Everything about Rila totally explained
» for the Tibetan village see Rila, Tibet
Rila (['ri.lə]) is a mountain range in southwestern
Bulgaria and the highest mountain range of Bulgaria and the
Balkans, with its highest peak being
Musala at 2,925
m. The massif is also the sixth highest mountain in
Europe (when each mountain is represented by its highest peak only), coming after the
Caucasus, the
Alps,
Sierra Nevada, the
Pyrenees and
Mount Etna. The larger part of the mountain is occupied by the
Rila National Park.
The name
Rila is allegedly of
Thracian origin and is thought to mean "well-watered mountain", owing to Rila's abundance of
glacial lakes (about 200) and
hot springs in the faulty areas. Some of the Balkans' longest and deepest rivers originate from Rila, including the
Maritsa, the
Iskar and the
Mesta.
Culturally, Rila is famous for the
Rila Monastery, Bulgaria's largest and most important monastery founded in the
10th century by
Saint John of Rila.
Geology
Rila is a dome-shaped
horst mountain, part of the Balkans' oldest land, the Macedo-Thracian Massif. It was formed by granite and
gneiss rocks and crystal
schists during the
Paleozoic (250,000,000 years ago), with Rila's alpine relief being formed later, 10-12,000 years ago, after the
Würm glaciation, when the snow line was at 2,100 m
above sea level. Above this line
glaciers radically changed the existing relief, creating deep
cirques, sharp pyramid-shaped peaks, rock pinnacles, various valleys,
moraines and other typical glacial formations.
Borders and climate
Rila has an area of 2,400
km². The dome of the mountain rises over the surrounding mountain valleys, with the Borovets Saddle (1,305 m) connecting the main Musala Ridge with the Shipchan and Shumnitsa ridges that connect to the Ihtiman
Sredna Gora mountains through the
Gate of Trajan pass. The Yundola Saddle (1,375 m) and the Abraham Saddle (1,295 m) link Rila with the
Rhodopes to the east, while the connection with
Pirin is the Predel Saddle (1,140 m), the one with
Verila being the Klisura Saddle (1,025 m).
The climate is typically
alpine, with 2,000
mm of precipitation on Musala yearly, 80% of which of
snow. The lowest average temperature ever measured in February on Musala is –11.6
°C and the absolute minimum is -31.2°C. An average temperature for August is 5.4°C, the maximum being 18.7°C.
Subdivision
Rila is subdivided into several parts depending on their geographic position.
- East Rila or the Musala Ridge is the highest and vastest part. The highest peak, as well as 12 of the 18 peaks over 2,700 m are located there — Musala, Yastrebets, Irechek, Deno Mancho, etc. The Musala Lakes lie in this part of Rila, as well as Ledeno ezero ("Icy Lake"), the highest lake of the Balkans at 2,709 m. Other lakes in East Rila include the Maritsa Lakes and the Ropalitsa Lakes. The renowned mountain resort of Borovets is also located in this part of the mountain.
- Central Rila or the Skakavets Ridge is the smallest part (1/10 of the total area), most famous for the glacial lakes — the Fish Lakes, Dzhendem Lakes, Monastery Lakes. The largest glacial lake of the Balkans, Smradlivo ezero ("Stinky Lake") with an area of 21.2 km² is located in Central Rila, as well as the peaks Kanarata, Cherna polyana, Malak Skakavets and Golyam Skakavets, Rilets. The ridge of the Skakavtsi (the peaks of Golyam Skakavets and Malak Skakavets, Pchelina and Sveti Duh) rises isolated between the Levi and Beli Iskar rivers. Another well-known ridge in the area is the one of Marinkovitsa and Vodniya chal, extending to the forest reserve of Kobilino branishte.
- Northwest Rila takes up 25% of Rila's total area. The highest peak is Malyovitsa at 2,730 m. The Seven Rila Lakes are an important landmark in this part, as well as the many remote peaks and small lakes.
- Southwest Rila or the Kapatnik Ridge occupies 30% of Rila and has the oldest reserve of Bulgaria. Apart from its small northern part, Southwest Rila doesn't have the alpine appearance of the other parts.
Peaks in Rila
Musala — 2925 m
Malka Musala — 2902 m
Ovcharets (Yurushki chal) — 2768 m
Golyam Kupen — 2731 m
Malyovitsa — 2729 m
Popova kapa — 2704 m
Malka Malyovitsa — 2698 m
Lopushki vrah — 2698 m
Lovnitsa — 2695 m
Kanarata — 2691 m
Orlovets — 2685 m
Pastri slap (Aladzha slap) – 2684 m
Zliya zab — 2678 m
Eleni vrah — 2654 m
Kovach (Nalbant) vrah - 2640 m
Suha Vapa vrah - 2638 m
Ravni vrah (Ravni chal) — 2637 m
Belmeken — 2627 m
Kamilata — 2621 m
Golyam Mechi vrah — 2618 m
Dvuglav — 2605 m
Golyam Mramorets (Golyam Mermer) — 2598 m
Dodov (Drushlevishki) vrah — 2597 m
Kozi vrah — 2587 m
Iglata — 2575 m
Mechit — 2568 m
Ushite — 2560 m
Ptichi vrah (Ashiklar) — 2536 m
Malak Mechit — 2535 m
Yanchov vrah — 2481 m
Malak Mechi vrah — 2474 m
Strazhnik (Kurdzhilak) — 2469 m
Budachki kamak — 2447 m
Kukov vrah — 2411 m
Tsarev vrah — 2376 m
Ivan Vazov (Damga) — 2342 m
Markov kamak (Gorna Kadiitsa) — 2342 m
Malka Popova kapa — 2180 m
Treshtenik — 2020 m
Angelov vrah
Malak Lopushki vrah
Malak Mramorets (Malak Mermer)Further Information
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