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Nišava

The Nišava or Nishava (Bulgarian and Serbian Cyrillic: Нишава, Serbian pronunciation: [nǐʃaʋa]) is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia, a right tributary, and with a length of 218 kilometres (135 mi)[1] also the longest one, of the South Morava.

Nišava (Nishava, Нишава)
The Sićevo Gorge, eastern Serbia
Location
CountryBulgaria, Serbia
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationBulgaria, Stara Planina mountains
Mouth 
 • location
Južna Morava, west of Niš, Serbia
 • coordinates
43°22′14″N 21°46′08″E / 43.37056°N 21.76889°E / 43.37056; 21.76889
Length218 km (135 mi)[1]
Basin size4,086 km2 (1,578 sq mi)[2]
Discharge 
 • average36 m3/s (1,300 cu ft/s) at the mouth
Basin features
ProgressionSouth MoravaGreat MoravaDanubeBlack Sea
The Nišava before Kalotina in Bulgaria

Course edit

Bulgaria edit

The Nišava originates in western Bulgaria, in the Stara Planina mountains (east of Kom Peak) near the village of Gintsi. Its source is close to the Serbian border. It enters Serbia after 67 kilometres (42 mi) of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries.

Because it flows through Gintsi, the upper course of the river is known as Ginska (Cyrillic: Гинска). It first flows to the south, then sharply turns west into the Godech Kettle, passing through Razboishte, after which it forms a gorge. Coming out of the gorge, it reaches Kalotina, a major border crossing on the Bulgarian-Serbian border (Kalotina-Gradina), and continues west into Serbia.

Serbia edit

Flowing generally to the west for the remaining 151 kilometres (94 mi), it passes near Dimitrovgrad, Pirot, Bela Palanka, Niška Banja and Niš, one of the largest cities in Serbia, 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) after which the Nišava empties into the Južna Morava. With the rapid growth of Niš in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs, the banks of the Nišava are urbanized almost to its mouth.

Geography edit

The river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin. Its own drainage area covers 4,086 square kilometres (1,578 sq mi), of which about 73% is in Serbia, the rest in Bulgaria.[2] The Nišava is not navigable. It is not only the longest tributary of the Južna Morava, but also the largest one in terms of discharge (36 metres per second (120 ft/s)). It has many smaller tributaries, the most important being the Temštica from the right, and the Jerma (or Sukovska reka), Crvena reka, Koritnička reka and Kutinska reka from the left.

In its Serbian part, the Nišava has carved a composite valley with several depressions (Dimitrovgrad, Pirot (or Basara; Cyrillic: Басара), Bela Palanka and Niš). However, the most prominent geological feature the river has formed is the Sićevo Gorge. There are numerous caves in the step-like limestone cliffs, the majority of which remains unexplored.[3]

Sićevo Gorge edit

The gorge is located between Bela Palanka and Niška Banja. The gorge is 17 kilometres (11 mi) long, and 350 to 400 metres (1,150 to 1,310 ft) deep. The gorge is a composite one, which means in consists of several gorges and widenings, like the Prosečka gorge, Ostrovička basin or Gradištanski canyon.[3]

The river is quite powerful in the gorge, which is used for two power stations ("Sićevo" and "Ostrovica") used for electricity production, irrigation and fishery. The plants are old, from the first half of the 20th century.[3] "Sićevo" was built in 1909 as "Sveta Petka", and was declared a cultural monument.[4] In some parts canyon like-structures (like inverse valley slopes at Gradištanski canyon) were formed by the river. The gorge itself carved through the Kunovica plateau between the southern slopes of the Mountains of Svrljig and the mountain of Suva Planina, and the surrounding areas are known for their high-quality vineyards.[3] There is also a large Ostrovica quarry in the gorge, where six villages are located, the largest one being Sićevo that gives the name to the whole gorge.

Wildlife edit

The Oblik rise, above the Sićevo gorge, is a location where extremely rare plants Serbian ramonda and Natalie's ramonda can be found.[3]

Trouts can be find on the entire river's course, with their number varying over the years. Over 100 bird species live only in the gorge section, including golden eagle.[3]

Human history edit

North of the river, in the Sićevo gorge, excavations in the Mala Balanica cave began in 2005. Mousterian stone tools from the Middle Paleolithic were discovered until 2009. Numerous animal remains were discovered in the same layer, up to 30 centimetres (12 in) deep. A hominid mandible was discovered at the depth of 1.5 metres (4 ft 11 in) in 2007. It is concluded that it belongs to a young adult person, though the sex can't be specified. Originally believed to be 200,000 to 300,000 years old, during the 2013 examination of the remains it was estimated that the lower jaw was not younger than 397,000 years, and probably older than 525,000 years, which makes it one of the oldest discovered remains of the Homo heidelbergensis in Europe. Later, only 50 metres (160 ft) further from this finding, remains of Neanderthals were discovered. Four teeth belonged to one adult and one child, and are estimated to be 300,000 years old. It was suggested that some kind of contact of different species of humans happened in the region, one group being from Europe, and the other coming from Asia Minor.[5][6][7][8]

On the southern side of the river, on the Suva Planina, there is a Pešturina cave, nicknamed the "Serbian Atapuerca".[9] Artifacts from the Middle and Upper Paleolithic were discovered since the archaeological excavations began in 2006.[10] The remains, identified as the Mousterian culture, were dated from 102,000 BP+ 5,000 to 39,000 BP + 3,000, which makes Pešturina one of the latest surviving Neanderthal habitats.[11] In April 2019 it was announced that the remains of the Neanderthal man have been discovered. It is the first discovery of Neanderthal remains in Serbia. All Paleolithic sites in the Central Balkans, including discoveries in the Nišava valley, have the noticeable absence of the Aurignacian layers. That points to the theory that the expansion of the early modern humans into Europe occurred via the Danube corridor, which allowed for the small Neanderthal communities to survive beyond 40,000 BP in some isolated pockets.[12][13][14]

The Celts called it a Fairy river. The valley of the river is rich in Byzantine artefacts, and many monasteries, active, or in ruins.[3]

The Nišava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia: the route follows the valleys of the Morava, Nišava and Maritsa and onwards towards Constantinople, present-day Istanbul. During the Roman period, the road was known as Via Militaris, and later as the Tsarigrad Road. Both the Belgrade-Sofia-Istanbul road and the railway follow this route.[3]

Importance edit

After being divided into districts in 1992, the Nišava District (with Niš as administrative center) is named after the river.[15] Nishava Cove in Rugged Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Nišava.[16]

In 2008, cultivation of various aromatic and medicinal herbs began in the Serbian section of the Nišava watershed and the valleys of its tributaries. In time, lavender became the major crop, spreading on numerous hills and mountain slopes. Other herbs include Roman chamomile, dwarf everlast, lemon balm, hyssop and Damask rose. Modified Mediterranean micro-climate in the valley, spreading from Greece and North Macedonia through the Niš and Leskovac basins in the South Morava valley, suits the herbs, so as the ph-neutral limestone terrain and altitude from 450 to 550 metres (1,480 to 1,800 ft). Numerous eco-plantations and oil distilleries were built. By 2020, the region became known as Serbian Provence.[17]

The region was famous for its vineyards, which were neglected for a long time, but by the 2020s they also experienced new boom. Planting of orchards also expanded. In some parts of the valley, lemon and banana trees are planted. The area used to be known for sirene production, too. Number of once popular breed of Svrljig sheep dwindled.[3]

See also edit

  •  ; Morava - Vardar (Axios) Navigation Route (About 1,200 km shorter route (three days shorter time of navigation) from Belgrade to Port of Thessaloniki than across Danube, Black Sea and Aegean Sea. Electric power production, improvement of water quality and regulation of flooding wave.)
  • (Concepts of regulation of rivers Great Morava and South Morava for navigation and hydropower production.)

Sources edit

  • Mala Prosvetina Enciklopedija, Third edition (1985); Prosveta; ISBN 86-07-00001-2
  • Jovan Đ. Marković (1990): Enciklopedijski geografski leksikon Jugoslavije; Svjetlost-Sarajevo; ISBN 86-01-02651-6

References edit

  1. ^ a b Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of Serbia 2017 (PDF) (in Serbian and English). Belgrade: Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. October 2017. p. 16. ISSN 0354-4206. Retrieved 30 May 2018.
  2. ^ a b Velika Morava River Basin, ICPDR, November 2009, p. 2
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Dragan Bosnić (1 May 2022). У долини Вилине реке [In the valley of Fairy river]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1283 (in Serbian). pp. 20–21.
  4. ^ Toma Todorović (12 November 2023). = Хидроелектрана "Сићево" проглашена спомеником културе [Hydroelectric power plant "Sićevo" declared a cultural monument]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 21.
  5. ^ Mirjana Roksandic et al.: A human mandible (BH-1) from the Pleistocene deposits of Mala Balanica cave (Sićevo Gorge, Niš, Serbia). In: Journal of Human Evolution. Band 61, Nr. 2, 2011, S. 186–196, doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2011.03.003, [1]
  6. ^ William J. Rink et al.: New Radiometric Ages for the BH-1 Hominin from Balanica (Serbia): Implications for Understanding the Role of the Balkans in Middle Pleistocene Human Evolution. In: PLoS ONE. Band 8, Nr. 2: e54608, doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0054608
  7. ^ "Tajne fosila u Maloj Balanici". Večernje Novosti. Tanjug.
  8. ^ Toma Todorović (8 April 2022). "Praljudi živeli u Sićevačkoj klisuri" [Ancient hominids lived in Sićevo gorge]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 12.
  9. ^ Toma Todorović (24 July 2017), "Bogatstvo za koje se malo zna", Politika (in Serbian), p. 14
  10. ^ Dušan P. Mihailović; Stefan P. Milošević (2012). Istraživanja paleolitskog nalazišta Pešturina kod Niša (in Serbian and English). Journal of Serbian Archaeological Society.
  11. ^ Dušan Mihailović (2014). Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Research in the Central Balkans. Serbian Archaeological Society. ISBN 978-86-913229-9-1.
  12. ^ Predrag Radović; Joshua Lindal; Dušan Mihailović; Mirjana Roksandić (June 2019). "The first Neanderthal specimen from Serbia: Maxillary first molar from the Late Pleistocene of Pešturina Cave". Journal of Human Evolution. 131: 139–151. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2019.03.018. PMID 31182199. S2CID 145899241.
  13. ^ "Први налаз неандерталца из Србије" [First discovery of a Neanderthal in Serbia] (in Serbian). University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy. 18 April 2019.
  14. ^ University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy (18 April 2019). "Prvi Neandertalac u Srbiji" [First Neanderthal man in Serbia] (in Serbian). Vugl.rs.
  15. ^ "Uredba o načinu vršenja poslova ministarstava i posebnih organizacija van njihovog sedišta" [Decree on execution of the works of the ministries and special agencies outside of their seats] (PDF). Government of the Republic of Serbia (in Serbian). 1995.
  16. ^ "Composite gazetteer of Antarctica - Nishava Cove". Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). 2022.
  17. ^ Anadolija (4 July 2020). "Mirisna polja lavande na jugu Srbije, eterična ulja za kupce iz EU" [Aromatic lavender fields in southern Serbia, essential oils for the EU byers] (in Serbian). N1.

External links edit

nišava, district, serbia, district, nishava, bulgarian, serbian, cyrillic, Нишава, serbian, pronunciation, nǐʃaʋa, river, bulgaria, serbia, right, tributary, with, length, kilometres, also, longest, south, morava, nishava, Нишава, sićevo, gorge, eastern, serbi. For the district in Serbia see Nisava District The Nisava or Nishava Bulgarian and Serbian Cyrillic Nishava Serbian pronunciation nǐʃaʋa is a river in Bulgaria and Serbia a right tributary and with a length of 218 kilometres 135 mi 1 also the longest one of the South Morava Nisava Nishava Nishava The Sicevo Gorge eastern SerbiaLocationCountryBulgaria SerbiaPhysical characteristicsSource locationBulgaria Stara Planina mountainsMouth locationJuzna Morava west of Nis Serbia coordinates43 22 14 N 21 46 08 E 43 37056 N 21 76889 E 43 37056 21 76889Length218 km 135 mi 1 Basin size4 086 km2 1 578 sq mi 2 Discharge average36 m3 s 1 300 cu ft s at the mouthBasin featuresProgressionSouth Morava Great Morava Danube Black Sea The Nisava before Kalotina in Bulgaria Contents 1 Course 1 1 Bulgaria 1 2 Serbia 2 Geography 2 1 Sicevo Gorge 3 Wildlife 4 Human history 5 Importance 6 See also 7 Sources 8 References 9 External linksCourse editBulgaria edit The Nisava originates in western Bulgaria in the Stara Planina mountains east of Kom Peak near the village of Gintsi Its source is close to the Serbian border It enters Serbia after 67 kilometres 42 mi of flow through Bulgaria without receiving any major tributaries Because it flows through Gintsi the upper course of the river is known as Ginska Cyrillic Ginska It first flows to the south then sharply turns west into the Godech Kettle passing through Razboishte after which it forms a gorge Coming out of the gorge it reaches Kalotina a major border crossing on the Bulgarian Serbian border Kalotina Gradina and continues west into Serbia Serbia edit Flowing generally to the west for the remaining 151 kilometres 94 mi it passes near Dimitrovgrad Pirot Bela Palanka Niska Banja and Nis one of the largest cities in Serbia 10 kilometres 6 2 mi after which the Nisava empties into the Juzna Morava With the rapid growth of Nis in previous decades and its still fast growing suburbs the banks of the Nisava are urbanized almost to its mouth Geography editThe river belongs to the Black Sea drainage basin Its own drainage area covers 4 086 square kilometres 1 578 sq mi of which about 73 is in Serbia the rest in Bulgaria 2 The Nisava is not navigable It is not only the longest tributary of the Juzna Morava but also the largest one in terms of discharge 36 metres per second 120 ft s It has many smaller tributaries the most important being the Temstica from the right and the Jerma or Sukovska reka Crvena reka Koritnicka reka and Kutinska reka from the left In its Serbian part the Nisava has carved a composite valley with several depressions Dimitrovgrad Pirot or Basara Cyrillic Basara Bela Palanka and Nis However the most prominent geological feature the river has formed is the Sicevo Gorge There are numerous caves in the step like limestone cliffs the majority of which remains unexplored 3 Sicevo Gorge edit Main article Sicevo Gorge The gorge is located between Bela Palanka and Niska Banja The gorge is 17 kilometres 11 mi long and 350 to 400 metres 1 150 to 1 310 ft deep The gorge is a composite one which means in consists of several gorges and widenings like the Prosecka gorge Ostrovicka basin or Gradistanski canyon 3 The river is quite powerful in the gorge which is used for two power stations Sicevo and Ostrovica used for electricity production irrigation and fishery The plants are old from the first half of the 20th century 3 Sicevo was built in 1909 as Sveta Petka and was declared a cultural monument 4 In some parts canyon like structures like inverse valley slopes at Gradistanski canyon were formed by the river The gorge itself carved through the Kunovica plateau between the southern slopes of the Mountains of Svrljig and the mountain of Suva Planina and the surrounding areas are known for their high quality vineyards 3 There is also a large Ostrovica quarry in the gorge where six villages are located the largest one being Sicevo that gives the name to the whole gorge Wildlife editThe Oblik rise above the Sicevo gorge is a location where extremely rare plants Serbian ramonda and Natalie s ramonda can be found 3 Trouts can be find on the entire river s course with their number varying over the years Over 100 bird species live only in the gorge section including golden eagle 3 Human history editNorth of the river in the Sicevo gorge excavations in the Mala Balanica cave began in 2005 Mousterian stone tools from the Middle Paleolithic were discovered until 2009 Numerous animal remains were discovered in the same layer up to 30 centimetres 12 in deep A hominid mandible was discovered at the depth of 1 5 metres 4 ft 11 in in 2007 It is concluded that it belongs to a young adult person though the sex can t be specified Originally believed to be 200 000 to 300 000 years old during the 2013 examination of the remains it was estimated that the lower jaw was not younger than 397 000 years and probably older than 525 000 years which makes it one of the oldest discovered remains of the Homo heidelbergensis in Europe Later only 50 metres 160 ft further from this finding remains of Neanderthals were discovered Four teeth belonged to one adult and one child and are estimated to be 300 000 years old It was suggested that some kind of contact of different species of humans happened in the region one group being from Europe and the other coming from Asia Minor 5 6 7 8 On the southern side of the river on the Suva Planina there is a Pesturina cave nicknamed the Serbian Atapuerca 9 Artifacts from the Middle and Upper Paleolithic were discovered since the archaeological excavations began in 2006 10 The remains identified as the Mousterian culture were dated from 102 000 BP 5 000 to 39 000 BP 3 000 which makes Pesturina one of the latest surviving Neanderthal habitats 11 In April 2019 it was announced that the remains of the Neanderthal man have been discovered It is the first discovery of Neanderthal remains in Serbia All Paleolithic sites in the Central Balkans including discoveries in the Nisava valley have the noticeable absence of the Aurignacian layers That points to the theory that the expansion of the early modern humans into Europe occurred via the Danube corridor which allowed for the small Neanderthal communities to survive beyond 40 000 BP in some isolated pockets 12 13 14 The Celts called it a Fairy river The valley of the river is rich in Byzantine artefacts and many monasteries active or in ruins 3 The Nisava valley is part of a major natural route that from ancient times has connected Europe and Asia the route follows the valleys of the Morava Nisava and Maritsa and onwards towards Constantinople present day Istanbul During the Roman period the road was known as Via Militaris and later as the Tsarigrad Road Both the Belgrade Sofia Istanbul road and the railway follow this route 3 Importance editAfter being divided into districts in 1992 the Nisava District with Nis as administrative center is named after the river 15 Nishava Cove in Rugged Island in the South Shetland Islands Antarctica is named after Nisava 16 In 2008 cultivation of various aromatic and medicinal herbs began in the Serbian section of the Nisava watershed and the valleys of its tributaries In time lavender became the major crop spreading on numerous hills and mountain slopes Other herbs include Roman chamomile dwarf everlast lemon balm hyssop and Damask rose Modified Mediterranean micro climate in the valley spreading from Greece and North Macedonia through the Nis and Leskovac basins in the South Morava valley suits the herbs so as the ph neutral limestone terrain and altitude from 450 to 550 metres 1 480 to 1 800 ft Numerous eco plantations and oil distilleries were built By 2020 the region became known as Serbian Provence 17 The region was famous for its vineyards which were neglected for a long time but by the 2020s they also experienced new boom Planting of orchards also expanded In some parts of the valley lemon and banana trees are planted The area used to be known for sirene production too Number of once popular breed of Svrljig sheep dwindled 3 See also editPIM Ivan Milutinovic Belgrade Serbia Morava Vardar Axios Navigation Route About 1 200 km shorter route three days shorter time of navigation from Belgrade to Port of Thessaloniki than across Danube Black Sea and Aegean Sea Electric power production improvement of water quality and regulation of flooding wave Morava Vardar Axios Navigation Route map Hydropower and navigation system Morava Concepts of regulation of rivers Great Morava and South Morava for navigation and hydropower production Sources editMala Prosvetina Enciklopedija Third edition 1985 Prosveta ISBN 86 07 00001 2 Jovan Đ Markovic 1990 Enciklopedijski geografski leksikon Jugoslavije Svjetlost Sarajevo ISBN 86 01 02651 6References edit a b Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of Serbia 2017 PDF in Serbian and English Belgrade Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia October 2017 p 16 ISSN 0354 4206 Retrieved 30 May 2018 a b Velika Morava River Basin ICPDR November 2009 p 2 a b c d e f g h i Dragan Bosnic 1 May 2022 U dolini Viline reke In the valley of Fairy river Politika Magazin No 1283 in Serbian pp 20 21 Toma Todorovic 12 November 2023 Hidroelektrana Siћevo proglashena spomenikom kulture Hydroelectric power plant Sicevo declared a cultural monument Politika in Serbian p 21 Mirjana Roksandic et al A human mandible BH 1 from the Pleistocene deposits of Mala Balanica cave Sicevo Gorge Nis Serbia In Journal of Human Evolution Band 61 Nr 2 2011 S 186 196 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2011 03 003 1 William J Rink et al New Radiometric Ages for the BH 1 Hominin from Balanica Serbia Implications for Understanding the Role of the Balkans in Middle Pleistocene Human Evolution In PLoS ONE Band 8 Nr 2 e54608 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0054608 Tajne fosila u Maloj Balanici Vecernje Novosti Tanjug Toma Todorovic 8 April 2022 Praljudi ziveli u Sicevackoj klisuri Ancient hominids lived in Sicevo gorge Politika in Serbian p 12 Toma Todorovic 24 July 2017 Bogatstvo za koje se malo zna Politika in Serbian p 14 Dusan P Mihailovic Stefan P Milosevic 2012 Istrazivanja paleolitskog nalazista Pesturina kod Nisa in Serbian and English Journal of Serbian Archaeological Society Dusan Mihailovic 2014 Palaeolithic and Mesolithic Research in the Central Balkans Serbian Archaeological Society ISBN 978 86 913229 9 1 Predrag Radovic Joshua Lindal Dusan Mihailovic Mirjana Roksandic June 2019 The first Neanderthal specimen from Serbia Maxillary first molar from the Late Pleistocene of Pesturina Cave Journal of Human Evolution 131 139 151 doi 10 1016 j jhevol 2019 03 018 PMID 31182199 S2CID 145899241 Prvi nalaz neandertalca iz Srbiјe First discovery of a Neanderthal in Serbia in Serbian University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy 18 April 2019 University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy 18 April 2019 Prvi Neandertalac u Srbiji First Neanderthal man in Serbia in Serbian Vugl rs Uredba o nacinu vrsenja poslova ministarstava i posebnih organizacija van njihovog sedista Decree on execution of the works of the ministries and special agencies outside of their seats PDF Government of the Republic of Serbia in Serbian 1995 Composite gazetteer of Antarctica Nishava Cove Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research SCAR 2022 Anadolija 4 July 2020 Mirisna polja lavande na jugu Srbije etericna ulja za kupce iz EU Aromatic lavender fields in southern Serbia essential oils for the EU byers in Serbian N1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nisava Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nisava amp oldid 1210902552, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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