Hadzhidimovo
Hadzhidimovo Хаджидимово | |
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Ruins of an ancient fortress near Hadzhidimovo | |
Hadzhidimovo Location of Hadzhidimovo in Bulgaria | |
Coordinates: 41°31′19″N 23°52′8.4″E / 41.52194°N 23.869000°E | |
Country | Bulgaria |
Province (Oblast) | Blagoevgrad |
Government | |
Elevation | 485 m (1,591 ft) |
Population | |
• Total | 11,364 |
Area code(s) | 07528 |
Hadzhidimovo (Bulgarian: Хаджидимово) is a small town and the centre of Hadzhidimovo Municipality in Blagoevgrad Province, south-western Bulgaria.
It is located in the southernmost part of Bulgaria, bordering on Greece in the Chech region.
Geography
The town lies in the Mesta River valley, surrounded by the heights of Rila, Pirin, Slavyanka, Shilka, Bozdag, and the Western Rhodopes Mountains.
Although the town is located in a Mediterranean climate region, temperatures quite often fall below 0° in winter, and the summers are hot with temperatures sometimes reaching 45° Celsius.
History
Hadzhidimovo was formed through the merger of the villages of Gorna Singartia and Dolna Singartia. Throughout the 19th century, researchers listed the two villages as having a predominantly ethnic Bulgarian population with a Turkish minority.[1]
For a while after the merger, the settlement was known as Zhostovo, after Bulgarian general Konstantin Zhostov who was born in nearby Gaytaninovo. Today, it bears the name of leftist Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) revolutionary Dimo Hadzhidimov since 1951. Hadzhidimovo was proclaimed a town in 1996.
Transportation
The municipality is crossed by the II-19 highway from Gotse Delchev, Koprivlen, and Sadovo to the Greek border at Ilinden.
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hadzhidimovo. |
- ↑ Македония и Одринско. Статистика на населението от 1873 г., Македонски научен институт, София, 1995, стр. 126-127.
Coordinates: 41°31′18″N 23°52′8″E / 41.52167°N 23.86889°E