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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A historic house in Mandritsa
Location of Mandritsa in Bulgaria

Mandritsa (Bulgarian: Мандрица, "Small dairy"; Albanian: Mandricë) is a village in southernmost Bulgaria, part of Ivaylovgrad municipality, Haskovo Province. It is known as the only Albanian village in Bulgaria. As of 14 December 2006, Mandritsa has a population of 75. It lies at 41°23′N 26°8′E / 41.383°N 26.133°E / 41.383; 26.133, 93 m above sea level.

Mandritsa is located on the right bank of the Byala Reka in the easternmost Rhodope Mountains, 15 km south of Ivaylovgrad and 2 km west of the Luda reka, which forms the border with Greece.

History

Ottoman rule

The village was founded in 1636[1] by Eastern Orthodox Albanian dairymen who supplied the Ottoman Army. They were allowed to pick a tract of land and were freed from taxes. The bulk of the local Albanian speakers arrived in the 18th century from around Korçë[2] and in the 19th century from the region of Souli in Epirus.[citation needed] The locals preserved their Souliot national dress until the 19th century, when the fustanella was substituted by Thracian breeches.[citation needed] However, the female dress was preserved until the mass emigration to Greece in 1913.

In the 19th century, Mandritsa was a small town of Greek-identifying Albanians in the kaza of Didymoteicho.[3] In 1873, it was a village of 250 households with 1,080 Albanian residents.

The main occupations were sericulture, tobacco growing, manufacture and trade. The village had three Greek educational institutions: a school for boys, a school for girls and a kindergarten.

Bulgaria and emigration

Mandritsa exited from Ottoman rule on 15 October 1912, during the First Balkan War, when it was taken by military units of the First Bulgarian Army, but was once again occupied by the Ottomans during the Second Balkan War. According to the Treaty of Constantinople, it was ceded to Bulgaria. A large number of the residents fled back to the Ottoman Empire, where they remained as refugees for six months before heading to Greece in 1914 through Constantinople and Rodosto.

Of the 480 families of the time, only 40 remained in Bulgaria, while 100 settled in the village of Hambarköy near Kilkis, which was renamed Mandres in their honour, while the others populated other villages in Greek Macedonia and Western Thrace. The Bulgarian government settled Bulgarian refugees from Thrace and Macedonia (from the region of Edessa). In 1929, another wave of emigration to Greece followed.

Today

Today, Mandritsa is a small village of around 70 residents, part of them still speaking a distinct Tosk Albanian dialect. The village has well-preserved three-storey adobe and brick houses which represent the Thracian style featuring wood-carved ceilings, wrought iron balconies and columns.

Mandritsa has two churches: the small single-naved cemetery church of St Nedelya built in 1708, which is one of the oldest churches in the Eastern Rhodopes, and the three-naved village church of St Demetrius constructed in 1835, which is partially destroyed, but planned to be reconstructed.

As of 2016, Mandritsa has a newly built small hotel with a bar and a restaurant. The hotel bears the name Bukor shtepi, Albanian for "beautiful house".[4]

Language

Numbers in standard Albanian and Mandritsa Tosk[5]
One Two Three Four Five Six Seven Eight Nine Ten
Standard Albanian një dy tre katër pesë gjashtë shtatë tetë nëntë dhjetë
Mandritsa Tosk ni g'u tri kátrë pésë g'áštë štátë tétë në'ntë zjétë

Footnotes

  1. ^ Саръмов, Росен (2001-03-29). "Албанска приказка умира на 50 км от Любимец" (in Bulgarian). Марица днес. Archived from the original on 2007-03-30. Retrieved 2007-03-08.
  2. ^ сп. Тема, Понеделниците на Мандрица, Искра Ценкова.
  3. ^ Македония и Одринско. Статистика на населението от 1873 г. Sofia: Macedonian Scientific Institute. 1995. p. 57.
  4. ^ Калицин, Лили (2016-03-09). "Най-неочаквано посрещане в село Мандрица" (in Bulgarian). Момичетата от града. Archived from the original on 2016-03-10. Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  5. ^ "Numbers in Over 5000 Languages". Retrieved 2007-03-08.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 9 August 2022, at 12:27
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