Cherven Bryag

Cherven bryag (Bulgarian: Червен бряг, also transliterated Červen brjag) is a town in northern Bulgaria, a capital of the Cherven Bryag municipality, Pleven Province. It is situated on the right shore of the Zlatna Panega in river Iskar, 137 km north-east of Sofia, 53 km south-west of Pleven, 12 km north-west of Lukovit, 56 km east of Vratsa, and 55 km south of Oryahovo. The name means "red shore" and refers to the reddish clay in the vicinity of the river. As of December 2009, the town had a population of 13,856 inhabitants.[1]

Cherven bryag

Червен бряг
Cherven bryag
Location of Cherven Bryag
Coordinates: 43°16′46″N 24°4′59″E
CountryBulgaria
Province
(Oblast)
Pleven
Government
  MayorPavlin Filiovski
Elevation
187 m (614 ft)
Population
 (31.12.2009)[1]
  Total13,856
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal Code
5980
Area code(s)0659

Cherven Bryag is a medieval settlement mentioned in 1431 in Ottoman registers as Dobrolak.[2] Under its present name Cherven Bryag was first recorded in the 16th century as part of the Ottoman region of Nikopol. On 26 June 1929, Prime Minister Andrey Lyapchev proclaimed the former village and station a town.

Cherven Bryag is a railway station on the line Sofia-Gorna Oryahovitsa-Varna/Ruse. It first appeared as a railway station settlement in 1899 on the newly built Sofia-Varna railway line.[3] Cherven Bryag was a starting point of a narrow-gauge railway line to Byala Slatina and Oryahovo, as well as of a normal railway line to Lukovit and Zlatna Panega. Today those lines are no more, out of service. The railway station is in the southwestern end of the town, opposite the central area.

Among the local landmarks, the St. Sophronius of Vratsa Church located in the central part of the town is notable.

Notable people

gollark: Please remember that the transistor cult is allied with the diode cult.
gollark: They're still cooler.
gollark: If transistors exist, then can you transist?
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Our cult *strictly* respects conservation of energy, thank you.

References

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