Vetrino Municipality

Vetrino Municipality (Bulgarian: Община Ветрино) is a municipality (obshtina) in Varna Province, Northeastern Bulgaria. It is named after its administrative centre – the village of Vetrino.

Vetrino Municipality

Община Ветрино
Municipality
Vetrino Municipality within Bulgaria and Varna Province.
Coordinates: 43°19′N 27°23′E
Country Bulgaria
Province (Oblast)Varna
Admin. centre (Obshtinski tsentar)Vetrino
Area
  Total293.12 km2 (113.17 sq mi)
Population
 (December 2009)[1]
  Total5,702
  Density19/km2 (50/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)

The municipality embraces a territory of 293.12 km², bordering the Shumen Province to the west, with a population of 5,702 inhabitants, as of December 2009.[1] The southern parts of the area is crossed by the east operating part of Hemus motorway which is planned to connect the port of Varna with the country capital – Sofia.

Settlements

Vetrino Municipality includes the following 10 places, all of them are villages:

Town/Village Cyrillic Population[2][3][4]
(December 2009)
Vetrino Ветрино 1,036
Belogradets Белоградец 1,226
Dobroplodno Доброплодно 894
Gabarnitsa Габърница 96
Mlada Gvardiya Млада гвардия 335
Momchilovo Момчилово 192
Nevsha Невша 648
Neofit Rilski Неофит Рилски 921
Sredno Selo Средно село 59
Yagnilo Ягнило 295
Total 5,702

Demography

The following table shows the change of the population during the last four decades.

Vetrino Municipality
Year 1975 1985 1992 2001 2005 2007 2009 2011
Population 13,331 10,812 7,990 7,023 6,296 6,045 5,702 ...
Sources: Census 2001,[5] Census 2011,[6] „pop-stat.mashke.org“,[7]

Religion

According to the latest Bulgarian census of 2011, the religious composition, among those who answered the optional question on religious identification, was the following:

Religious composition of Vetrino Municipality [8]
Orthodox Christianity
68.5%
Catholicism
0.3%
Protestantism
0.4%
Islam
21.8%
No religion
3.3%
Prefer not to answer, others and indefinable
5.7%

A majority of the population of Vetrino Municipality identify themselves as Christians. At the 2011 census, 68.5% of respondents identified as Orthodox Christians belonging to the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. Muslims are the largest minority with 21.8% of its population.

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gollark: I don't think that makes much sense either honestly. I mean, the whole point of... political systems... is that they organize people in some way. If they don't work on people in ways you could probably point out very easily theoretically, they are not very good.
gollark: inb4 "but capitalism kills literally everyone who dies in worse-off countries"
gollark: > that one pattern of red and green that is an actual cognitohazardWait, what?
gollark: What even are half of these? These seem, er, worrying.

See also

References

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