Bulgaria’s Dobrich to Restore, Promote ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress in Joint Cultural Tourism Project with Romania’s Constanta

Bulgaria’s Dobrich to Restore, Promote ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress in Joint Cultural Tourism Project with Romania’s Constanta

The Late Antiquity and medieval fortress Slavnata Kanara (The Glorious Rock) near the towns of Debrene and Prilep in Northeast Bulgaria. Photo: Dobrich Online

Part of the ruins of the Late Antiquity and medieval fortress Slavnata Kanara (The Glorious Rock) near the towns of Debrene and Prilep in Northeast Bulgaria. Photo: Dobrich Online

The Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress near the towns of Debrene and Prilep in Northeast Bulgaria is to be restored and promoted as a site for cultural tourism as part of a joint project of the Administration of Bulgaria’s Dobrich District and the Prefecture of Constanta County in Romania.

The proposal for the project entitled “Historical Heritage in the Trans-border Region Dobrich – Constanta” has already been submitted for EU funding to the office of the “INTERREG V-A Romania – Bulgaria 2014-2020” Program in Calarasi, Romania, the press service of the Dobrich District has announced.

In addition to the local authorities in Bulgaria’s Dobrich and Romania’s Constanta, the project for the Slavata Kanara Fortress has been drafted in partnership with the Dobrich Regional Museum of History, the Museum of National History and Archaeology in Romania’s Black Sea city of Constanta, and the State Forestry Service in Bulgaria’s Black Sea town of Balchik.

The Glorious Rock Fortress in Northeast Bulgaria is a small fortress built to protect an Early Christian basilica from the Late Roman period in the 4th-5th century AD, and was also in use during the Early Byzantine period in the 6th century AD, and the First Bulgarian Empire (632/680-1018 AD); the site also harbors Early Christian rock monasteries, as well as, possibly, Ancient Bulgar settlements.

In 2014, the Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress yielded two interesting discoveries when the local archaeologists found there a Byzantine coin treasure and the belt of an Ancient Bulgar warrior.

Unfortunately, the 2015 excavations of the site fell through after Bulgaria’s central government gave no funding, and Dobrichka Municipality which was planning to fund new digs eventually twice refused to do so.

The new cultural tourism project provides for the partial restoration of the Glorious Rock Fortress and for building a chairlift linking it to a nearby rock.

In addition to being of impressive historical, archaeological, and cultural value, the site of the Glorious Fortress near Bulgaria’s Debrene and Prilep is also known for its beautiful nature and picturesque landscape.

Debrene is also known for its folklore festival where Bulgarian national folklore songs and dances from the region of Dobrudzha (Northeast Bulgaria) are performed.

Thus, archaeology, nature, and folklore provide “an excellent perspective for turning the archaeological site into a tourist attraction”, notes the Administration of the Dobrich Disrict.

The site of the Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress in Northeast Bulgaria was excavated in 2014 by archaeologists from the Dobrich Regional Museum of History for the first time since the 1980s.

The most exciting 2014 archaeological discoveries at the Glorious Rock Fortress near Prilep and Debrene included not only the 6th century AD Byzantine treasure of 1,202 coins, and the 16 applications of the belt of an Ancient Bulgar warrior, but also three skathas – long Roman swords found by a local resident and turned in to the museum authorities.

The announcement of the Dobrich District press center provides no information about the respective Romanian project that will be part of the joint initiative.

However, the project for the Glorious Rock Fortress is the third recent Bulgarian-Romanian project seeking funding from INTERREG for the development of cultural, historical, and archaeological tourism.

Check out the other two recent Bulgarian-Romanian projects seeking EU funding from the INTERREG Program in the cultural heritage field:

Bulgaria’s Vratsa, Romania’s Dobrosloveni Sign Joint Project for Open-Air Archaeological Museums in Ohoden, Resca

Bulgaria’s Varshets to Set Up Paleontology Museum with Sculptures of Prehistoric Mammals in Joint Project with Romania’s Constanta

Also check out our other recent stories about the archaeological efforts on the site of the Glorious Rock Fortress:

Bulgaria’s Dobrichka Municipality Refuses Again Funding for Excavations of ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress

Bulgarian Cabinet Grants Dobrich History Museum Excavation Rights for ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress

Silver Buckles of Ancient Bulgar Warrior Aristocrats Displayed for the First Time by Bulgaria’s National Museum of History

Bulgarian Archaeologists Find Bronze Belt Applications of Ancient Bulgar Warrior at ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress

Archaeologists Discover Treasure of Byzantine Bronze Coins at ‘Glorious Rock’ Fortress in Northeast Bulgaria

Background Infonotes:

The Late Roman, Early Byzantine, and medieval Bulgarian fortress in the area known as Slavnata Kanara (The Glorious Rock) is located near the towns of Debrene and Prilep, Dobrichka Municipality, Dobrich District, in Northeast Bulgaria. There are traces of civilized life from the Early Iron Age (the 12th – 6th century BC) but the construction of an Early Christian basilica and the fortress are dated to the second half of the 4th century AD. The fortress has several archaeological layers – a Late Roman layer from the 4th-5th century AD, an Early Byzantine lawyer from the 6th century AD, and a Bulgarian (Bulgar) layer from the 10th century AD, the time of the height of the First Bulgarian Empire (r. 632/680-1018 AD). It was destroyed three times – during the barbarian invasions of the Huns in the middle of the 5th century AD, during the invasion of the Slavs and Avars at the end of the 6th century AD, and during the Bulgarian-Byzantine wars at the end of the 10th century AD.

The Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress was the home of a large religious complex including a Christian basilica, which has now been partly excavated by the Bulgarian archaeologists. The basilica is said to be disproportionately large compared with the size of the fortress itself, which is why the Bulgarian archaeologists believe that the fortress was built after the temple in order to protect the religious site. The fortress has an area of 2 decares (app. 0.5 acres). The basilica itself is dated to the Late Roman period, and was in operation until the end of the 6th century AD.

The Starata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress near Debrene and Prilep is located in the woods of the Batovo Valley which starts at the Black Sea coast and continues inland. It is not mentioned in the known historical sources, which is why its real name is unknown. It was first described by the found of modern-day Bulgarian archaeology, Czech-Bulgarian archaeologist Karel Skorpil, at the beginning of the 20th century, and was excavated at the end of the 1980s by Bulgarian archaeologist Assoc. Prof. Sergey Torbatov from the National Institute and Museum of Archaeology. It was further excavated in 2014 by archaeologists from the Dobrich Regional Museum of History, with lead archaeologist Boyan Totev, and with funding from the Dobrichka Municipality.

The archaeologists found there an amphora containing a treasure of 1,202 6th century AD Byzantine bronze coins of the lowest face value (more specifically attributed to the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I the Great (r. 527-565 AD)), three skathas – long Roman swords, and the belt of an Ancient Bulgar warrior, among other artifacts. During its first archaeological excavations in the 1980s, the Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress yielded another interesting find – an Ancient Bulgar medieval saber from the 9th-10th century AD.

The medieval Bulgarian home where the belt was found was made of wattle, wood, and mud; other artifacts found in it include clothing buttons and pottery; the archaeologists believe that the home was destroyed by an arson, most likely when the Slavnata Kanara (Glorious Rock) Fortress was conquered by the troops of Knyaz Svietoslav I Igorevich, ruler of Kievan Rus (r. 945-972 AD) who invaded the First Bulgarian Empire in 968-971 AD), or by the Byzantine forces that conquered the eastern part of the First Bulgarian Empire in 971 AD. The archaeological data indicate that the late 10th century AD was when the Slavnata Kanara Fortress ceased to exist – except for the discovery of part of a Viking sword which is taken to mean that the fortress could have been inhabited at a later period as well – during the Second Bulgarian Empire (1185-1396 AD).