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Tuhovishta

Tuhovishta (variation of the name Tuvishta or Duhovishta) is a village in Southwest Bulgaria, part of Satovcha Municipality, Blagoevgrad Province.

Tuhovishta
Туховища
Village
Tuhovishta
Location of Tuhovishta
Coordinates: 41°30′N 24°3′E / 41.500°N 24.050°E / 41.500; 24.050
Country Bulgaria
Province
(Oblast)
Blagoevgrad
Municipality
(Obshtina)
Satovcha
Government
 • MayorShukri Shukriev (CEDB)
Area
 • Total17.151 km2 (6.622 sq mi)
Elevation
836 m (2,743 ft)
Population
 (2010-12-15)[2]
 • Total815
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal Code
2939
Area code07548
Vehicle registrationE

Geography edit

Tuhovishta Village is located in the southwestern Rhodope Mountains and is part of the historical and geographical area Chech. t is located about 2 kilometers from the border with Greece. Altitude of the village is 700–999 meters and the area of the land is 17.15 km2. The village adjoins the lands of the following villages: in the east with Greece's border, with the lands of depopulated villages of Boren and Manastir, in the west with the lands of Slashten and Valkosel, in the south with the land of Godeshevo and in the North with Zhizhevo's land. The village is located 20 km south of Satovcha.

Relief edit

 
Winter view of Tuhovishta

Tuhovishta is located in the Dabrash's hill, so the relief is mainly mountainous and hilly, which passes in the high parts in hilly or mountainous hilly and in places is very rugged. From a geological point of view the land is presented basically from rocks, granite, rhyolite and sandstone. Brown forest and sandy-clay soils dominate the land. Overall, the relief is extremely varied. The village is situated at the crossroads between several small hills. In a flat lands, rocks, naked peaks and valley riverfront. Over Tuhovishta are two of the highest peaks in the region - Chukata (local name - Mitnitsata) in the northeast at an altitude of 1010 m and the highest peak in the region Dikilitash Peak, better known as "Pobit Kamen", with a height of 1100 m. Peak Pobit Kamen is located between Tuhovishta and Valkosel. In late autumn and late spring, when over the village and the surrounding falls frost but over Pobit Kamen precipitations are of snow.

Climate edit

The climate is moderate continental (subtropical) with particular influence in the high mountain areas (Chukata and Dikilitash). Average annual temperature is 10 °C. The average January temperature is moving according to altitude between 0 °C to 7 °C. Summer is warm and sunny. The average annual maximum temperature in the valley of the Mesta river is 32-36 °C, but in the mid-part 23-32 °C. Predominates the autumn-winter and spring-summer rainfalls. Seasons are distinct - summer hot and winter - moderately cold.

Flora and fauna edit

Forests are rich in coniferous and deciduous species - pine, spruce, beech, fir, oak, birch, willow and others. Since Tuhovishta is in a transition from hilly to mountainous area it can be noted that the coniferous, wood or bush vegetation exceeds the deciduous vegetation several times. Of species it can be mentioned bear, hare, wolf, fox, marten, deer, wild boar and many others. Common in summer are snakes and adders, in shady places vipers, other reptiles are lizards, salamander, and many others.

Hydrographic network includes the Mesta River, Dospat and many smaller rivers and springs. There are many micro-dams used for irrigation, fishing and more.

History edit

 
Roman bronze ring found in Tuhovishta

The village has an outdoor medieval necropolis.

In Ottoman Documents the village is mentioned as Thuishta (in Ottoman Turkish: تحويشته).

The population of the village is Muslim and since 19th century Tuhovishta is a Muslim village in Nevrokopian territory of the Ottoman Empire.

 
Token found in Tuhovishta of the 17th - 18th century for accounting purposes. The master who made the token was called Wolf Lauffer

In "Ethnography of vilayets Adrianople, Monastir and Salonika", published in Constantinople in 1878 and reflecting statistics of the male population since 1873, Tuhovishta is listed as a village with 36 households and 90 inhabitants Muslims.

According to Stephen Verkovich at the end of 19th century Tuhovishta has a Muslim male population of 120 people living in 36 houses.

According to Vasil Kanchov's statistics to 1900 Tuhovishta is a Bulgarian-Moslem village. There live 500 Bulgarians-Muslims in 70 houses.

In 1912, during the Balkan war, Tuhovishta is a victim of the Christianization of the Muslims. Plovdiv's church wants to Christianize Muslims and local rebels burn Tuhovishta along with other villages while the population hides along the river and the big hills.

In 1949 the village enters into the composition of the Municipality of Slashten under Decree 794 of the Presidium of the National Assembly of 24 September 1949. By decision of the Blagoevgrad District People's Council of 28 November 1958 Tuhovishta goes to the Satovcha Municipality. It is returned to the Municipality of Slashten by decree 959 of the Presidium of the National Assembly of December 23, 1965. Pursuant to Decree 2295 of the State Council of People's Republic of December 22, 1978 it was again transferred to the Municipality of Satovcha.

In 1970 the villagers are victims of to the Bulgarisation process.

During the Bulgarisation over population was exerted systematic harassment, which included banning the execution of any Muslim rites - a visit to the mosque, wearing headscarves, trousers, breeches, a Muslim burial custom, etc. Turkish names of residents were forcibly changed to Bulgarian. Many villagers find their death around the Bulgarian-Greek border in an attempt to emigrate illegally. Frequent is killing people around the border to intimidate the population. In 1989, the population gets back their Muslim names.

Population of Tuhovishta according to the census in 2003 was 859 people and puts it in eighth place in number of inhabitants of the fourteen villages comprising the Satovcha Municipality. The same place gets for its territory, this is 17,01 km2 which is 5.11% of the terrain of the Satovcha Municipality.

Emigration edit

During the existence of the village there has been continuously immigrant groups displaced to larger cities and abroad for various reasons. If we go back in 1876 we can point out many emigrated from the village and the region, on the occasion of the April Uprising which broke out on April 20, 1876 as its goal is the liberation of Bulgaria from the Ottoman Empire, therefore, all Turks Muslims and others are killed. 36 years later, in 1912 the first Balkan War broke out, which is a conflict between the Ottoman Empire and the allied Bulgaria, Serbia, Greece and Montenegro. Again, all regarded as Turks or Muslims were killed and a large population Tuhovishta, such as other villages, try to run away from the conflict. Some escaped, others remain, while others went under the knife. Several decades later th Bulgarisation process began in the early 70's and continued until the late 80's. The measures taken to convey this policy consists in a forced change of Arab-Turkish names with Bulgarian. It was prohibited the use of native language of the villagers and the entire region, forced limitation of traditional customs and rituals and the profession of their religion. This creates a conflict which people want to escape through Bulgaria's southern neighbor, Greece, and also to Turkey. Some succeeded, others were killed at the border, while others remain in the village and suffer.

Religion edit

 
The mosque in Tuhovishta

Currently the village has over 830 Tuhovishta inhabitants Bulgarian Muslims (Pomaks). The village has two mosques - one in the bottom quarter which has one minaret with two balconies, built in 1989 under the leadership of Mustafa Shukriev building techniques and masters Zeinil Kalarev, Aliosman Yumer, Yusuf Bashov and voluntary financial support of the whole village. The mosque in the bottom quarter is refreshed - repairs were made in 2000 by businessman Shukri Shukriev. The second mosque, which is older, is located in the upper quarter and there is only one balcony.

Public institutions edit

  • City Hall - Tuhovishta Village
  • Primary School "St. St. Cyril and Methodius"
  • Kindergarten
  • Center "Granichar"
  • Library

Sport edit

Football Club "Granichar" - Tuhovishta

"Granichar" - Tuhovishta was registered in 1976 and created by the idea of local residents such as Mizamidin Sinanov who is also the first coach of the team, Gosho Temendzhiyski, a teacher from the town of Gotse Delchev, Valkov, head of the outpost, who helps to make the playground, Stoicho Gabrovski, teacher from Dupnitsa and many others. Team's name "Granichar" is inherited from the cultural center in the village, which is also called "Granichar".

 
Team "Granichar" - Tuhovishta

Before Tuhovishta had an official team, the best players were taken in the neighbor villages, such as Slashten and Valkosel, where they were trained and now are at the base of Granichar. In the early years, teams of soldiers from the outpost played in the team. The strongest moment of the team was in the early 80s. Only 5 years after its creation, the team quickly rose to top positions, thanks to teachers, soldiers and residents of the village, players in the team. Some of the first players were Ahmed Kyoibashiev, Bekir Bekirov, Aliosman Kotelov, Mehmed Kyoibashiev and others.

In 2000, the team ceases to exist due to financial reasons. In 2009 the team was registered again by the initiative of local residents and sponsoring of the Tuhovishtan immigrant Mehmed Kasapov.

The team's president up today is Emin Mustafov Yumerov.

First Chamber of "Granichar" - Tuhovishta

 
Panoramic view of the Tuhovishta's football team playground
  • Sinanov
  • Tsvetanov
  • Ichev
  • Andonov
  • Zivko Yovchev
  • Mehmed Kyoybashiev
  • Ali Halimov
  • Bekir Bekirov
  • Stoicho Gabrovski
  • Gosho Temendzhiyski
  • Dzhemisap Topalov
  • Ali Dangov
  • Mehmed Imamov
  • Jamal Chaushev
  • Aliosman Kotelov

Notable people edit

  • Tarkan Tevetoğlu - grandfather of the famous German artist of Turkish origin Tarkan is from Tuhovishta.
  • Mustafa Sandal - ancestors of the Turkish pop star are immigrants from Tuhovishta.

Gallery edit

External links edit

  • (has to be opened with Internet Explorer)
  • Official channel in YouTube.com
  • Official profile in DailyMotion.com
  • Official site in Dir.bg
  • Photo album of Tuhovishta
  • Discussion forum for Tuhovishta


References edit

  1. ^ Mestni cik.bg [dead link]
  2. ^ "ТАБЛИЦА НА НАСЕЛЕНИЕТО ПО ПОСТОЯНЕН И НАСТОЯЩ АДРЕС област БЛАГОЕВГРАД община БАНСКО". grao.bg (in Bulgarian). 31 December 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2024.

tuhovishta, variation, name, tuvishta, duhovishta, village, southwest, bulgaria, part, satovcha, municipality, blagoevgrad, province, Туховищаvillagelocation, coordinates, 050country, bulgariaprovince, oblast, blagoevgradmunicipality, obshtina, satovchagovernm. Tuhovishta variation of the name Tuvishta or Duhovishta is a village in Southwest Bulgaria part of Satovcha Municipality Blagoevgrad Province Tuhovishta TuhovishaVillageTuhovishtaLocation of TuhovishtaCoordinates 41 30 N 24 3 E 41 500 N 24 050 E 41 500 24 050Country BulgariaProvince Oblast BlagoevgradMunicipality Obshtina SatovchaGovernment 1 MayorShukri Shukriev CEDB Area Total17 151 km2 6 622 sq mi Elevation836 m 2 743 ft Population 2010 12 15 2 Total815Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal Code2939Area code07548Vehicle registrationE Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Relief 1 2 Climate 1 3 Flora and fauna 2 History 3 Emigration 4 Religion 5 Public institutions 6 Sport 7 Notable people 8 Gallery 9 External links 10 ReferencesGeography editTuhovishta Village is located in the southwestern Rhodope Mountains and is part of the historical and geographical area Chech t is located about 2 kilometers from the border with Greece Altitude of the village is 700 999 meters and the area of the land is 17 15 km2 The village adjoins the lands of the following villages in the east with Greece s border with the lands of depopulated villages of Boren and Manastir in the west with the lands of Slashten and Valkosel in the south with the land of Godeshevo and in the North with Zhizhevo s land The village is located 20 km south of Satovcha Relief edit nbsp Winter view of TuhovishtaTuhovishta is located in the Dabrash s hill so the relief is mainly mountainous and hilly which passes in the high parts in hilly or mountainous hilly and in places is very rugged From a geological point of view the land is presented basically from rocks granite rhyolite and sandstone Brown forest and sandy clay soils dominate the land Overall the relief is extremely varied The village is situated at the crossroads between several small hills In a flat lands rocks naked peaks and valley riverfront Over Tuhovishta are two of the highest peaks in the region Chukata local name Mitnitsata in the northeast at an altitude of 1010 m and the highest peak in the region Dikilitash Peak better known as Pobit Kamen with a height of 1100 m Peak Pobit Kamen is located between Tuhovishta and Valkosel In late autumn and late spring when over the village and the surrounding falls frost but over Pobit Kamen precipitations are of snow Climate edit The climate is moderate continental subtropical with particular influence in the high mountain areas Chukata and Dikilitash Average annual temperature is 10 C The average January temperature is moving according to altitude between 0 C to 7 C Summer is warm and sunny The average annual maximum temperature in the valley of the Mesta river is 32 36 C but in the mid part 23 32 C Predominates the autumn winter and spring summer rainfalls Seasons are distinct summer hot and winter moderately cold Flora and fauna edit Forests are rich in coniferous and deciduous species pine spruce beech fir oak birch willow and others Since Tuhovishta is in a transition from hilly to mountainous area it can be noted that the coniferous wood or bush vegetation exceeds the deciduous vegetation several times Of species it can be mentioned bear hare wolf fox marten deer wild boar and many others Common in summer are snakes and adders in shady places vipers other reptiles are lizards salamander and many others Hydrographic network includes the Mesta River Dospat and many smaller rivers and springs There are many micro dams used for irrigation fishing and more History edit nbsp Roman bronze ring found in TuhovishtaThe village has an outdoor medieval necropolis In Ottoman Documents the village is mentioned as Thuishta in Ottoman Turkish تحويشته The population of the village is Muslim and since 19th century Tuhovishta is a Muslim village in Nevrokopian territory of the Ottoman Empire nbsp Token found in Tuhovishta of the 17th 18th century for accounting purposes The master who made the token was called Wolf LaufferIn Ethnography of vilayets Adrianople Monastir and Salonika published in Constantinople in 1878 and reflecting statistics of the male population since 1873 Tuhovishta is listed as a village with 36 households and 90 inhabitants Muslims According to Stephen Verkovich at the end of 19th century Tuhovishta has a Muslim male population of 120 people living in 36 houses According to Vasil Kanchov s statistics to 1900 Tuhovishta is a Bulgarian Moslem village There live 500 Bulgarians Muslims in 70 houses In 1912 during the Balkan war Tuhovishta is a victim of the Christianization of the Muslims Plovdiv s church wants to Christianize Muslims and local rebels burn Tuhovishta along with other villages while the population hides along the river and the big hills In 1949 the village enters into the composition of the Municipality of Slashten under Decree 794 of the Presidium of the National Assembly of 24 September 1949 By decision of the Blagoevgrad District People s Council of 28 November 1958 Tuhovishta goes to the Satovcha Municipality It is returned to the Municipality of Slashten by decree 959 of the Presidium of the National Assembly of December 23 1965 Pursuant to Decree 2295 of the State Council of People s Republic of December 22 1978 it was again transferred to the Municipality of Satovcha In 1970 the villagers are victims of to the Bulgarisation process During the Bulgarisation over population was exerted systematic harassment which included banning the execution of any Muslim rites a visit to the mosque wearing headscarves trousers breeches a Muslim burial custom etc Turkish names of residents were forcibly changed to Bulgarian Many villagers find their death around the Bulgarian Greek border in an attempt to emigrate illegally Frequent is killing people around the border to intimidate the population In 1989 the population gets back their Muslim names Population of Tuhovishta according to the census in 2003 was 859 people and puts it in eighth place in number of inhabitants of the fourteen villages comprising the Satovcha Municipality The same place gets for its territory this is 17 01 km2 which is 5 11 of the terrain of the Satovcha Municipality Emigration editDuring the existence of the village there has been continuously immigrant groups displaced to larger cities and abroad for various reasons If we go back in 1876 we can point out many emigrated from the village and the region on the occasion of the April Uprising which broke out on April 20 1876 as its goal is the liberation of Bulgaria from the Ottoman Empire therefore all Turks Muslims and others are killed 36 years later in 1912 the first Balkan War broke out which is a conflict between the Ottoman Empire and the allied Bulgaria Serbia Greece and Montenegro Again all regarded as Turks or Muslims were killed and a large population Tuhovishta such as other villages try to run away from the conflict Some escaped others remain while others went under the knife Several decades later th Bulgarisation process began in the early 70 s and continued until the late 80 s The measures taken to convey this policy consists in a forced change of Arab Turkish names with Bulgarian It was prohibited the use of native language of the villagers and the entire region forced limitation of traditional customs and rituals and the profession of their religion This creates a conflict which people want to escape through Bulgaria s southern neighbor Greece and also to Turkey Some succeeded others were killed at the border while others remain in the village and suffer Religion edit nbsp The mosque in TuhovishtaCurrently the village has over 830 Tuhovishta inhabitants Bulgarian Muslims Pomaks The village has two mosques one in the bottom quarter which has one minaret with two balconies built in 1989 under the leadership of Mustafa Shukriev building techniques and masters Zeinil Kalarev Aliosman Yumer Yusuf Bashov and voluntary financial support of the whole village The mosque in the bottom quarter is refreshed repairs were made in 2000 by businessman Shukri Shukriev The second mosque which is older is located in the upper quarter and there is only one balcony Public institutions editCity Hall Tuhovishta Village Primary School St St Cyril and Methodius Kindergarten Center Granichar LibrarySport editFootball Club Granichar Tuhovishta Granichar Tuhovishta was registered in 1976 and created by the idea of local residents such as Mizamidin Sinanov who is also the first coach of the team Gosho Temendzhiyski a teacher from the town of Gotse Delchev Valkov head of the outpost who helps to make the playground Stoicho Gabrovski teacher from Dupnitsa and many others Team s name Granichar is inherited from the cultural center in the village which is also called Granichar nbsp Team Granichar TuhovishtaBefore Tuhovishta had an official team the best players were taken in the neighbor villages such as Slashten and Valkosel where they were trained and now are at the base of Granichar In the early years teams of soldiers from the outpost played in the team The strongest moment of the team was in the early 80s Only 5 years after its creation the team quickly rose to top positions thanks to teachers soldiers and residents of the village players in the team Some of the first players were Ahmed Kyoibashiev Bekir Bekirov Aliosman Kotelov Mehmed Kyoibashiev and others In 2000 the team ceases to exist due to financial reasons In 2009 the team was registered again by the initiative of local residents and sponsoring of the Tuhovishtan immigrant Mehmed Kasapov The team s president up today is Emin Mustafov Yumerov First Chamber of Granichar Tuhovishta nbsp Panoramic view of the Tuhovishta s football team playgroundSinanov Tsvetanov Ichev Andonov Zivko Yovchev Mehmed Kyoybashiev Ali Halimov Bekir Bekirov Stoicho Gabrovski Gosho Temendzhiyski Dzhemisap Topalov Ali Dangov Mehmed Imamov Jamal Chaushev Aliosman KotelovNotable people editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tarkan Tevetoglu grandfather of the famous German artist of Turkish origin Tarkan is from Tuhovishta Mustafa Sandal ancestors of the Turkish pop star are immigrants from Tuhovishta Gallery editPictures from Tuhovishta nbsp View of Tuhovishta nbsp Tuhovishta square nbsp Tombs in Tuhovishta s Necropolis nbsp Mosque in the center nbsp PlateExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tuhovishta Official site in HIT BG has to be opened with Internet Explorer Official channel in YouTube com Official profile in DailyMotion com Official site in Dir bg Photo album of Tuhovishta Discussion forum for TuhovishtaReferences edit Mestni cik bg dead link TABLICA NA NASELENIETO PO POSTOYaNEN I NASTOYaSh ADRES oblast BLAGOEVGRAD obshina BANSKO grao bg in Bulgarian 31 December 2010 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tuhovishta amp oldid 1213213962, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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