Balkan Mountains
The Balkan mountain range is located in the eastern part of the Balkan peninsula in Southeastern Europe. It is conventionally taken to begin at the peak of Vrashka Chuka on the border between Bulgaria and Serbia. It then runs for about, first in a south-easterly direction along the border, then eastward across Bulgaria, forming a natural barrier between the northern and southern halves of the country, before finally reaching the Black Sea at Cape Emine. The mountains reach their highest point with Botev Peak at.
In much of the central and eastern sections, the summit forms the watershed between the drainage basins of the Black Sea and the Aegean. A prominent gap in the mountains is formed by the predominantly narrow Iskar Gorge, a few miles north of the Bulgarian capital, Sofia. The karst relief determines the large number of caves, including Magura, featuring the most important and extended European post-Palaeolithic cave painting, Ledenika, Saeva dupka, Bacho Kiro, etc. The most notable rock formation are the Belogradchik Rocks in the west.
There are several important protected areas: Central Balkan National Park, Vrachanski Balkan, Bulgarka, and Sinite Kamani, as well as a number of nature reserves. The Balkan Mountains are remarkable for their flora and fauna. Edelweiss grows there in the region of Kozyata stena. Some of the most striking landscapes are included in the Central Balkan National Park with steep cliffs, the highest waterfalls in the Balkans and lush vegetation. There are a number of important nature reserves such as Chuprene, Kozyata stena and others. Most of Europe's large mammals inhabit the area including the brown bear, wolf, boar, chamois and deer.
The mountains are the source of the name of the Balkans. In Bulgarian and Serbian the mountains are also known as Стара планина , a term whose literal meaning is 'old mountain'.
Etymology
It is widely believed this name was brought to the region by the Ottoman Turks but it may have ultimately derived from the Persian bālkāneh or bālākhāna, meaning "high, above, or proud house.". In Bulgarian, the archaic word balkan was borrowed from Turkish and means "mountain". The name is still preserved in Central Asia with the Balkan Daglary and the Balkan Province of Turkmenistan.In Antiquity and the Middle Ages the mountains were known as Haemus, derived from a Thracian word *saimon, 'mountain ridge'. The name of the place where the range meets the Black Sea, Cape Emine, is derived from Aemon.
There are two different folk etymologies for the name Haemus, derived from ancient Greek mythology. One suggests that the name 'Haemus' comes from the Greek word "haima", meaning "blood," based on the myth of the battle between Zeus and the monster/titan Typhon. The other attributes the name to King Haemus. See the Mythology section below for more details.
Other names used to refer to the mountains in different time periods include Aemon, Haemimons, Hem, Emus, the Slavonic Matorni gori and the Turkish Kocabalkan.
The modern Slavic name "Stara Planina" was first attested at the beginning of the 16th century by Antun Vrančić.
Mythology
According to the mythology, the origin of the range is that King Haemus and his wife Rhodope were transformed into mountains, Haemus Mons and the Rhodope Mountains respectively, for daring to call themselves Zeus and Hera.Another myth states that during the clash between Typhon and Zeus, Typhon hurled entire mountains at the god, but Zeus deflected them with his thunderbolts, causing Typhon's blood to spill across the land. The mountain was named Haemus after this event, as the Greek word haima means "blood".
Geography
The Balkan Mountains are, technically, a chain of fold mountains—mountains formed by the compression and breaking of layers of rock. On a geological time scale, they are a rather young and recently formed part of the Alp-Himalayan chain which stretches across most of Eurasia. The Balkan Mountains can be divided into two parts—the main Balkan Chain and the Pre-Balkans to the north, which extend slightly onto the Danubian Plain. To the south, the mountains border the Sub-Balkan valleys, a row of 11 valleys running from the Bulgarian-Serbian border east to the Black Sea, separating the Balkan Mountains from a chain of other ranges known as Srednogorie.The Balkan Mountains consist of around 30 distinct peaks; within Bulgaria, the range can be divided into three sections:
- The Western Balkan Mountains extend from Vrashka Chuka, at the border with Serbia, to the Pass of Arabakonak, with a total length of. The highest peak is Midžor, at.
- The Central Balkan Mountains run from Arabakonak to the Vratnik Pass, with a length of. Botev Peak, the highest mountain in the Balkan range at, is located in this section.
- The Eastern Balkan Mountains extend from the Vratnik Pass to Cape Emine, with a length of. The highest peak is Balgarka, at. The eastern Balkan Mountains form the lowest part of the range.
| Section | Area, km2 | % | Average altitude, m | 0 – 200 m, km2 | % | 200 – 600 m, km2 | % | 600 – 1000 m, km2 | % | 1000 – 1600 m, km2 | % | over 1600 m, km2 | % |
| Western Balkan Mountains | 4 196,9 | 36.19 | 849 | – | – | 907.1 | 21.61 | 2 074,9 | 49.44 | 1 139,6 | 27.15 | 75.3 | 1.79 |
| Central Balkan Mountains | 3 400,9 | 29.33 | 961 | – | – | 549.8 | 16.17 | 1 512,7 | 44.48 | 1 076,7 | 31.66 | 261.7 | 7.70 |
| Eastern Balkan Mountains | 3 998,6 | 34.48 | 385 | 560 | 14.00 | 2 798,9 | 70.00 | 624.1 | 15.61 | 15.6 | 0.39 | – | — |
| Total | 11 596,4 | 100 | 722 | 560 | 4.83 | 4 255,8 | 36.70 | 4 211,7 | 36.32 | 2 231,9 | 19.25 | 337 | 2.91 |
Hydrology
In their central and eastern sections, the mountains form a water divide between the rivers flowing to the Danube in the north and those flowing to the Aegean Sea in the south. However, they are crossed by Bulgaria's longest river, the Iskar, which forms the Iskar Gorge. Rivers that take their source from the Balkan Mountains and flow northwards to the Danube include the Timok, Archar, Lom, Tsibritsa, Ogosta, Skat, Vit, Osam, Yantra, and Rusenski Lom. The mountains are also the source of the Kamchiya, which flows directly into the Black Sea. Although not so abundant in mineral waters as other parts of Bulgaria, there are several spas such as Varshets, Shipkovo and Voneshta Voda.Developments in modern times have completely changed the geography of Serbia, especially when it comes to waterfalls. Still, there are a number of waterfalls to be seen, especially in the western and central parts of the range, such as Raysko Praskalo, as well as Borov Kamak, Babsko Praskalo, Etropole Waterfall, Karlovsko Praskalo, and Skaklya, among others. The area of the Stara Planina has always been sparsely populated and inaccessible because of the rugged and forested terrain, but also as a location of the Serbian-Bulgarian border. As armies relinquished the borders, giving control to the border police, civilians were allowed to explore the area. As a result, higher and higher waterfalls have been discovered on the Serbian side of the Stara Planina in the years since, including Čungulj at ; Pilj at ; Kopren at ; and Kaluđerski Skokovi at.
Passes
The mountains are crossed by 20 passes and two gorges. There are paved roads crossing the Balkan Mountains at the following passes :- Petrohan Pass: Sofia - Montana
- Iskar Gorge : Sofia - Vratsa
- Vitinya Pass: Hemus motorway, Sofia - Botevgrad
- Zlatishki Pass : Zlatitsa - Etropole
- Beklemeto Pass: Troyan - Sopot
- Shipka Pass: Gabrovo - Kazanlak
- Pass of the Republic : Veliko Tarnovo - Gurkovo
- Vratnik Pass: Elena - Sliven
- Kotel Pass : Kotel - Petolachka crossroads
- Varbitsa Pass : Shumen - Petolachka crossroads
- Rish Pass : Shumen - Karnobat
- Luda Kamchiya Gorge : Provadiya - Karnobat
- Aytos Pass - Provadiya - Aytos
- Dyulino Pass : Varna - Aytos
- Obzor Pass : Varna - Burgas, future Cherno More motorway
Peaks
- Botev Peak
- Malkiyat yumruk
- Golyam Kademliya
- Mlechen chal
- Zhaltets
- Paradzhika
- Vezhen Peak
- Midžor, the highest peak in Serbia proper and north-western Bulgaria, 12th in the Balkan Mountains.
- Golyam Kupen
- Levski
- Yurushka gramada
- Martinova chuka
- Malak Kupen
- Tetevenska Baba
- Buluvaniya
- Golyam Krastets
- Kostenurkata
- Oba
- Kartala
- Pascal
- Ravnets
- Kom Peak
- Kositsa
- Replyanska tsarkva
- Golema chuka
- Svishti plaz
- Mara Gidia
- Todorini Kukli
- Haydushki kamak
- Murgash
- Koznitsa
- Chukava
- Gorno Yazovo
- Chumerna
- Ispolin
- Ravno buche
- Buzludzha
- Manyakov kamak
- Guvnishte
- Golemi Del
- Vetren Peak
- Shipka
- Goten
- Petrovski krast
History
During the Ottoman rule, many haiduks found refuge in the Balkan Mountains. Close to the highest summit, Botev Peak, is Kalofer, the birthplace of Hristo Botev, a Bulgarian poet and national hero who died in the western Balkan Mountains near Vratsa in 1876 in the struggle against the Ottoman Empire. Also close to Botev is Shipka Pass, the scene of the four battles in the Russo-Turkish War, 1877-78, which ended Turkish rule in the Balkans.