Bulgaria, officially Republic of Bulgaria, republic (2005 est. pop.
7,450,000), 42,823 sq mi (110,912 sq km), SE Europe, on the E Balkan
Peninsula. It is bounded by the Black Sea on the east, by Romania on
the north, by Serbia and Macedonia on the west, by Greece on the south,
and by European Turkey on the southeast. Sofia is the capital. Other
important cities are Varna and Burgas (the main Black Sea ports of
Bulgaria), Plovdiv and Ruse.
Land and People
Central
Bulgaria is traversed from east to west by ranges of the Balkan Mts.
(Stara Planina, or “Old Mountains” in Bulgarian). A fertile plateau
runs north of the Balkans to the Danube River, which forms most of the
northern border. In the southwest is the Rhodope range, which includes
Bulgaria's highest point, Musala Mt. (9,592 ft/2,923 m). The Thracian
plain lies south of the Balkans and east of the Rhodope. The Danube,
the Isk?r, the Maritsa, and the Struma are the principal rivers.
The
population consists chiefly of Bulgars. There is a substantial minority
of Turks, and smaller groups of Gypsies and Macedonians, although
Bulgaria, with its historic claim to Macedonia, refuses to recognize
Macedonians as distinct from Bulgars. Bulgarian is the predominant
language. Most of the population belongs to the Bulgarian Orthodox
Church; in 1953 the Bulgarian patriarchate, which had been disbanded in
1946, was reestablished. There is also a substantial Muslim minority.
Institutions of higher education include the universities of Sofia,
Plovdiv, Veliko T?rnovo, and Varna.
Economy
Until
1989, Bulgaria had a Soviet-style economy in which nearly all
agricultural and industrial enterprises were state-controlled. A
stagnant economy, shortages of food, energy, and consumer goods, an
enormous foreign debt, and an obsolete and inefficient industrial
complex instigated attempts at market-oriented reform in the 1990s.
Traditionally an agricultural country, Bulgaria has been considerably
industrialized since World War II. The leading industries are machine
building, metalworking, food processing, engineering, and the
production of chemicals, textiles, and electronics. Bulgaria's chief
mineral resources include bauxite, copper, lead, zinc, coal, brown coal
(lignite), iron ore, and oil and natural gas. There are many mineral
springs. Agriculture accounts for more than 20% of the gross national
product and employs about the same percentage of the workforce. The
principal crops are wheat, oilseeds, corn, barley, vegetables, and
tobacco. Grapes and other fruit, as well as roses, are grown, and wine
and brandy production is important. More than 80% of Bulgaria's trade
is with former Soviet-bloc countries.
Government
Under
the constitution of 1991 Bulgaria is a parliamentary republic with an
elected president and 15 ministers. The nation has a unicameral
national assembly made up of 240 popularly elected members.
Administratively, Bulgaria is divided into nine provinces or oblasts.
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