Layers of Sofia: Byzantine Churches, Ottoman Markets, and Bulgaria’s Revival
MTA
Sofia’s multi-layered past and its role in Balkan cultural and political history
Sofia is presented as a living palimpsest where successive historical strata—Roman Serdica, Byzantine Sredets, Ottoman urbanism, Bulgarian national revival, socialist reconstruction, and post‑1989 liberalization—overlap and interact rather than being erased. The book traces how each period adapted, repurposed, and imbued meaning onto earlier structures, from the conversion of Byzantine basilicas into mosques and the reuse of spolia, to the socialist Largo built atop Roman ruins and the contemporary revival of informal markets echoing Ottoman bazaars. This layered approach reveals a city where continuity and change coexist, and where religious, commercial, and civic spaces constantly negotiate their shared geography.
Through archaeological, architectural, and social lenses, the work examines how Sofia’s sacred topographies (churches, mosques, synagogues) and market ecologies (bezistens, hans, coffeehouses) have shaped its identity. It highlights the persistence of multiconfessional interaction under Ottoman millet governance, the role of guilds and craft traditions in urban sociability, and the ways water management and bath culture linked rituals of cleanliness to commerce and community. The Bulgarian Revival is shown as a pivotal moment when schools, printing, and the Exarchate reoriented loyalties toward a European‑style nation‑state, prompting a capitalscape of boulevards, monuments, and neoclassical architecture that simultaneously asserted Bulgarian heritage and modern aspirations.
The narrative continues into the twentieth century, detailing socialist reconstruction’s ideological imposition of the Largo and panelki housing, the cautious preservation of religious buildings as cultural monuments under state atheism, and the post‑1989 resurgence of private enterprise, malls, and informal bazaars that revived Ottoman‑era market dynamics. Comparative chapters with Thessaloniki and Skopje situate Sofia’s particular blend of Byzantine, Ottoman, and European influences within broader Balkan patterns of imperial governance, nationalist mobilization, and postsocialist transition. Finally, the book addresses contemporary challenges—climate change, tourism pressures, and digital technologies—and proposes strategies for heritage management that respect Sofia’s complex, layered character while ensuring its sustainable future as a living urban palimpsest.
This book is for scholars and practitioners studying Southeastern European urban history, archaeology, and cultural heritage, particularly those interested in interdisciplinary approaches to layered cities. Heritage travelers, urban planners, and architects will benefit from its synthesis of religious architecture, economic geography, and heritage policy, while its practical itineraries offer value for visitors seeking to understand Sofia's complex identity. Researchers in Byzantine studies, Ottoman history, and post-socialist transitions will find comparative insights into how empires and nation-states have shaped Balkan urbanism.
June 11, 2026
62,805 words
4 hours 24 minutes
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