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Tran, Bulgaria

Coordinates:42°50′N22°39′E/ 42.833°N 22.650°E/42.833; 22.650
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tran
Трън
Town
Flag of Tran
Coat of arms of Tran
Tran is located in Bulgaria
Tran
Tran
Location of Tran, Bulgaria
Coordinates:42°50′N22°40′E/ 42.833°N 22.667°E/42.833; 22.667
CountryBulgaria
Provinces
(Oblast)
Pernik
Government
• MayorTsvetislava Tsvetkova
Elevation
900 m (3,000 ft)
Population
(2020)
• Total2,483
Time zoneUTC+2(EET)
• Summer (DST)UTC+3(EEST)
Postal Code
2460
Area code07731

Tran(Bulgarian:Трън,lit.'thorn',pronounced[trɤn]) is a small town inTran Municipality,Pernik Province,westernBulgaria.It is 27 km (17 mi) fromBreznikand 15 km (9.3 mi) from the border withSerbia.

Geography

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Location

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Tran is located in a mountainous region, close to the border with Serbia and to the nearby townsBreznikandDragoman.It is located on the banks of the riverErma,in the easternmost part of the high mountain valleyZnepole.

Climate

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The town has ahumid continental climate(Dfb) with large temperature amplitudes, similar to that ofSofia.The lowest temperature in Bulgaria −38.3 °C (−36.9 °F) was recorded in Tran in January 1947. With temperatures frequently dropping to −20 °C (−4 °F) −25 °C (−13 °F) through the winter, Tran can be considered one of the coldest towns inBulgaria.

History

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Once hereThracians,Goths,Slavslived here successively. The Goths are from theHerulitribe and settled for the purpose of mining. The Slavic settlement was quite massive, as evidenced by the almost one hundred percent Slavic name system of the topographic areas in Tran region. Proto-Bulgarian presence is not attested. After the defeat of the Thracian tribes from theRoman Empire,they were subjected to assimilation, and in Tran region theLatinlanguage was used and they subsequently either acquired and maintained Vlach self-consciousness, or became Slavicized. Traces of Wallachian-Roman-Thracian influence are the name of the local dialect of the town square - Piazza, Italian. piazza, Chirchilat peak, Rui peak and mountain, Radovo village, etc. Tran region is in the middle of two large Slavic tribes that settled in the Balkans and gave the names of the rivers - Strumi and Moravians. The former are Dacian Slavs or southern Slavs from the Bulgarian group and the latter are a large swarm of Western Slavs, Czech Moravians. In the past, the so-called Znepolski Drum - the old road that connectedDubrovnikand theAdriaticwithSerdica.Thus, today's Tran in those days was an important trade centre. Life in Antiquity at the present city is documented only by the discovered ancient tomb and by found Roman coins from the IV century.

For the first time, Tran entered the borders of Bulgaria during the conquest ofSofiabyKhan Krumin April 809. During theFirst Bulgarian Kingdom,underKing Samuel,as a famous historical figure stands out as the boyarKrakra Pernishki,who was entrusted with the lands inPernik,Sofia and Tran. The boyar put up fierce resistance toEmperor Basil IIfor more than 10 years, but nevertheless, in 1018 this area, together with the rest of Bulgaria, came underByzantine rule.

During theOttoman rule,the city was known as a market town and was namedIznebol Kabasi,Taran PalankaandTran Palanka.According to a legend, the name Tran itself comes from even more distant times, when according to the legend there was a large thorn here, under the branches of which there was a healing spring, with the waters from which the local priest Terapontius healed the believers.

At the end of the 18th century, during the devastation ofAli Pasha of Ioannina,groups from Kostur moved to Tran. AnAyanofBreznik,Kara Feizi, in the area of Tran, one of the most successfulKardzhalileaders persecuted the local population. After his death, his son Ali Bey took over the administration of the district, from whose arbitrariness he screamed the local population to such an extent that he sent complaints to the central government several times and eventually Ali Bey was removed, handed over to the authorities and killed on the way toConstantinople.

After the end of theRusso-Turkish War of 1828-1829,the so-called Znepol Uprising broke out in the area of Tran in 1830. For a short time, Tran was free, but immediately after that the Ottoman authorities brutally dealt with the rebels. In 1871 the Tran Revolutionary Committee was founded in the monastery "Archangel Michael". The committee is headed by Dimo Petrichev and Gigo Masalovichki. The committee took an active part in theSerbo-Turkish War of 1876.The detachments ofSimo SokolovandGrozdan Nasalevskitook part in it. These two detachments later joined theRusso-Turkish Liberation War of 1877-1878.They were joined by the detachment formed by Tako Peev. Thus Tran became the centre of the so-called Shop uprising, in the course of which the Tran,Breznik,RadomirandKjustendilregions were liberated. At the end of the Liberation War, Tran came under the temporary rule ofSerbiauntil 1879. TheNeuilly-sur-Seine Treatyhad severe consequences for Tran, with which a large number of settlements were separated from the district and given to Serbia, and others such as Vrabcha, Strezimirovtsi, Bankya (village) and Petachintsi, are literally halved, and even today you can see the houses through which the border passes, dividing them into two - divided yards, cemeteries, as well as many families.

Culture

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One distinctive feature of the town is the specificTran dialectof theBulgarian languagespoken in Tran, which is part of theTransitional dialect group.

Churches

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  • „Saint Nikola "– in the centre of town
  • „Saint Petka "– in Barintsi neighbourhood
  • „Saint Petka "– chapel on top of Barintsi neighbourhood
  • „Saint Troitsa "– chapel in Murgovitsa neighbourhood
  • Pentecostalist church

Notable people

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Stamen Grigorov

Honour

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Tran CragonLivingston Islandin theSouth Shetland Islands,Antarcticais named after Tran.

See also

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Notes

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42°50′N22°39′E/ 42.833°N 22.650°E/42.833; 22.650