Megaliths, an ancient mystery
Megaliths, an ancient mystery
Some argue that megaliths used to be
shrines of pagan gods, others that they operated as ancient astronomical
observatories, still others believe they represented burial ground
facilities. Megalithic sites in Bulgaria have not lost their appeal for
either explorers or curious tourists. You might fail to spot some them
while walking on open fields or in the woods, however these ancient
structures immune to the destruction of time, and alive in legends, have
been there for thousands of years. So far, hundreds of such structures
have been card-indexed in Bulgaria. Their actual number is even bigger
though.
© Photo: Lyubomir Tsonev
Menhiri near Pliska
No
one knows anything about them. The monolithic rammed stone blocks,
grouped or structured in weird facilities, were built by our
predecessors in the course of close to four millennia. Such heaps can
only be seen in Europe and Asia. The earliest ones from the 4th
millennium BC stand in Northwestern Europe. The Bulgarian megaliths are
younger – built from 12 to 5 c. BC, hence their more sophisticated
construction. The megaliths in the Bulgarian lands are two types. Do you
remember the funny character Asterix and his good friend Obelix who
drags along his favorite menhir, or a stone block? In fact menhirs are
stone blocks either larger than human height or clustered together, set
deeply into the ground. There are hundreds of dolmens in Bulgaria. These
are facilities made of stone slabs that look very much like houses with
two to three rooms. “We don’t know who created them. We talk about the
Thracians but they actually lived after the structures appeared”,
explains Lubomir Tsonev from the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, who has
explored megaliths for years. The Bulgarian explorer advises us to focus
on Northeastern Bulgaria where the ruins of the first Balkan Bulgarian
capital Pliska dated in 7 c. are scattered. Its vicinity boasts hundreds
of magnificent menhirs similar to the ones in France and Belgium.
© Photo: Lyubomir Tsonev
Chromleh in the Rhodopes (the village of Dolni Glavanak)
“No
one can say what they were made of but the mystery is right in front of
your eyes”, Lubomir Tsonev says. “Some are 1.5 m in height, others,
close to 2 m and stand out rammed in the ground. Some menhirs are set
into circles and are called cromlechs. Stonehenge offers some features
of a cromlech. Bulgaria has two such structures. One of them was found
in the Eastern Rhodope Mountains near the village of Dolni Glavanak, not
far from the dams along the Arda River. This is a great place to visit.
It displays 15 stone columns spaced out in a circle with a diameter of 8
meters. The other cromlech was found by late archeologist Prof. Georgi
Kitov in the region of Starosel, Southern Bulgaria. In 2002 Dr. Kitov’s
team came across the cromlech on the southern edge of the village of
Staro Zhelezare. It represents twenty stones of various height arranged
in a circle. Quite surprisingly this cromlech is unique worldwide as to
the way the construction has been buried. It seems that the Thracians
loved to make mounds, and they even made artificial mounds. In this way
they covered the cromlech allover.”
© Photo: Lyubomir Tsonev
Dolmen in Stranja Mountain, the village of Granichar
Stone
monuments abound in the southeastern Bulgarian mountains Strandja and
Sakar. Their ancient forests are virtually dotted with dolmens.
Interestingly, some of the megalith structures face ancient summits
crowned with pagan shrines. In the past the people of Sakar believed
that the millennial stones were inhabited by ghosts and spitted fire at
night.
© Photo: Lyubomir Tsonev
Dolmen in Sakar Mountain, the village of Hlyabovo
“The
earliest dolmens in Bulgaria stand in the Sakar Mountain, in the
vicinity of Hlyabovo village, not far from Topolovgrad. There is a map
in the village. The locals call dolmens ‘barnlets’ or ‘dragon houses’.
Indeed, they look like houses. The simplest constructions have a single
chamber, others have more. In the recent past the mountain was bare, and
they stood out clearly. However after the region was afforested they
are difficult to spot amid thick vegetation. Wonderful dolmens are found
in central Strandja Mountain, off the villages of Granichar, Kirovo,
Gorno Yabalkovo and Dolko Yabalkovo.”
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