Kalofer town
The town
of Kalofer has about 4,000 inhabitants and
stretches on both
banks of the Tundzha River, in the skirts of the
Strazhata hill that represents a natural liaison between the Sredna Gora and Balkan mountains. The town lies on the
main road between Sofia and Burgas, 158 km east of Sofia.
The place had been covered with thick woods and uninhabited until the early
years of Ottoman rule. The town of Kalofer was established by a
group of ‘hayduti' (Bulgarian rebels) from a destroyed nearby town, led by
Kalifer Voivoda. This happened with the explicit permission of the Turkish
Sultan, after his inferiors acknowledged inability to destroy the rebel group,
which had attacked on Turkish officers and created trouble for years. The
residents of the new settlement were given the statute of ‘dervendzhii',
meaning official guardians of roads and passes in the mountains.
Even in the town was plundered and ruined twice, in 1799 and 1804, it quickly
recovered to see an economic boom in the early 19th century with a lot of producers of woollen
braids, mills for wool processing and shops for dying of cloths emerging out of
the ashes. At that time, Kalofer traded with Constantinople, Odessa, Braila and Vienna. In 1845, the first
school for boys was opened, while in 1871 another one for girls followed.
Towards the end of Turkish rule, about 15 groups of hayduti, with more than 500
members being from Kalofer, existed in the town's neighbourhood. Similarly to
Karlovo and Sopot, Kalofer was set on fire and largely destroyed by the Turks
during the Liberation War of 1877-1878.
The biggest landmarks in the present-day town are connected with the poet and
revolutionary Hristo Botev, who was born here, and his father – Botyo Petkov, a
respected teacher. These are the Hristo Botev House-Museum, the school, where
Botyo Petkov taught, a bust monument of Botyo Petkov and a memorial
complex with a granite statue of Hristo Botev. Other sights are the monument of Kalifer Voivoda, the old stone
bridges over Tundzha's waters, the Female Monastery, several old houses, etc.
Outside the town, one can visit the Panitsite resort (6 km north of Kalofer),
or the Kalofer female monastery founded in 1640 (6 km to the northwest). Those
having mountaineering equipment, can climb to the marvellous Southern Dzhendem
Canyon, declared a nature reserve. Mountain hikers can also get to the Rayskoto
Praskalo waterfall, near the Ray chalet. This is the highest waterfall in Bulgaria and its waters fall
down the steep walls of Mt Botev (2,376m), the highest peak in the Balkan
mountain.

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