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Embassies and Judical Resources. |
News, Business and Weather. |
Religion, Culture, Education and Science. |
Sport, Health, Travel and Events. |
About Bulgaria, Macedonia and Volga Region. |
Enviroment and Energy. |
Famous Persons Photo Album. |
Diaspora and Genealogy. |
Music, the Arts and Shopping. |
Beverages and Cuisine. |
Internet , Computers and Technology. |
Machinery. |
Links |
Boards, Essays, chat and email. |
About Me |
Smilies. |
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Macedonia, Bulgaria, Volga-Bulgaria, Diaspora, Association. |
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Welcome to this Bulgarophile website!
The site is under constant construction, I don't seem to stop expanding it when we are so great. Eventually the site will be replaced with a better looking one and that is also more thought out and everything will be more easy to find. Bulgaria Coat of Arms. Map of Bulgaria. BULGARIA. Bulgaria, republic in southeastern Europe. Situated in the Balkan Peninsula, Bulgaria is bounded on the north by Romania, on the east by the Black Sea, on the south by Turkey and Greece, and on the west by the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) and the Republic of Macedonia. The capital and largest city is Sofia. National Anthem. click here to play sound |
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Macedonia. Macedonia, (Macedonian Republika Makedonija), country in southeastern Europe, on the Balkan Peninsula. A former constituent republic of Yugoslavia, it declared its independence in November 1991. Skopje is the capital and largest city. National Anthem. click here to play sound The Balkans Balkan Peninsula, peninsula in southeastern Europe, bounded on the east by the Black and Aegean seas, on the south by the Mediterranean Sea, and on the west by the Adriatic and Ionian seas. It comprises the countries of Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Republic of Macedonia, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro), Albania, Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, and European Turkey. The northern boundary is geographically defined as the Sava River; the lower Danube River from the point, at Belgrade in Serbia, where the Sava joins it; and a line drawn arbitrarily from the upper Sava to the Adriatic near Rijeka, Croatia. This boundary is easily recognizable on a map and, with a few exceptions, encompasses the countries generally defined as Balkan states, but it has no physiographical justification. It is historically justifiable because the region so defined (together with Romania and excluding Montenegro, Dalmatia, and the Ionian Islands) constituted most of the European territory of the Ottoman Empire from the late 15th to the 19th century. |
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