"The World of Mimi - Friendship Overland!"
THE ROYAL CITY - VELIKO TURNOVO
The
royal city of Veliko Turnovo, the capital of the Second Bulgarian
Kingdom (1187-1393) is situated on three hills -Tsarevets,
Trapezitsa and Sveta Gora. These are circled by the deep cutting
Yantra River above whose magnificent gorges sheer rocks rise into
the sky. Perched one above the other on the rocks the houses reach
right down to the riverbank.
Tsarevets
Hill is a natural inaccessible fortress where the royal
palace, the patriarchate and a multitude of small cross-domed
churches, were built .The fortress walls were up to 12m high and 3
m thick. The basic fortress elements determining its silhouette
have been restored today. The remaining archaeological finds are
displayed as originally discovered: the foundations of numerous
residential and administrative buildings that were part of the
royal court, churches and streets provide an image of the former
appearance of Turnovgrad's main fortress. A central place is
occupied by the ruins of the royal palace erected on three
terraces owing to the rocky terrain.
Baldwin's
Tower in the hill's south-eastern part, commemorating the victory
of the Bulgarian Tsar Kaloyan over the knights of the
Fourth
Crusade in 1205, was restored in 1930-1932.
The
so-called "Execution rock" from which traitors were
pushed into the river, rises high above the Yantra to the north.
The Holy Ascension patriarchal church has been re-erected on top
of the hill.
It
contains murals painted by contemporary Bulgarian artist Teofan
Sokerov, which reflect the historic and spiritual growth of the
Bulgarian nation.
Trapezitsa
Hill rises on the opposite bank of the Yantra River. Remains
of fortress walls, embrasures, towers and fortified gates have
been discovered here. The hill housed the residences of boyars and
some public buildings, churches above all.
The homes of the
urban population were located at the foot of the two hills,
outside the fortress walls and near the river. Several
mediaeval
churches dating from the time of the Second Bulgarian Kingdom
have been preserved in the Assenev quarter.
The
St. Dimiter of Salonika church has a sculptured and
picturesque exterior with brick decorations. Besides being the
city's oldest church, it is also one of the earliest examples of
the Turnovo School of architecture and painting. It was here that
the boyar brothers Assen and Peter declared the uprising for
Bulgaria's liberation from Byzantine domination in 1185. The
church has been reconstructed and the murals have been conserved.
The Holy 40 Martyrs church
was built in honour of Tsar Assen II who defeated the feudal lord
Teodor Komnin in 1230. The church preserved the oldest Biblical
calendar in the Eastern Orthodox world, along with the in-built
columns of Khan Omourtag and of
Tsar Ivan Assen II - two of the
few surviving written monuments of the Bulgarian mediaeval history.
The
Sts. Peter and Paul church, also with a spiking
brick-decorated facade, was built during the second half of the
13th century, and painted during the 14th, 16th and 17th
centuries. The murals depicting Biblical scenes carry the clear
mark of the Turnovo School of painting - one of the most
impressive ones in the Eastern Orthodox world, questing for the
portrait and psychological individuality of the figures.
From
the 12th to 14th c. Sveta
Gora Hill was the country's spiritual and cultural centre. The
Turnovo School of literature and painting gave the world
the Manassiev Chronicle and
the Tetraevangelia of Tsar Ivan Alexander.
Its traditions have a significant and lasting influence on the
whole of south-eastern Europe.
Besides being a mediaeval capital, Turnovo was also a
National Revival city. Its 18th-19th century houses seem to grow
right out of the steep slopes flanking the river and crowning them
with their gables and overhanging eaves. Gurko Street provides a fine example of an architectural
ensemble.
This
is where you will find the
Granny
Mota and Anna Harieva houses, as well as the large
Sarafkina House, whose salon runs across both floors (it now
houses the 19th Century Turnovo Lifestyle exhibition). Turnovo is
also the place of one of
the finest architectural achievements of the self-taught master
builder Kolyu Ficheto - the foremost representative of
Bulgarian National Revival monumental architecture and building.
He revived and ennobled mediaeval traditions with new elements,
conforming to the terrain and construction materials. His works
include the parish churches
the first of which - St.
Nikola - was begun by another master,
Ivan Davdada to be
precise, and completed by Kolyu Ficheto in
1836.
Followed
the churches Sts. Cyril and
Methodius (1860-1861), St. Spas (1862-1863), and
Sts. Constantine
and Helena (1872-1874), the latter being one of the most
impressive and representative Turnovo churches in whose monumental
structures elements of urban architecture are skillfully imbued.
Kolyu Ficheto also built the
Konak (1872), the former town hall of the Turkish
administration (now housing the National Revival and Constituent
Assembly exposition), the
House with the Monkey at Vustanicheska Street, as well as
Hadji Nikola (1858). The rooms on its two top floors where travelers
were accommodated, are linked by open verandas
galleries whose vaulted arches above the capitals are visible from
the opposite bank of the Yantra River (the building now
houses the
National Revival and Ethnography exhibition).
Brought
back to life in Turnovo are also the Samovodene Market Place with its attractive small workshops
where master goldsmiths, potters, carvers, weavers and pastry
cooks still pursue their crafts, and the old photo studio.
Veliko Turnovo is
more than just a beautiful city surrounded by magnificent scenery.
It is a city that is destined to survive.