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Pazardzhik (Bulgarian: Пазарджик, also spelled as Pazardjik or Pazarjik)
is a town situated along the banks of the Maritsa river in Bulgaria with
a population of 95,485. It is the capital of Pazardzhik Province and
centre for the Pazardzhik municipality.
Pazardzhik was founded by Tatars from what is today
Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi in 1485 on the left bank of the river Maritsa,
near the market of the region, an important crossroad at the middle of
this productive region, and named Tatar Pazardzhik (Turkish Tatar
Pazarcιk, "small Tatar market"). Thanks to this favourable location, the
settlement quickly developed. While it was very small at the beginning
of the 19th century, it became the administrative centre for the region
at the end of the century and remained so until the Liberation from
Turkish occupation.
During the following centuries the town continued to grow and
strengthened its position. Trade in iron, leather and rice prospered.
The town impressed visitors with its beautiful houses and clean streets.
In 1718 Gerard Kornelius Drish visited Pazardzhik and wrote "the
buildings here according to construction, size and beauty stand higher
than those of Niš, Sofia and all other places".
The Russians under Count Nikolay Kamensky took the city after a brief
siege in 1810. By the mid-19th century Pazardzhik was a big, important
centre of crafts and trade, with a population of about 25,000 people. It
hosted two big annual fairs, and a big market Tuesdays and Wednesdays.
There was a post office with a telegraph.
In 1837 the Church of the Mother of God was built — an important
national monument, famous for its architecture and woodcarving. In the
mid-19th century Pazardzhik became an important cultural centre: a
school was opened in 1847, a girls' school in 1848, a community centre
in 1868, the women's union "Prosveta" in 1870.
During the Liberation War in 1877-1878, the town was burned by
retreating Turkish troops. It was liberated on 2 January 1878 by General
Joseph Vladimirovich Gourko's platoon. Pazardzhik grew and spread to the
right bank of Maritsa river; barracks and an agricultural school were
built.
From the early 20th century on people built factories, stores and
houses, and thus the industrial quarter of the town. From 1959 to 1987
Pazardzhik was again an administrative centre for the region, and is
again since the 1999 administrative division of Bulgaria.
The Church of the Theotokos preserves the most impressive icons in
Bulgaria by master artists of the Debar School, wood-carvings of New and
Old Testament scenes, and icons by Stanislav Dospevski. Among the town's
landmarks are also the clock tower, the ethnographic and history
museums.
As with most Bulgarian cities, Pazardzhik has developed a significant
pedestrian center, in which several central squares typify the European
café society and pedestrian culture. In Bulgaria the café culture is
particularly prominent, with many downtown squares easily providing up
to a half dozen cafés, with ample outside seating.
Pazardzhik has a level of pedestrian streets (or network of carfree
areas) even above the relatively high Bulgarian standard. There are
several longer pedestrian streets, and at one point there is even an
intersection where five different pedestrian streets converge. A few of
these do not continue for very long, but most do, or are connected to
the rest of the pedestrian areas of the city, and thus could be said to
form the pedestrian network of the city.
During the warmer seasons, most afternoons of the week and especially
weekends find a large number of people strolling about or sitting in
cafés. There are few tourist attractions in this area but there are
large supermarkets including Bila and a Lidl which is due to open in
summer 2009.
Most people who live in Pazardzhik are proud of their city. Villagers
could be often seen at the Pazardzhik Downtown disco "Largo". The town
cinema closed in 2008..
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BULGARIAN PORTALS
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