| Melnik |
Time has not consigned to oblivion the legends and facts about old Melnik.
Archaeologists claim that the Thracians were the first to settle in these parts.
Later, the Romans passed through it and left a unique trace: the ancient Roman
bridge preserved to this day. It is the Slavs, however, who are supposed to have
first given the town its present name - Melnik, after the sand pyramids (mel)
which envelop the town on all sides. It became a part of the Bulgarian state
under Khan Pressiyan (836-852) and within a few centuries flourished greatly.
In the early 13th century Melnik was the capital city of the independent domain
of Lord Alexi Slav, an important and impregnable fortress and a brisk centre of
arts and crafts, of building and trade. It continued to prosper under Tzar Ivan
Assen (1218-1241). His charter for duty-free trade with the Dubrovnik merchants
brought in together with exquisite goods and artisan skills also a culture imbued
with modern humanism.Melnik became a centre where icon-painters, masters of ceramics,
goldsmiths producing filigree works, and masons who built churches and houses thrived.
The vicissitudes of history often changed the rulers of this outlying part of the
Bulgarian state.
Under Byzantine domination Melnik became the place where claimants to the Byzantine
throne were exiled. They arrived with their families and riches, built houses and
supported the development of arts and trade.
The Ottoman conquest ushered in a period of several centuries of oblivion and decline.
Yet Melnik again became famous. The spark of the Bulgarian National Revival
(18th - 19th century) burst earlier into flame here than in other parts of the country.
The town regained its past splendour. It again became a major cultural and commercial centre.
In the late 17th century it emerged as a centre of church decoration and openwork woodcarving
and some time later, as a centre of the fine mural painting. Many churches and Bulgarian
schools were opened. Remarkable works of architecture were built; theatrical performance,
quadrilles and waltzes began to be played in the parlours of eminent merchants, after
Western fashions. Heavy caravans spread the fame of Melnik wines in the distant corners
od Europe. It matured in deep cellars for several dozen years. It acquired thickness and
flavour which made it much sought after in Salonica, Athens, Vienna, France, Spain and
even in Britain. Several months after the Russo-Turkish War (1877 - 1878) the Berlin
Treaty gave Melnik back to Turkey and the town lived through the Kresna Uprising (1878).
The town gradually lost its sparkle, and during the Balkan war (1912 - 1913) which ultimately
freed it, it suffered devastation by fire.
Today Melnik is an architectural reserve, a historical town, a monument of culture.
From the previously rich and prosperous town now remain what is left of the fortress
wall of Lord Slav, houses an wine cellars, churches and monasteries. Amidst the exotic
charm of the natural decor, they remind one of a romantic tale of olden icons and carved
wood, of splendid frescoes and architectural gems.
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