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Serdica

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Sofia

 ancient Serdica

City (pop., 2001: 1,096,389), capital of Bulgaria. Established as a Thracian settlement c. 8th century BC, it flourished under the Romans. Plundered by the Huns in the 5th century AD, it was rebuilt under the Byzantine Empire. In 809 it became a Bulgarian town but reverted to Byzantine rule from 1018 to 1185, when the second Bulgarian empire was established. The Turks held it from 1382 until it was liberated by the Russians in 1878. In 1879 it was made the Bulgarian capital. It is the country's principal transportation and cultural centre and the site of many industries. Among its educational institutions is the University of Sofia (1888), Bulgaria's oldest university. Its historical monuments include the 6th-century church of St. Sofia.


Serdica 

the name for what is now the city of Sofia, Bulgaria, used until 809, when Serdica was incorporated into the First Bulgarian Kingdom under the name Sredets.



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Tel 02/944 11 75 Open: Tue to Sat 10am to 7pm, Sun 11am to 6pm PROMISING FIELD [exhibition with works by Luiza Margan, Croatia] October 13 to November 1 GreenCat Gallery--Arena di Serdica Residence Hotel 2-4 Budapeshta Str.
In addition, the discussion in chapter nine of the failed council of Serdica in 342 C.
Dryanov, Sobolev type decomposition of Paley-Wiener-Schwartz space with application to sampling theory, Serdica, 33, 411-432, 2007.
 
 
 
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