Zheleznitsa, Sofia City Province

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Elevation
1,023 m (3,356 ft)
Postal Code
1475
Zheleznitsa
Zheleznitsa is located in Bulgaria
Zheleznitsa
Zheleznitsa
Location of Zheleznitsa, Bulgaria
Coordinates: 42°32′0″N 23°22′0″E / 42.53333°N 23.36667°E / 42.53333; 23.36667
Country Bulgaria
Provinces
(Oblast)
Sofia City Province
Elevation
1,023 m (3,356 ft)
Population
 (2024)
  Total
1,633[1]
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EESTa)
Postal Code
1475
Area codes02992 from Bulgaria, 003592992 from outside

Zheleznitsa (Bulgarian: Железница) is a large village in the Pancharevo district of the Bulgarian capital Sofia, located at 23 km to the south of the city center. As of 2024 it has 1,633 inhabitants.[1][2]

The Church of the Assumption of Virgin Mary

The village is situated at an altitude of 1,023 m on the eastern foothills of the Vitosha mountain range facing the Sofia Valley to the north. The Zheleznishka reka runs through the village and flows into the Iskar at the Pancharevo Gorge a few kilometers to the northeast. There are mineral springs with a total discharge of 1,000 L/min and temperature of 28–32 °С. It falls within the continental climatic zone with alpine influence from Vitosha. The soils are brown forest.[3][4]

Administratively, Zheleznitsa is part of the Pancharevo district in the southern reaches of the Sofia City Province. It has a territory of 50.304 km2.[2] It is accessible via the third class III-181, which connects it to the neighbouring village of Bistritsa to the north in the direction of Sofia, and the village of Kovachevtsi to the south, situated in the Samokov Valley. Another road leads to the village of Plana some 11 km to the southeast, located in the Plana mountain range.[2][3]

History

The area of Zheleznitsa has been inhabited since antiquity, as testified by traces of Thracian sanctuaries. There are ruins of medieval Bulgarian churches and monasteries, which were destroyed by the Ottomans after the Bulgarian–Ottoman wars in the late 14th century. It was later settled by people from the homonymous village in the modern Blagoevgrad Province. The name of the village was first mentioned in Ottoman registers from 1728.[2][3]

Culture

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