Silistra

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Silistra
Силистра
Image:Silistra-obshtina-gerb.gif Map of Bulgaria, Silistra is indicated
Province
(oblast)
Silistra
Population 49 166 (2005-09-13)
Altitude 6 m
Postal code 7500
Area code 086
Geographic
coordinates
44° 7' north,
27° 16' east
Time zone EET
(UTC+2; UTC+3 in summer)
Mayor Ivo Andonov

Silistra (Bulgarian: Силистра [si.'lis.trə], historically Bulgarian Дръстър (Drastar, ['drəstər]) and Romanian Dârstor) is a port city of northeastern Bulgaria, lying on the southern side of the lower Danube at the country's border with Romania. Silistra is the administrative centre of Silistra Province and one of the important cities of the historical region of Southern Dobruja.

[edit] History

The Romans built a fortress in 29 AD on the site of an earlier Celtic settlement and kept its name, Durostorum (or Dorostorum). It became an important military centre of Moesia and grew into a city at the time of Marcus Aurelius. In 388, Durostorum became the seat of a Christian bishopric and a centre of Christianity in the region, and Roman general Flavius Aëtius was born in the town in 396. After the Roman Empire was split, the town (known as Δουρόστολον, Durostolon in Byzantine Greek) became part of the Byzantine Empire.

Silistra Art Gallery building
Silistra Art Gallery building

Around the end of the 7th century, the town was incorporated in the First Bulgarian Empire and the bishop of Drastar was proclaimed the first patriarch of Bulgaria. The town was captured by the forces of Sviatoslav I of Kiev in 969, but two years later it was besieged by the Byzantines during the Battle of Dorostolon. Having been ceded to the Byzantines, it was renamed Theodoropolis, after the reigning empress. In 976, Tsar Samuil restored Bulgarian rule in the region until 1001, when it was once again incorporated within the bounds of the Byzantine Empire.

In 1186, after the Vlach-Bulgarian Rebellion, the town became part of the Second Bulgarian Empire until the Ottoman conquest of Bulgaria in 1396.

During Ottoman rule, Silistra (Silistre in Ottoman Turkish) was part of Rumelia Province and was the administrative centre of the Silistra sanjak. This sanjak was later upgraded to become the Silistra Province (eyalet) that stretched over most of the western Black Sea littoral. The town was captured by Russian forces numerous times during the Russo-Turkish Wars.

In 1878, following the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878, Silistra was included in the newly autonomous Principality of Bulgaria, which became the Kingdom of Bulgaria in 1908.

In May 1913, after unsuccessful Bulgarian-Romanian negotiations in London, the both countries accepted the mediation of the Great Powers, who awarded Silistra and the area in a 3 km radius around it to Romania at the Saint Petersburg Conference. Following the Second Balkan War, the Treaty of Bucharest (1913) granted Silistra and the whole of Southern Dobruja to Romania. Although Bulgaria regained the town during World War I with the Treaty of Bucharest (1918), in which Romania surrendered to the Central Powers (including Bulgaria), the Treaty of Neuilly (1919) following World War I returned it to Romania. Silistra remained a part of Romania until the Axis-sponsored Treaty of Craiova of 1940, when the town once again became part of Bulgaria, a transfer confirmed by the Paris Peace Treaties of 1947.

A panorama of Silistra and the Danube
A panorama of Silistra and the Danube


[edit] Historical population

Year Population
1888 11,414
1892 11,718
1900 12,133
1908 12,055
1924 13,756
1974 48,000
1985 53,500
2005 49,166

[edit] External links

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