Delčevo

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Delčevo
Делчево
Coat of arms of Delčevo
Coat of arms
Delčevo (Republic of Macedonia  )
Delčevo
Delčevo
Location within Macedonia
Coordinates: 41°58′N 22°46′E / 41.967, 22.767
Country Flag of the Republic of Macedonia Macedonia
Municipality Delčevo municipality
Highest elevation 640 m (2,100 ft)
Lowest elevation 590 m (1,936 ft)
Population ([citation needed])
 - Total 17,505
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 - Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 2320
Area code(s) +389 033
Car plates ŠT
Website: www.delcevo.gov.mk/

Delčevo (Macedonian: Делчево), is a small town in the eastern mountainous part of the Republic of Macedonia. It is the municipal seat of the eponymous municipality. The town is named after Gotse Delchev, considered by patriotic Macedonians as one of their greatest revolutionary heroes.

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[edit] Demographics

Delčevo has 11,500 residents.

Number %
TOTAL 11,500 100
Macedonians 10,761 93.57
Roma 564 4.90
others 175 1.52

[edit] Geographical Position

The town of Delčevo is situated at the foot of Mount Golak on both banks of the river Bregalnica, 164 km (102 mi) to the east of Skopje. It is the biggest settlement in the Pianec region which covers an area of 585 km² (226 sq mi), between Mount Osogovo to the north and Mount Maleš to the south. The town lies at 590 m (1,936 ft) to 640 metres (2,100 ft) above sea level. Delčevo has a good geographical position and good traffic connections. All rural settlements and recreations centred around Golak are connected with the town of Delčevo by good asphalt roads of local and regional types. Golak's Tourist Center is located 10 km (6 mi) south of Delcevo at 1,300 m (4,270 ft) height above sea level, under the Chavka peak (1358 m) of the mountain Golak. The distinctive Recreation Center was built in 1981 and has 5 apartments, 8 hotel rooms and a restaurant with 170 seats as its own terens for small football, basketball and volleyball.

[edit] History

Delčevo was first mentioned in a charter of Serbian King Stefan Dušan in the 14th century.

The town has changed its name several times. During the Ottoman period it was visited by a Sultan personally. A large number of Christian people converted to Islam, and at that time the town was called "Sultania" or "Sultaniye". The Islamised Christian population hadn't learned the Turkish language and they renamed Sultania into their own language, Carevo Selo (Czar's village). One year before Sultan Mehmed II, the Turkish travel writer Evlija Celebija had passed there and wrote: "After Vinica we climbed upon Kocani mountain meadow and after 4 hours walking along the ravine, we arrived in Carevo Selo. This is a Muslim village and it lays in the mountain ornamented with 100 houses and one marvelous mosque with minaret."

The town has borne its present name Delčevo since 1950, in honor of the celebrated revolutionary and ideologist Gotse Delchev who had often visited the place while he was teaching in the village of Novo Selo, near Štip.

After the Russo-Turkish War, 1877–1878 much of the Christian population left for Bulgaria and Turkish people from Asia moved in to take their place. There was a second big movement thirty years later during the Balkan wars, but this time with an emigration of much of the Turkish population.

Between the two world wars Delčevo was a small provincial town of dilapidated houses and a small number of craft shops with narrow muddy streets.

[edit] Twin cities

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