Suvorovo

Suvorovo
Суворово
Suvorovo

Location of Suvorovo

Coordinates: 43°20′N 27°36′E / 43.333°N 27.600°E / 43.333; 27.600
Country Bulgaria
Provinces
(Oblast)
Varna
Government
  Mayor Pavlin Paraskevov
Elevation 246 m (807 ft)
Population (December 2009)[1]
  Total 4,723
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal Code 9170
Area code(s) 05153
For the residential area in Kaliningrad, Russia, see Suvorovo Microdistrict.
For settlement in Ukraine, see Berezanka.

Suvorovo (Bulgarian: Суворово, pronounced [suˈvɔruvu]) is a town in northeastern Bulgaria, part of Varna Province. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous Suvorovo Municipality, which lies in the northwestern part of the Province. The town is located in the southwestern part of the Dobruja plateau, 34 kilometres northwest of the provincial capital of Varna, 56 kilometres southwest of Dobrich and 59 kilometres east of Shumen. As of December 2009, it has a population of 4,723 inhabitants.[1]

Suvorovo was originally named Kozludža, usually spelled Kozludzha or Kozludja (Bulgarian: Козлуджа), and in 1934 it was renamed Novgradets (Bulgarian: Новградец). Its present name is in honor of Generalissimus Alexander Suvorov, one of the famous Russian military commanders, who won a decisive battle of the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774 in the vicinity of the modern town. The town has a historical museum, a community centre (chitalishte), an Eastern Orthodox church dedicated to the Ascension of Jesus and a mosque.

Municipality

Main article: Suvorovo Municipality

Suvorovo municipality covers an area of 216 square kilometres (of which 61% arable) includes the following 9 places:

  • Levski
  • Nikolaevka
  • Prosechen
  • Suvorovo

Notable natives of the municipality include Esoteric Christian spiritual leader Peter Deunov (born in Nikolaevka; 1864–1944) and Movement for Rights and Freedoms president Ahmed Doğan (born in Pchelarovo, but spent his childhood in Drandar; 1954-)

Points of interest

West of Suvorovo, at 43°18'52"N 27°30'25"E, there is Bulgaria's only 750 kV substation.

References

Coordinates: 43°20′N 27°36′E / 43.333°N 27.600°E / 43.333; 27.600

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