Provinces of Bulgaria explained

Provinces of Bulgaria
Map:Regions of Bulgaria Map.png
Category:Unitary state
Territory:Republic of Bulgaria
Current Number:28
Number Date:1999
Population Range:101,018 (Vidin) – 1,291,591 (Sofia City)
Area Range:1348.9sqkm (Sofia City)– 7748.07sqkm (Burgas)
Government:Province government, National government
Subdivision:Municipality

The provinces of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: области на България|oblasti na Bǎlgariya) are the first-level administrative subdivisions of the country.

Since 1999, Bulgaria has been divided into 28 provinces (Bulgarian: области|links=nooblasti; singular: Bulgarian: областoblast; also translated as "regions") which correspond approximately to the 28 districts (in Bulgarian: links=no|окръгokrǎg, plural: Bulgarian: окръзиokrǎzi), that existed before 1987.

The provinces are further subdivided into 265 municipalities (singular: Bulgarian: общинаobshtina, plural: Bulgarian: общиниobshtini).

Sofia – the capital city of Bulgaria and the largest settlement in the country – is the administrative centre of both Sofia Province and Sofia City Province (Sofia-grad). The capital is included (together with three other cities plus 34 villages) in Sofia Capital Municipality (over 90% of whose population lives in Sofia), which is the sole municipality comprising Sofia City province.

Terminology

The provinces do not have official names – legally (in the President's decree on their constitution), they are not named but only described as "oblast with administrative centre [Noun]" – together with a list of the constituting municipalities. In Bulgaria they are usually called "[Adjective] Oblast"; occasionally they are referred to as "Oblast [Noun]" and rarely as "oblast with administrative centre [Noun]".

The Bulgarian term "област" (oblast) is preferably translated into English as "province", in order to avoid disambiguation and distinguish from the former unit called "окръг" (okrag, translated as "district") and the term "регион" (always translated as "region"). At any rate, "district" and "region" are sometimes still used to name these contemporary 28 units.

History

In 1987, the then-existing 28 districts (okrags) were transformed into 9 large units (in Bulgarian called oblasts – provinces), which survived until 1999.[3]

The 9 large provinces are listed below, along with the pre-1987 districts (post-1999 small provinces) comprising them.

1987–1998
oblasts
Comprising former districts (future provinces)
Burgas Burgas, Sliven, Yambol
Haskovo Haskovo, Kardzhali, Stara Zagora
Lovech Gabrovo, Lovech, Pleven, Veliko Tarnovo
Montana Montana, Vidin, Vratsa
Plovdiv Pazardzhik, Plovdiv, Smolyan
Razgrad Razgrad, Ruse, Silistra, Targovishte
Sofia Sofia City
Sofia Blagoevgrad, Kyustendil, Pernik, Sofia
Varna Dobrich, Shumen, Varna

On 1 January 1999, the old districts were restored with some modifications, but the designation "oblast" ("province") was kept.

See also

References

  1. Web site: South Central Planning Region . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141013075738/http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/innovation/policy/regional-innovation/monitor/base-profile/yugozapadna-i-yuzhna-tsentralna-bulgaria/south-central-planning-region . 2014-10-13 . 2014-10-07 . European Commission.
  2. Web site: Bulgaria: Major Cities . citypopulation.de .
  3. Web site: Bulgaria – Government Structure . 15 October 2017 . countrystudies.us.