Place:Mikhaĭlovgrad, Montana, Bulgaria

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NameMikhaĭlovgrad
Alt namesMontana
Golyama Kutlovitsasource: Encyclopædia Britannica (1988) VII, 120
Mihailovgradsource: Encyclopædia Britannica (1988) VII, 120
Mihajlovgradsource: Rand McNally Atlas (Reprinted 1994) I-112
Mikhailovgradsource: Encyclopædia Britannica (1988) VII, 120
Mikhaylovgradsource: Britannica Book of the Year (1992) p 563; Encyclopædia Britannica (1988) VII, 120; Times Atlas of the World (1994) p 127
Mikhaĭlovgradsource: Family History Library Catalog
Montanensiasource: Encyclopædia Britannica (1988) VII, 120
TypeInhabited place
Coordinates43.417°N 23.183°E
Located inMontana, Bulgaria
Contained Places
Inhabited place
Berkovitsa
Rakovitsa
source: Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
source: Family History Library Catalog


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Montana is a town in Northwestern Bulgaria, located south of the Danube river, northwest of Vratsa and east of the Serbian border. It is the administrative centre of Montana Province.

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History

the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Roman times

The region around Montana became part of the Roman province of Upper Moesia in 29 BC. Around 160 AD, a military camp that was most likely founded on the remains of an older Thracian settlement acquired city rights under the name of Civitas Montanensium. The town developed and urbanized after a Roman model and became the second most important settlement in the province after Raciaria (near modern-day Archar). The fortress of Castra ad Montanesium was built atop the hill overlooking Montana, as well as public and residential buildings, temples, baths and theatres. Montana became a typical imperial settlement, where the local romanized population coexisted alongside Italic and Anatolian settlers. The base of the town's economy was the big landowners of Italic origin and their villas and mansions, while the locals served to work in agricultural production and gold mining in the Ogosta river valley. A community of Greek settlers engaged in craftsmanship and money-lending lived in the town during the period. The patrons of Montana, in the spirit of Hellenism, were Diana and Apollo.

Middle Ages

Between 440 and 490, the northwest of modern Bulgaria was devastated by the raids of the Huns, under Attila, and later by the Goths. Slavs and Avars delivered the final blow to Greco-Roman culture in the region. The Slavs who settled later in the area called the town Kutlovitsa. During the time of the First and Second Bulgarian Empires, the settlement recovered and became the centre of an eparchy.

Ottoman rule

After Kutlovitsa was seized by the Ottomans, the settlement was destroyed and became deserted. It was renamed "Kutlofça" by the Ottomans, which was derived from Kutlovitsa. Between 1450 and 1688, the town was resettled by Turks because of its strategic location, and went through another period of blossoming as a typically Oriental town. A mosque, fountains, and other new buildings were erected. There was also a Roman Bath left over the Middle Ages.

Modern history

After the Liberation began a massive wave of migration towards Kutlovitsa and a period of economic blossoming. An electricity station, a railway station, a post office and a hospital were built, a fair and a community centre emerged. The football team, FC Montana, was founded in 1921 and currently plays in the Bulgarian First League.

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