Medkovets

Place in Montana, Bulgaria
Medkovets
Медковец
43°38′N 23°11′E / 43.633°N 23.183°E / 43.633; 23.183
Country Bulgaria
Provinces
(Oblast)
Montana
Government
 • MayorVentsislav Kutkudeyski
Elevation
182 m (597 ft)
Population
 (2008)[1]
 • Total2,050
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal Code
3670
Area code09727

Medkovets (Bulgarian: Медковец, pronounced [mɛtˈkɔvɛt͡s]; also transliterated Medkovec or Medkovetz) is a village in northwestern Bulgaria, part of Montana Province. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous Medkovets Municipality, which lies in the northern part of Montana Province.

The area around Medkovets has been inhabited since prehistoric times, as proven using archaeological evidence. The village itself was founded no later than the first half of the 18th century, with the name being derived from the word med ("honey") according to popular etymology. In the 1830s, Medkovets took part in organized struggle against the Ottoman rule of Bulgaria. The first school in the village, a monastical school, was opened in 1821, while a secular school was founded in 1845, when Ivan Kulin was knez ("mayor"). The Church of Saint Paraskeva was built in 1859, with the iconostasis carved by the Bulgarian masters Filipovi from the region of Debar, Vardar Macedonia.

A notable native is Andrey Ivanov ("Andrey the Priest"), a communist revolutionary who played an active part in the September Uprising of 1923 and was hanged by the authorities. His feats were mentioned in Geo Milev's expressionist poem Septemvri.

Municipality

Medkovets municipality includes the following 5 places:

Gallery

  • Church
    Church
  • House
    House
  • Museum
    Museum

External links

  • Medkovets municipality website (in Bulgarian)
  • v
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  • e
Capital: Medkovets
Villages
Landmarks
Culture
Notable people
  • Ivan Kulin
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • Czech Republic

43°38′N 23°11′E / 43.633°N 23.183°E / 43.633; 23.183


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