"The World of Mimi - Friendship Overland!"
KOTEL - THE PRIVILEGED SOLDIERS VILLAGE
The
town of Kotel is situated in a small valley in one of the passes
of the Balkan Range linking North and South Bulgaria. This is also
why its statute during Ottoman domination was that of a
"privileged soldiers village", exempt from state taxes.
This enabled its inhabitants to acquire wealth as merchants and
craftsmen, and to feel spiritually and politically free to a large
extent. In 1765 Paissii of Hilendar, the author of the first
Bulgarian history - Slaviano-Bulgarian History - gave the
manuscript to Kotel clergyman Priest Stoiko, the future bishop
Sophronius of Vratsa, who was responsible for the History's first
copy. Kotel's inhabitants were also the first to mark the Day of
the Founders of the Slavianian Script, the brothers Cyril and
Methodius, on May 24, 1860 - an official holiday today.
In
the 19th century Kotel already boasted four secular schools. The
school
in the Galata quarter is now a Museum of the Bulgarian National Revival. A large part of the
exhibition is dedicated to local Georgi Stoikov Rakovski - one of
the outstanding ideologues and figures of the Bulgarian national
liberation movement.
Kotel's National
Revival period houses are of the "wooden type" seen
frequently in the Eastern Balkan Range. The only difference was
that in Kotel they were higher - up to 3-4 stories, the ground
floors housing shops and workshops, rather than the usual
household premises. The originally open verandas is lost in later
times, making the houses akin to closed urban homes - with
spacious central salons and a wealth of decorative elements.
A
devastating fire in 1894 wiped out nearly the entire town of which
only two quarters - Galata and Durlyanka survived.
Although
but a few, the preserved architectural examples provide a good
idea of the town's former appearance. Just take a look at the
Kyorpeev House, now an
Ethnographic Museum, the Kosichkov, Pisomov, Burnev, Bairumov and
Karaivanov houses, the old water mill and the inn. The yards
are dotted with geraniums and carnations.
The locals still weave their famous
Kotel carpets, and
many of their children study at the town's secondary music school
for national instruments and folk singing.