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'St.
Troitsa' Monastery
was built in 1868 and after the Liberation it became a cathedral temple.
Stratesh park is located on a hill with the same name in the northern part of
the town of Lovech. It is built up with the volunteer
help of the citizens of Lovech. The asphalt alleys curve along beautiful
lakes, alleys full of flowers, decorative trees and bushes. The Alley of the
Bulgarian-Russian friendship is a memorable sign for the Russians soldiers
who have died during the liberation of Lovech on 22.08.1877. In the eastern
part of the park you can visit the second biggest zoo in Bulgaria with various animal species.
Twenty kilometres from the city, on the right bank of the river Osam, those
interested in caves can visit one of the biggest caves in Europe - 'Devetashkata Cave'. According to archaeological
research, it sheltered people since the late Palaeolithic era. Devetashka
cave is a monument of culture and a place of national and international
significance and protection. The Devetashka cave is settled only at the
distance of 15 km. to the north of Lovech. It is one of the biggest caves in Bulgaria. This natural phenomenon is
about 1500 meters long and has huge entrance - 35 m high. A Bulgarian
scientist discovered the cave in 1921.
In the vicinity of Lovech people can visit several interesting places, among
them 'Glozhensky' Monastery (1224), the mountain resort 'Ribaritsa' and
'Saeva dupka' cave. According to annals of Glozhensky monastery, the
cloister was built in the 13th century by the Ukrainian prince Glozh, who
settled in the area with the agreement and help of the Bulgarian king Ivan
Asen II. Close to the village of Glozhene (named after him) and the river of Cherni Vit, Prince Glozh established a
cloister, dedicated to St George the Victorious, an icon of whom he carried
all the way from the Ukrainian lands. According to the legend, shortly after
the establishment of the monastery, the icon repeatedly disappeared from the
cloister, only to be found later on a hill not far away from the village
where currently lays the present-day monastery. Those inexplicable
disappearances of the icon were interpreted by the monks as a god’s sign that
the monastery had to be moved to the hills, which they eventually did in the end
of the 14th century. For a short period of time, the two monasteries existed
and functioned together, connected by an underground tunnel. This underground
shortcut was used more than once by the Apostle of Freedom, Vasil Levski as
an escape route while fleeing from his Ottoman persecutors. Unfortunately,
the tunnel was filled up and became unusable after an earthquake in 1928. The
monastery church was beautifully decorated with wall paintings, which
unfortunately existed only until 1913 when an earthquake ruined completely
the church. The present-day church was built in 1951 in the place of the
preceding one and represents a relatively narrow but a high building. The
Glozhene monastery is located amid the natural beauties of the Northern Balkan mountains. Despite its name, it is in
fact closer to the village of Malak Izvor, than to the neighbouring village of Glozhene. It is built right on top of a
mount and resembles a castle when viewed from a distance.
The village of Ribaritsa is one of the most picturesque
villages in the Teteven region and the most invested in either. It is located
at the foot of the Teteven Balkan, settled to the river banks of Beli Vit.
Ribaritsa village has numerous little country houses and villas, lost among
flowers and greenness. Here is situated the National Park Central Balkan and
the biosphere reserve of Tsarichina. From the village of Ribaritsa there are roads to the town of Teteven, Saeva dupka cave, Shipkovo
mineral baths, the Glozhen monastery, the town of Troyan and the Troyan monastery.
The Saeva Dupka Cave with its length of 400 m. is interesting for
different cave species. Scientists found that primitive man inhabited the
cave and they found various objects including a coin with the image of the
Roman emperor Antoninus.
In the village of Stefanovo, 20 km south-east from Lovech
and 27 km north-east from Troyan is the village of Staro Stefanovo Architectural
Reserve (the only one on the territory of the region) with over
100 monuments of culture from the beginning and the middle of the 19th
century. The first written information dates back to 1515 when the village
was called Isvote. Preserved as an entire ethnographical complex, the village of Stefanovo is one of the oldest
settlements in the Lovech district with a proven ancient Bulgarian origin.
Today Lovech is a beautiful and modern town, which carefully keeps the
atmosphere of the previous century. Two main transport thoroughfares pass
through the territory of the region: the highway to Sofia, Sevlievo, Veliko
Tarnovo Shumen and the highway to Botevgrad, Koritna, and Byala. Both connect
the region of Lovech with the neighbouring and the other regions and with the
capital city.
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