Tsepina

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Tsepina
Цепина
Pazardzhik Province, Bulgaria
250px
Tsepina Fortress - plan.
Site information
Condition In ruins
Site history
Events Byzantine–Bulgarian Wars; Bulgarian-Ottoman Wars

Tsepina (Bulgarian: Цепина) was a castle and town in the western Rhodope mountains, southern Bulgaria, now in ruins. It is located at 6 km from the Dorkovo village in the north-eastern part of the Chepinska valley. Tsepina is situated at an altitude of 317 m.[1]

The town was built on a steep height at 1,136 metres above sea level. Its outer walls closed an area of 25 decares and was dominated by a citadel located at the top of the cliff. The foundations of three churches have been excavated as well as four large water storage tanks up to 10 m deep.

History

In the Middle Ages Tsepina was one of the most important Bulgarian fortresses in the Rhodope region. The Bulgarians took the castle in the 9th century but with the end of the First Bulgarian Empire in the beginning of the 11th century the Byzantines conquered it. Tsepina returned under Bulgarian control under Emperor Kaloyan (1197-1207). In 12th–14th centuries it grew as an important city and one of the strongest strongholds of the Second Bulgarian Empire. In the early 13th century, it was a seat of despot Alexius Slav. Between 1246 and 1254 it was under Byzantine control but Emperor Michael Asen (1246-1256) managed to retake the fortress. Around 1373 Tsepina was seized by the Turks under the command of Daud Pasha after a bloody nine-month siege[2] but only after the Ottomans cut off the water-conduit.[3] Soon after that it was abandoned by its inhabitants.

References

Footnotes

  1. Tsepina Altitude and Location
  2. Захариев, Ст. Цит. съч., с. 66
  3. Шишков, Ст. Цит. съч., с. 64

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