St. Anastasia Island (Bulgarian: остров св. Анастасия, ostrov Sv. Anastasiya, formerly called Bolshevik Island, остров Болшевик) is a small Bulgarian island in the Black Sea. It is located in the Gulf of Burgas, 1.5 km off the coast near Chernomorets, at 12 metres above sea level, and covers a territory of one hectare. The island is built of volcanic rocks.[1][2] It is the only inhabited island off the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast.[citation needed]

St. Anastasia
Native name:
Света Анастасия
Approaching St. Anastasia Island by boat
St. Anastasia is located in Bulgaria
St. Anastasia
St. Anastasia
Location within Bulgaria
Geography
LocationBlack Sea
Coordinates42°28′05″N 27°33′11″E / 42.46806°N 27.55306°E / 42.46806; 27.55306
Area0.01 km2 (0.0039 sq mi)
Highest point12 m
Administration
ProvinceBurgas

The island is supplied with electricity and drinking water. It is named after the former St. Anastasia convent located on it. The convent had existed since the Middle Ages and was reconstructed during the 18th-19th century. It has been abandoned since 1923, when the island was transformed into a prison.[citation needed]

In 1925, a group of 43 political prisoners (communists and anti-fascists), led by Teohar Bakardzhiev, revolted and escaped from the island, subsequently fleeing to the Soviet Union. In their honor, the island was renamed Bolshevik Island when the communists came into power in 1945. Bulgarian film director Rangel Valchanov based his 1958 film On The Small Island (Bulgarian: "На малкия остров") on this event.[citation needed]

A Bulgarian Burgas-based weekly newspaper, Factor, reported in 2006 that the Movement for Rights and Freedoms leader, Ahmed Dogan, visited the island and expressed desire to privatize it. The Bulgarian Orthodox Church, however, which claims the island is its property, objected.[citation needed]

Today, in addition to the monastery with its church, there is a lighthouse situated on the island, as well as a museum, a restaurant, a small quay, a conference hall and two guesthouses with a total of five rooms available to tourists. In the summer, the island is accessible from Burgas via boat services running back and forth multiple times a day.[3]

Gallery edit

External links edit

  • Official tourism website of the island
  • Petrinski, Ivan (2008). "Zdravi kreposti pazyat ostrovnite obiteli; Kazashki pir otbelyazva kraya na obitavaneto na o. Sveti Ivan". Istinskata istoriya na Balgariya (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Ciela. pp. 111–124. ISBN 978-954-28-0286-0.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dimitrov, D. 2019. Engineering-geological investigation in the coastal zone of St. Anastasia Island. Engineering Geology and Hydrogeology, 33, 67–75
  2. ^ Dimitrov D., B. Banushev. 2021. Geological-geomorphological characteristics and petrographical composition of the St. Anastasia Island. Acta Scientifica Naturalis. 8. 118–125. Bibcode:2021AcSN....8a.118D. doi:10.2478/asn-2021-0010.
  3. ^ "St. Anastasia Island website". Go to Burgas. Retrieved 17 January 2016.