"The World of Mimi - Friendship Overland!"
SOZOPOL - THE TOWN OF THE SALVATION
THE OLD APOLLONIA
History
has not preserved the name of this Thracian settlement in whose
place Miletian Greeks founded the town of Apollonia in 610
b.c. After another 10 centuries it became known as
Sozopol –
“the town of salvation”. Apollonia, a fortified and wealthy
independent town boasting its own army and fleet, was completely
destroyed by the legions of Marcus Lucullus in 72 b.c. The town's
pride - a 13 m high bronze statue of Apollo rising in his imposing
temple, is assumed by some to have been taken to Rome by the Roman
conquerors.
During
the Middle Ages Sozopol was part of both Byzantium and Bulgaria,
until the whole Balkan Peninsula was subjected to Ottoman rule.
Reduced to an ordinary fishing town, Sozopol was revived together
with the other settlements in the Bulgarian lands towards the end
of the 18th and the start of the 19th century. This is when
several churches were restructured - St. George, St. Mary, St. John the Theologian, St. Zossim;
the
Sts. Cyril and Methodius church was erected and over 150
houses restored.
Three
different methods of construction are visible in the
St. Mary's church, corresponding to the three stages of its
erection. The eastern, altar wall is made of stone, up to 3 m
thick, containing the apse and the two transepts (probably built
in the 16th c.). The central part, faced with oak on the outside,
dates from the 18th century, while the western part and narthex
were added during the 19th century. Partly dug into the ground,
the church surprises with its spacious interior. An unknown master
of the Samokov School made pulpit and bishop’s throne the
exquisitely carved altar.
Sozopol's
housing architecture from the National Revival period closely
resembles that of Nessebur. It falls into the category of the
so-called "Black Sea house" featuring stonewalled
basements, wooden staircases leading up to the living quarters,
wooden scaffoldings, jutting eaves, and exterior wood paneling to
protect the building from the salty sea air. The southern
vegetation like fig trees and vineyards form part of Sozopol's
landscape.
The
A. Trendafilova House with its wooden facings modeled on the
classical forms of Dorian pilasters, with its triangular gable and
stylized sun, is certainly worth seeing. The ceiling in one of the
rooms is composed of multi-figural timber pieces, painted in
different colours.
Everything
in Sozopol today is sunny, bright and attractive - starting with
the cobbles tone lanes and old houses with strings of fish hanging
from the roof, and ending with the southern drawl of the fishermen
who fondly call their white boats "ships".
The
Apollonia Festival of the Arts staged here every September gathers
painters and actors, singers and musicians, poets and dancers to a
ten-day world of art come alive amidst the old houses of this
southern small town.