Redenka

 
The town of Ahtopol has population of about 1,500
people and is situated over a sharply jutted cape 87km southeast of Bourgas.
It has two long and beautiful beaches, the second one (further to the
north of the town) being used mostly by nudists.
The Assumption Church and the St. Yani Monastery are interesting sights
for tourists. In the afternoon and evenings, romantic visitors enjoy walking
to the town's lighthouse and crawling over the nearby rocks next to the
quay, beneath which one can see a lot of crabs and fish. Five kilometres
south of Ahtopol is the mouth of Veleka River, one of the most beautiful
rivers, which flow into the Black Sea, together with Kamchiya and Ropotamo.
The mouth of the river is barred by a strip of sand stretching from one
shore to the other, where some holidaymakers prefer to sunbathe and take
turns in swimming in the river (which traditionally has a much colder
water) and the sea. The village of Kosti, famous for its 'nestinarski'
dances (barefoot dances on glowing embers) is situated nearby the river
mouth. Further south to the border, holidaymakers can sunbathe at the
beautiful beaches of Sinemoretz, Silistar and Rezovo (the latter though
being a rather small one).
The town occupies the place of a Thracian settlement. It was probably
colonised in the 6th century BC. The Romans called it Peronticus while
the Byzantine leader Agaton reconstructed the town after barbarian invasions
and gave it his own name, Agatopolis. The town frequently changed hands
between the Byzantine Empire and the Bulgarian state. With the arrival
of the Ottoman troops at the end of the 14th century, it was called Ahtenbolu.
It was burnt down and devastated by sea pirates many times with the most
recent fire being in 1918 when the town was completely destroyed. Remains
of the town's fortress and a fountain with a carved horseman are the only
traces left from old times.
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