Nessebar
The present-day town is the
successor of a Thracian fishermen's settlement named Menabryia
(meaning literally 'the town of Mena'), the foundation of
which dates back to the 2nd century BC. Later it remained
the only Doric colony along the Black Sea coast, as the rest
were typical Ionic settlements. The Greeks named it Messembria
(which was later transformed into Nessabar by the Slavs),
and it grew into a big and well-fortified town-state. The
town benefited from natural protection from both the land
and the sea. Remains suggest the existence of aqueducts, a
sewerage system, fortified wails, an amphitheatre and numerous
cult edifices (including an impressive temple of Apollo) at
that time. The town became a popular commercial centre as
a variety of goods from the Aegean and the Mediterranean regions
were traded there and it also minted its own coins in the
5th century BC. Two centuries later, it founded its own colony
called Navlohos near Obzor. The whole land between Nessebar
and Obzor used to be a granary that supplied the two colonies
with food as well as goods of exchange. In the 1st century
BC the town surrendered to Marcus Lukulus' legions and was
subjected top Roman domination, during which the construction
of a second colony of Messembria began and was finished. The
second colony, built to the south of Nessebar, was named Anhialo
(present-day Pomorie).
In the early Middle Ages the
town rebuilt its fortress walls and stayed part of the Byzantine
Empire until 812 when the protobulgarian Khan Kroum conquered
it, including it in the territory of Bulgaria. During the
reign of Ivan Alexander the town went thorough a cultural
and economic boom, and occupied substantial territories beyond
the stretch of the peninsula. It was around that period when
most of the churches of Nessebar, remains of which are to
be found in the present-day town, were built. In 1366 the
knights of Amadeus of Savoy conquered the town, and then sold
it to Byzantium for 15,000 golden ducats. In 1453, shortly
after Constantinople fell under Turkish domination the town
was conquered by the Ottoman Empire and went through a period
of decay. The Liberation found Nessabar as a small fishermen's
settlement, with well-developed viticulture on the hills above
the town.
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