Rositsa (river) explained

Rositsa
Mouth Location:Yantra
Mouth Coordinates:43.2461°N 25.7077°W
Subdivision Type1:Country
Subdivision Name1:Bulgaria
Length:148.5km (92.3miles)[1]
Basin Size:2260km2

The Rositsa (Bulgarian: Росица in Bulgarian pronounced as /roˈsit͡sɐ/) is a river in central northern Bulgaria, the most important tributary (a left one) of the Yantra. It is 148.5km (92.3miles) long and has a drainage basin of 2260km2.[1] Its ancient name was Lyginus.[2]

The river has its source in the Central Balkan Mountains between Shipka Pass to the east and Botev Peak to the west and flows north until Sevlievo, after which it gradually turns east-northeast until emptying into the Yantra. There is a dam on the river some 10- after Sevlievo, Aleksandar Stamboliyski Dam.

An important tributary is the Vidima, which flows into the Rositsa at Sevlievo. Other tributaries include the Negoychevitsa, the Kravenishka, the Byala and the Bagareshtitsa from the left, as well as the Malobuhalshtitsa, the Zelenikovets and the Marishtnitsa from the right.

References

  1. http://www.nsi.bg/sites/default/files/files/publications/God2017.pdf Statistical Yearbook 2017
  2. The Assyrian and Babylonian Empires and other States of the Near East, from the Eighth to the Sixth Centuries B.C. The Cambridge Ancient History, Cambridge University Press,, I. E. S. Edwards, Cambridge University Press, 1992,, p. 889.