are 607,473 dwellings and 101,696 buildings. According to modern records 39,551 dwellings were constructed until 1949, 119,943 between 1950 and 1969, 287,191 between 1970 and 1989, 57,916 in the 90s and 102,623 between 2000 and 2011. Until 1949, 13,114 buildings were constructed and between 10,000-20,000 in each following decade.[67] Sofia's architecture combines a wide range of architectural styles, some of which are aesthetically incompatible. These vary from Christian Roman architecture and medieval Bulgar fortresses to Neoclassicism and prefabricated Socialist-era apartment blocks (panelki). A number of ancient Roman, Byzantine and medieval Bulgarian buildings are preserved in the centre of the city. These include the 4th century Rotunda of St. George, the walls of the Serdica fortress and the partially preserved Amphitheatre of Serdica.
After the Liberation War, knyaz Alexander Battenberg invited architects from Austria–Hungary to shape the new capital's architectural appearance.[68]
Among the architects invited to work in Bulgaria were Friedrich Grünanger, Adolf Václav Kolář, and Viktor Rumpelmayer, who designed the most important public buildings needed by the newly reestablished Bulgarian government, as well as numerous houses for the country's elite.[68] Later, many foreign-educated Bulgarian architects also contributed. The architecture of Sofia's centre is thus a combination of Neo-Baroque, Neo-Rococo, Neo-Renaissance and Neoclassicism, with the Vienna Secession also later playing an important part, but it is mostly typically Central European.
After World War II and the establishment of a Communist government in Bulgaria in 1944, the architectural style was substantially altered. Stalinist Gothic public buildings emerged in the centre, notably the spacious government complex around The Largo, Vasil Levski Stadium, the Cyril and Methodius National Library and others. As the city grew outwards, the then-new neighbourhoods were dominated by many concrete tower blocks, prefabricated panel apartment buildings and examples of Brutalist architecture. They still make Sofia's housing very high compared to post-Western block countries,
After the abolition of Communism in 1989, Sofia witnessed the construction of whole business districts and neighbourhoods, as well as modern skryscraper-like glass-fronted office buildings, but also top-class residential neighbourhoods. The 126-metre (413 ft) Capital Fort Business Center will be the first skyscraper in Bulgaria, with 36 floors. However, the end of the old administration and centrally planned system also paved the way for chaotic and unrestrained construction, which continues today.
-
The 3rd century St. George Rotunda(the oldest building) behind some remains of Serdica
-
Housing in Mladost, Stalinist architecture
-
Interior of the ancient Saint Sofia Church
-
Hotel Rodina, an example of Brutalist architecture
-
Neo-Gothic architecture in Sofia
-
Baroque architecture in Sofia
Green areas
The city has an extensive green belt. Some of the neighbourhoods constructed after 2000 which are densely built-up often lack green spaces. There are four principal parks – Borisova gradina in the city centre and the Southern, Western and Northern parks. Several smaller parks, among which the City Garden and the Doctors' Garden, are located in central Sofia. The Vitosha Nature Park (the oldest national park in the Balkans)[69] includes most of Vitosha mountain and covers an area of 266 square kilometres (103 sq mi),[70] with roughly half of it lying within the municipality of Sofia. Vitosha Mountain is a popular hiking destination due to its proximity and ease of access via car and public transport. Two functioning cable cars provide year long access from the outskirts of the city. The mountain offers favorable skiing conditions during the winter when multiple ski slopes of various difficulty are made available. Access to the ski slopes is regulated, they are maintained daily and health and safety personnel is available to assist in case of injury. Skiing passes typically allow unlimited access to the ski slopes, cable cars and other transport facilities. Skiing equipment can be rented and skiing lessons are available.
Government and law
Sofia as a capital is the location of all Bulgarian state authorities - executive, legislative, judiciary, the headquarters of all parties and the delegation of the European Commission. This includes the Parliament, the Presidency, the Council of Ministers and all the ministries, supreme courts and the Constitutional Court of Bulgaria.
Sofia Municipality is identical to Sofia City Province, which is distinct from Sofia Province, which surrounds but does not include the capital itself. Besides the city proper, the 24 districts of Sofia Municipality encompass three other towns and 34 villages.[71] Districts and settlements have their own governor who is elected in a popular election. The assembly members are chosen every four years. The common head of Sofia Municipality and all the 38 settlements is the mayor of Sofia.[71] The current mayor Yordanka Fandakova is serving a third consecutive term, having won the 2015 election at first round with 238,500 votes,[72] or 60.2% of the vote, when Reformist Bloc opponent Vili Lilkov was second with 9.6%; the turnout was 41.25%.[73] Some party leaders claimed that ballots were falsified and called for annulment of the election.[74] A precedent happened, due to the suspicion, as a preventative action between 300 and 5000 people and counters had been locked inside Arena Armeets against their will for two days,[75] following which the director of the Electoral Commission of Sofia resigned at the request of Prime Minister Boyko Borissov.[76]
The number one problem that mayor Yordanka Fandakova acknowledges and is working on is the street dogs in Sofia.[77] Although according to officials Sofia hosts 6600 street dogs currently, unofficially there at between 35,000 and 70,000 stray dogs.[78] They have become part of urban life in Sofia, but the problem spotted into light after a pack mauled a prominent Columbia University professor to death in 2012, who was the president of the Wall Street Investemnt Bank and worked for the US Department of State, the United Nations and the World Bank.[79]
# | Area | km2 | Pop. | Extent | Mayor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Sredets | 3 | 32.423 | City | RB |
2 | Krasno selo | 7 | 83.552 | City | RB |
3 | Vazrazhdane | 3 | 37.303 | City | GERB |
4 | Oborishte | 3 | 31.060 | City | RB |
5 | Serdika | 18 | 46.949 | City | GERB |
6 | Poduyane | 11 | 76.672 | City | GERB |
7 | Slatina | 13 | 66.702 | City | GERB |
8 | Izgrev | 5 | 30.896 | City | GERB |
9 | Lozenets | 9 | 53.080 | City | GERB |
10 | Triaditsa | 10 | 63.451 | City | GERB |
11 | Krasna polyana | 9 | 58.234 | City | GERB |
12 | Ilinden | 3 | 33.236 | City | GERB |
13 | Nadezhda | 19 | 67.905 | City | GERB |
14 | Iskar | 26 | 63.248 | City/satellites | GERB |
15 | Mladost | 17 | 102.899 | City | GERB |
16 | Studentski | 9 | 71.961 | City | GERB |
17 | Vitosha | 123 | 61.467 | City/satellites | RB |
18 | Ovcha kupel | 42 | 54.320 | City/satellites | GERB |
19 | Lyulin | 22 | 114.910 | City | GERB |
20 | Vrabnitsa | 44 | 47.969 | City/satellites | GERB |
21 | Novi Iskar | 220 | 28.991 | Satellites | GERB |
22 | Kremikovtsi | 256 | 23.641 | City/satellites | RB |
23 | Pancharevo | 407 | 28.586 | Satellites | GERB |
24 | Bankya | 53 | 12.136 | Satellites | GERB |
TOTAL | 1342 | 1.291.591 | [9][10][11][12] |
Crime
As of 2013[update], even though local sources reported Sofia had some of the lowest crime rates among European cities,[80] crime rates had inflated,[81] where authorities had difficulties convicting the authors of mafia killings that occurred in the first decade of the 21st century,[82] causing the European Commission to warn the Bulgarian government that the country would not be able to join the EU by 2007 unless it curbed crime.[83] According to the director of Sofia District Police Directorate the largest share of the crimes are thefts, making up 62.4% of all crimes in the capital city. Increasing are frauds, drug-related crimes, petty theft and vandalism.[84] Crime rates were considered high, with organized crime being considered the most worrying aspect.[85] According to a survey, almost a third of Sofia's residents say that they never feel safe in the Bulgarian capital, while 20% always feel safe.[86] As of 2015[update] the consumer-reported perceived crime risk on the Numbeo database was "high" for theft and vandalism and "low" for violent crimes; safety while walking during daylight was rated "very high", and "moderate" during the night.[87] With 1,600 prisoners the incarceration rate is above 0.1%;[88] however, roughly 70% of all prisoners are part of the Romani minority.[89]
Culture
Arts and entertainment
Sofia concentrates the majority of Bulgaria's leading performing arts troupes. Theatre is by far the most popular form of performing art, and theatrical venues are among the most visited, second only to cinemas. The oldest such institution is the Ivan Vazov National Theatre, which performs mainly classical plays and is situated in the very centre of the city.
The National Opera and Ballet of Bulgaria is a combined opera and ballet collective, established in 1891. However, it did not begin performances on a regular basis until 1909. Some of Bulgaria's most famous operatic singers, such as Nicolai Ghiaurov and Ghena Dimitrova, have made their first appearances on the stage of the National Opera and Ballet. The National Palace of Culture regularly hold classical concerts. Bulgaria's largest art museums are located in the central areas of the city. The National Art Gallery holds a collection of works mostly by Bulgarian authors, while the National Gallery for Foreign Art displays exclusively foreign art, mostly from India, Africa, China and Europe. Its collections encompass diverse cultural items such as Ashanti Empire sculptures, Buddhist art, Dutch Golden Age painting, works by Albrecht Dürer, Jean-Baptiste Greuze and Auguste Rodin, among others. The crypt of the Alexander Nevsky cathedral holds a collection of Eastern Orthodox icons from the 9th to the 19th century. Other museums are the National Historical Museum with a collection of more than 600,000 items; the National Polytechnical Museum with more than 1,000 technological items on display; the National Archaeological Museum and the Museum of Natural History. The SS. Cyril and Methodius National Library houses the largest national collection of books and documents (1,714,211 books and some 6 million other documents)[90] and is Bulgaria's oldest cultural institute. The Boyana Church, a UNESCO World Heritage site, contains realistic frescoes, depicting more than 240 human images and a total 89 scenes, were painted. With their vital, humanistic realism they are a Renaissance phenomenon at its culmination phase in the context of the common-European art.[91]
Cinema is the most popular form of entertainment. In recent years, cinematic venues have been concentrating in trade centres and malls, and independent halls have been closed. Mall of Sofia holds one of the largest IMAX cinemas in Europe. Most films are American productions, although European and domestic films are increasingly shown. Odeon (not part of the Odeon Cinemas chain) shows exclusively European and independent American films, as well as 20th century classics. Bulgaria's once thriving film industry, concentrated in the Boyana Film studios, has suffered a period of decay after 1990. A relative revival of the industry began after 2001. After the acquisition of Boyana Film by Nu Image, several moderately successful productions have been shot in and around Sofia, such as The Contract, The Black Dahlia, Hitman and Conan the Barbarian and Spartacus. The Nu Boyana Film studios have also hosted some of the scenes for The Expendables 2.
The city houses many cultural institutes such as the Russian Cultural Institute, the Polish Cultural Institute, the Hungarian Institute, the Czech and the Slovak Cultural Institutes, the Italian Cultural Institute, the French Cultural Institute, Goethe Institut, British Council, Instituto Cervantes, and the Open Society Institute, which regularly organise temporary expositions of visual, sound and literary works by artists from their respective countries.
Some of the biggest telecommunications companies, TV and radio stations, newspapers, magazines, and web portals are based in Sofia, including the Bulgarian National Television, bTV and Nova TV. Top-circulation newspapers include 24 Chasa and Trud.
Tourism
Sofia is one of the most visited tourist destinations in Bulgaria alongside coastal and mountain resorts. Among its highlights is the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, one of the symbols of Bulgaria, constructed in the late 19th century. It occupies an area of 3,170 square metres (34,100 sq ft) and can hold 10,000 people.
Sofia holds Bulgaria's largest museum collections, which attract tourists and students for practical studies. The National Historical Museum in Boyana district has a vast collection of more than 650,000 historical items dating from Prehistory to the modern era, although only 10,000 of them are permanently displayed due to the lack of space.[92] Smaller collections of items related mostly to the history of Sofia are in the National Archaeological Museum, a former mosque located between the edifices of the National Bank and the Presidency. Two natural sciences museums — the Natural History Museum and the Earth and Man — display minerals, animal species (alive and taxidermic) and rare materials. The Ethnographic Museum and the National Museum of Military History are other places of interest, holding large collections of Bulgarian folk costumes and armaments, respectively.
Vitosha Boulevard, also called Vitoshka, is a pedestrian zone with numerous cafes, restaurants, fashion boutiques, and luxury goods stores. Sofia's geographic location, in the foothills of the weekend retreat Vitosha mountain, further adds to the city's specific atmosphere.
Sports
A large number of sports clubs are based in the city. During the Communist era most sports clubs concentrated on all-round sporting development, therefore CSKA, Levski, Lokomotiv and Slavia are dominant not only in football, but in many other team sports as well. Basketball and volleyball also have strong traditions in Sofia. A notable local basketball team is twice European Champions Cup finalist Lukoil Akademik. The Bulgarian Volleyball Federation is the world's second-oldest, and it was an exhibition tournament organised by the BVF in Sofia that convinced the International Olympic Committee to include volleyball as an olympic sport in 1957.[93] Tennis is increasingly popular in the city. Currently there are some ten[94] tennis court complexes within the city including the one founded by former WTA top-ten athlete Magdalena Maleeva.[95]
Sofia applied to host the Winter Olympic Games in 1992 and in 1994, coming 2nd and 3rd respectively. The city was also an applicant for the 2014 Winter Olympics, but was not selected as candidate. In addition, Sofia hosted Eurobasket 1957 and the 1961 and 1977 Summer Universiades, as well as the 1983 and 1989 winter editions. In 2012, it hosted the FIVB World League finals.
The city is home to a number of large sports venues, including the 43,000-seat Vasil Levski National Stadium which hosts international football matches, as well as the Georgi Asparuhov Stadium and Lokomotiv Stadium, the main venues for outdoor musical concerts. Armeets Arena holds many indoor events and has a capacity of up to 19,000 people depending on its use. The venue was inaugurated on July 30, 2011, and the first event it hosted was a friendly volleyball match between Bulgaria and Serbia. There are two ice skating complexes — the Winter Sports Palace with a capacity of 4,600 and the Slavia Winter Stadium with a capacity of 2,000, both containing two rinks each.[96] A velodrome with 5,000 seats in the city's central park is currently undergoing renovation.[97] There are also various other sports complexes in the city which belong to institutions other than football clubs, such as those of the National Sports Academy, the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, or those of different universities. There are more than fifteen swimming complexes in the city, most of them outdoor.[98] Nearly all of these were constructed as competition venues and therefore have seating facilities for several hundred people.
There are two golf courses just to the east of Sofia — in Elin Pelin (St Sofia club) and in Ihtiman (Air Sofia club), and a horseriding club (St George club).
Demographics
Population growth over the years (in thousands):
According to 2015 data, the city has a population of 1,228,282 and the whole Sofia Capital Municipality of 1,316,557.[3] The first census carried out in February 1878 by the Russian Army recorded a population of 11,694 inhabitants including 6,560 Bulgarians, 3,538 Jews, 839 Turks and 737 Romani.
The ratio of women per 1,000 men was 1,102. The birth rate per 1000 people was 12.3 per mille and steadily increasing in the last 5 years, the death rate reaching 12.1 per mille and decreasing. The natural growth rate during 2009 was 0.2 per mille, the first positive growth rate in nearly 20 years. The considerable immigration to the capital from poorer regions of the country, as well as urbanisation, are among the other reasons for the increase in Sofia's population. The infant mortality rate was 5.6 per 1,000, down from 18.9 in 1980. According to the 2011 census, people aged 20–24 years are the most numerous group, numbering 133,170 individuals and accounting for 11% of the total 1,202,761 people. The median age is 38 though. According to the census, 1,056,738 citizens (87.9%) are recorded as ethnic Bulgarians, 17,550 (1.5%) as Romani, 6,149 (0.5%) as Turks, 9,569 (0.8%) belonged to other ethnic groups, 6,993 (0.6%) do not self-identify and 105,762 (8.8%) remained with undeclared affiliation.[99] This statistic should not necessarily be taken at face value due to conflicting data – such as for the predominantly Roma neighbourhood of Fakulteta, which alone may have a population of 45,000.[100]
According to the 2011 census, throughout the whole municipality some 892,511 people (69.1%) are recorded as Eastern Orthodox Christians, 10,256 (0.8%) as Protestant, 6,767 (0.5%) as Muslim, 5,572 (0.4%) as Roman Catholic, 4,010 (0.3%) belonged to other faith and 372,475 (28.8%) declared themselves irreligious or did not mention any faith. The data says that roughly a third of the total population have already earned a university degree. Of the population aged 15–64 - 265,248 people within the municipality (28.5%) are not economically active, the unemployed being another group of 55,553 people (6%), a large share of whom have completed higher education. The largest group are occupied in trading, followed by those in manufacturing industry. Within the municipality, three quarters, or 965,328 people are recorded as having access to television at home and 836,435 (64.8%) as having internet. Out of 464,865 homes - 432,847 have connection to the communal sanitary sewer, while 2,732 do not have any. Of these 864 do not have any water supply and 688 have other than communal. Over 99.6% of males and females aged over 9 are recorded as literate. The largest group of the population aged over 20 are recorded to live within marriage (46.3%), another 43.8% are recorded as single and another 9.9% as having other type of coexistence/partnership, whereas not married in total are a majority and among people aged up to 40 and over 70. The people with juridical status divorced or widowed are either part of the factual singles or those having another type of partnership, each of the two constitutes by around 10% of the population aged over 20. Only over 1% of the juridically married do not de facto live within marriage. The families that consist of two people are 46.8%, another 34.2% of the families are made up by three people, whereas most of the households (36.5%) consist of only one person.[67]
Sofia was declared the national capital in 1879. One year later, in 1880, it was the fifth-largest city in the country after Plovdiv, Varna, Ruse and Shumen. Plovdiv remained the most populous Bulgarian town until 1892 when Sofia took the lead. The city is the hot spot of internal migration, the capital population is increasing and is around 17% of the national,[101] thus a small number of people with local roots remain today, they dominate the surrounding rural suburbs and are called Shopi. Shopi speak one of the transitional South Slavic dialects, along with Torlakian, sharing features with both eastern (Bulgarian and Macedonian) and western (Serbo-Croatian) branches,[102] although they are given non-Slavic origin through the ancient Thracian Serdi, the founders of the city.[103]
Economy
Sofia is the economic heart of Bulgaria and home to most major Bulgarian and international companies operating in the country, as well as the Bulgarian National Bank and the Bulgarian Stock Exchange. The city and its surrounding Yugozapaden NUTS II planning region have a PPS GDP of €18,400,[104] which makes it the most developed region in the country. In 2008, the average per capita annual income was 4,572 leva ($3,479).[105] For the same year, the strongest sectors of the city's economy in terms of annual production were manufacturing ($5.5 bln.), metallurgy ($1.84 bln.), electricity, gas and water supply ($1.6 bln.) and food and beverages ($778 mln.).[106] Economic output in 2011 amounted to 15.9 billion leva, or $11.04 billion.[107] The average monthly wages paid amount to EUR 550, possibly excluding taxes, the highest in Bulgaria and the lowest among EU capitals.[108]
After World War II and the era of industrialisation under socialism, the city and its surrounding areas expanded rapidly and became the most heavily industrialised region of the country.[109] The influx of workers from other parts of the country became so intense that a restriction policy was imposed, and residing in the capital was only possible after obtaining Sofianite citizenship.[109] However, after the political changes in 1989, this kind of citizenship was removed.
Increasingly, Sofia is becoming an outsourcing destination for multinational companies, among them IBM, Hewlett-Packard, SAP, Siemens, Software AG.[110] Bulgaria Air, PPD, the national airline of Bulgaria, has its head office on the grounds of Sofia Airport.[111] From 2007 to 2011, the city attracted a cumulative total of $11,6 billion in foreign direct investment.[107]
Up until 2007 Sofia experienced rapid economic growth. In 2008, apartment prices increased dramatically, with a growth rate of 30%.[112] In 2009, prices fell by 26%.[113]
In January 2015 Sofia was ranked 30th out of 300 global cities in terms of combined growth in employment and real gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in 2013-2014. This was the highest rank amongst cities in Southeast Europe.[114] The real GDP (PPP) per capita growth was 2.5% to $33,105 (28,456 euro) and the employment went up by 3.4% to 962,400 in 2013-2014.[115]
Transport and infrastructure
With its developing infrastructure and strategic location, Sofia is a major hub for international railway and automobile transport. Three of the ten Pan-European Transport Corridors cross the city: IV, VIII and X.[116] All major types of transport (except water) are represented in the city. The Central Railway Station is the primary hub for domestic and international rail transport. Sofia has 186 kilometres of railway lines.[107] Sofia Airport handled 3,815,158 passengers in 2014.[117]
Public transport is well-developed with bus (2,380 km (1,479 mi) network),[118] tram (308 km (191 mi)) network,[119] and trolleybus (193 km (120 mi) network),[120] lines running in all areas of the city,[121][122] although some of the vehicles are in a poor condition. The Sofia Metro became operational in 1998, and now has two lines and 34 stations.[123] As of 2012, the system has 39 km (24 mi) of track. Six new stations were opened in 2009, two more in April 2012, and eleven more in August 2012. Construction works on the extension of the first line are underway and it is expected to reach the airport by 2014. A third line is currently in the late stages of planning and it is expected that its construction starts in 2014. This line will complete the proposed subway system of three lines with about 65 km (40 mi) of lines.[124] The master plan for the Sofia Metro includes three lines with a total of 63 stations.[125] In recent years the marshrutka, a private passenger van, began serving fixed routes and proved an efficient and popular means of transport by being faster than public transport but cheaper than taxis. As of 2005 these vans numbered 368 and serviced 48 lines around the city and suburbs.[116] There are around 13,000 taxi cabs operating in the city.[126] Low fares in comparison with other European countries, make taxis affordable and popular among a big part of the city population.
Private automobile ownership has grown rapidly in the 1990s; more than 1,000,000 cars were registered in Sofia after 2002. The city has the 4th-highest number of automobiles per capita in the European Union at 546.4 vehicles per 1,000 people.[127] The municipality was known for minor and cosmetic repairs and many streets are in a poor condition. This is noticeably changing in the past years. There are different boulevards and streets in the city with a higher amount of traffic than others. These include Tsarigradsko shose, Cherni Vrah, Bulgaria, Slivnitsa and Todor Aleksandrov boulevards, as well as the city's ring road, where long chains of cars are formed at peak hours and traffic jams occur regularly.[128] Consequently, traffic and air pollution problems have become more severe and receive regular criticism in local media. The extension of the underground system is hoped to alleviate the city's immense traffic problems.
Sofia has an extensive district heating system based around four combined heat and power (CHP) plants and boiler stations. Virtually the entire city (900,000 households and 5,900 companies) is centrally heated, using residual heat from electricity generation (3,000 MW) and gas- and oil-fired heating furnaces; total heat capacity is 4,640 MW. The heat distribution piping network is 900 km (559 mi) long and comprises 14,000 substations and 10,000 heated buildings.
Education
Sofia concentrates a significant portion of the national higher education capacity, including 109,000 university and college students[129] and 22 of Bulgaria's 51 higher education establishments.[130] These include four of the five highest-ranking national universities - Sofia University (SU), University of Architecture, Civil Engineering and Geodesy, the Technical University of Sofia, University of National and World Economy and the University of Mining and Geology.[131] Sofia University was founded in 1888.[132] More than 20,000 students[133] study in its 16 faculties.[134] A number of research and cultural departments operate within SU, including its own publishing house, botanical gardens,[135] a space research centre, a quantum electronics department,[136] and a Confucius Institute[137] Rakovski Defence and Staff College, the National Academy of Arts, and Sofia Medical University are other major higher education establishments in the city.[131]
There are 5 primary, 77 middle and 187 secondary schools, of all 77 are private. Education institutions include 13 specialized for children with disabilities, 8 art schools, 22 professional colleges. 35 professional high schools, 25 profiled high schools and 4 sport schools.[138] The "elite" secondary language schools provide education in a selected foreign language. These include the First English Language School, Sofia High School of Mathematics, 91st German Language School, 164th Spanish Language School, and 9th French Language School. Some of them provide a language certificate upon graduation, while the 9th French Language School has exchange programs with a number of lycées in France and Switzerland, such as the Parisian Collège-lycée Jacques-Decour. The American College of Sofia, a private secondary school which developed from a school founded by American missionaries in 1860, is among the oldest American educational institutions outside of the US.[139]
Other institutions of national significance, such as the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (BAS) and the SS. Cyril and Methodius National Library are located in Sofia. BAS is the centrepiece of scientific research in Bulgaria, employing more than 4,500 scientists in various institutes, including the Bulgarian Space Agency.
International relations
Twin and sister cities
This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2015) |
Sofia is twinned with:[citation needed]
- Algiers, Algeria[citation needed]
- Amman, Jordan[citation needed]
- Ankara, Turkey[140]
- Bratislava, Slovakia[141]
- Bucharest, Romania[citation needed]
- Karlovac, Croatia[citation needed]
- Kiev, Ukraine[citation needed]
- Maraş, Turkey[citation needed]
- Madrid, Spain[citation needed]
- Moscow, Russia[citation needed]
- Pittsburgh, USA[citation needed]
- Prague, Czech Republic[142]
- Saint Petersburg, Russia[citation needed]
- Salalah, Oman (since 2011)[citation needed]
- Shanghai, China (since 2014)[143]
- Sidon, Lebanon[citation needed]
- Skopje, Macedonia (since 2015)[144]
- Tel Aviv, Israel[145]
- Tirana, Albania[146][147]
- Warsaw, Poland[citation needed]
- Yerevan, Armenia[148]
Cooperation agreements
In addition Sofia has cooperation agreements with:
Honour
Serdica Peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Serdica.
Gallery
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Satellite image of Sofia
-
Aerial view
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Sunset behind Vitosha
-
Twilight
-
Red moon
-
Lightning storms
-
Tram in snowy Sofia, 1995
-
A faculty of Sofia University
-
The rebuilt Saint Nedelya Church
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The detonated Georgi Dimitrov Mausoleum
-
Artifacts from Serdica
-
Serdica Fortress, the walls of the ancient city
-
Remains from the settlement in Slatina dating to 6000- 5500 BC
See also
References
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- ^ a b Population and Demographic Processes in 2014 (Final data), National Statistical Institute of Bulgaria 2015
- ^ a b c Editors of Britannica. "Sofia". Britannica.
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- ^ Clark, Jayne. "Is Europe's most affordable capital worth the trip?". USA Today.
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Санџак Софија Овај је санџак основан око г. 1393.
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- ^ This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Sardica". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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Статистиките показват, че към 2013 г. София е сред европейските столици с най- ниски нива на престъпност
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- ^ "Shanghai, Sofia sign intent agreement to become sister cities". Retrieved 27 January 2015.
- ^ Macedonia's Skopje, Bulgaria's Sofia to Become Sister Cities. Novinite 2015
- ^ "Tel Aviv sister cities" (in Hebrew). Tel Aviv-Yafo Municipality. Retrieved 1 July 2009.
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Further reading
- Gigova, Irina (March 2011). "The City and the Nation: Sofia's Trajectory from Glory to Rubble in WWII". Journal of Urban History (Vol. 37 Issue 2): pp 155–175.
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has extra text (help)The 110 footnotes provide a guide to the literature on the city - "Sofia in Figures 2009" (PDF). Regional Statistical Office of Sofia. 2009.
- "Sofia — 130 Years Capital" (in Bulgarian).