In many ways, Bulgaria remains the unknown
country of the Balkans. Less newsworthy than the
former Yugoslavia, and less heavily touristed
than neighbouring Greece and Turkey, it's a
place that brings few distinct images to mind.
Despite being the site of extensive Black Sea
package resorts and the source of several good
wines, it's all too often dismissed as the dour
place it was before 1989, when it served as one
of the Soviet Union's most loyal East European
allies. As with many little-known destinations,
however, there's a great deal to discover here:
much of Bulgaria is like an open-air museum of
Balkan culture, with beautifully decorated
churches, fine mosques, wonderfully preserved
rustic villages and a great deal of enduring
folklore. The mountainous interior makes it one
of the top hiking destinations of Europe, while
over on the Black Sea coast, the white-sand
beaches are just as magnificent in reality as
they look in the tourist brochures.
Bulgarians are frustrated by their country's
lack of a clearly defined image abroad. Heirs to
one of Europe's great civilizations, and
guardians of Balkan Christian traditions, they
have a keen sense of national identity distilled
by centuries of turbulent history. In a
constantly repeating cycle of grandeur, decline
and national rebirth, successive Bulgarian
states have striven to dominate the Balkan
peninsula before succumbing to defeat and
foreign tutelage, only to be regenerated by
patriotic resistance to outside control.
The Bulgarian nation was formed in the
seventh and eighth centuries when the Bulgars
, warlike nomads from central Asia, assumed the
leadership of Slav tribes in the lower Danube
basin and took them on a spree of conquest in
southeastern Europe. The resulting First
Bulgarian Kingdom , after accepting Orthodox
Christianity as the state religion, became the
centre of Slavonic culture and spirituality
before falling victim to a resurgent Byzantine
Empire in the eleventh century. Recovery
came a century later when the local aristocracy
broke free from Constantinople and restored past
glories in the shape of the Second Bulgarian
Kingdom . However, the rise of Ottoman power
in the fourteenth century ushered in the
500-year-long period of Tursko robstvo or
" Turkish bondage ", when the
achievements of the medieval era were
extinguished. Bulgarian art and culture
recovered during the nineteenth-century National
Revival , and the emergence of a potent
revolutionary movement prepared the ground for
Bulgaria's eventual Liberation in 1878,
achieved with the help of Russian arms. However,
Europe's other Great Powers conspired to limit
the size of the infant state at the Berlin
Congress of 1878, the first of a series of
betrayals which denied Bulgarian claims to a
territory which had long been considered an
integral part of the historical Bulgarian state,
Macedonia . In the twentieth century
alone, Bulgaria went to war three times (in the
Balkan Wars of 1912-13, World War I and World
War II) to try and recover Macedonia, only to be
defeated on each occasion. By 1945 it seemed
like a country that had somehow missed out on
its destiny, and rapidly turned in on itself
during the subsequent deep sleep of Communism.
Today, while undoubtedly more open to the
outside world and more visitor-friendly than
ever before, Bulgaria remains a country in
transition. Back in the momentous winter of
1989, it looked as if it was dragging its feet
on the road to democracy while others forged
ahead. The Communist Party ditched a few of the
old guard, changed its name to the Socialist
Party and promptly won the first multiparty
elections for more than forty years, remaining
the country's most coherent political force
until the elections of April 1997, when the SDS
took over. Despite stabilizing the economy, the
SDS failed to stamp out corruption, and were
swept aside four years later by a new movement,
the NDSV, centred around the former Tsar of
Bulgaria, Simeon of Saxe-Coburg Gotha .
With the Tsar installed as Prime Minister, and a
Socialist (ie former Communist) occupying the
post of President, Bulgaria is in for some
interesting times.
Since 1989, market economics have been
introduced more cautiously than in the more
developed former Communist states, but the
steady growth of private enterprise is making
its mark nonetheless. Locals are quick to point
out that the move towards capitalism has meant
poor conditions for many. Full employment and
job security are things of the past, and the new
business culture is riddled with corruption and
organized crime. While these problems shouldn't
affect your enjoyment of an invigorating and
little-experienced culture, it's a good idea to
remain sensitive towards such issues.