The Shabla Lighthouse mysteries
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
The Shabla
Lighthouse has its private secret. In its foundation is hidden a message to future
generations that should be opened in 2056, when the facility turns 200.
There is a place
along the Black Sea coast that enjoys keen interests from tourists even in
winter. This is Shabla Municipality, occupying the northernmost section of the
Bulgarian coastline. There are three wetlands in the municipality’s territory
that have become the winter getaway of dozens of endangered bird species,
including the entire world population of the Red-breasted Goose.
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
During the
cold months when seaside resorts slip into an inevitable lull, Shabla
Municipality welcomes coaches with foreign tourists armed with heavy equipment
– cameras, binoculars etc. However, before heading to the wetlands, they make a
stopover in a most romantic little place protruding deep into the sea where, it
seems, time has stopped altogether. There, weathered by winds and legends,
stands the Shabla Lighthouse.
© Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
The oldest
lighthouse on the Bulgarian Black Sea coast occupies the country’s easternmost
point, Cape Shabla. Here the astronomical New Year arrives earlier than in the
rest of the country. So the new 2014 cаme here 19 minutes earlier than in the capital Sofia
located 550 km to the west of the cape.The navigation
point painted in red and white stripes is one of the most curious sites along
Bulgaria’s northern Black Sea coast section.
It is assumed that the lighthouse
was build to copy one of the world’s seven wonders, the Alexandria Lighthouse
reduced to rubble by a quake in the Middle Ages. The Shabla Lighthouse is also
called the Sand Lighthouse, for its power to protect ships from getting stuck
into the treacherous shallow waters stretching from Cape Shabla to the nearby
village of Tyulenovo.
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
The present structure of the
lighthouse dates back to 1856. Back then it was restored and started operation
replacing an even older navigation facility erected 100 years earlier. However,
there is evidence that guiding lights have been sent out from Cape Shabla since
ancient times, when the Black Sea was the sea crossroads of merchants from the
region.
Today, despite the spectacular growth of navigation technologies, not
all vessels are equipped with GPS systems and besides, the region is dangerous
with its underwater reefs. So, the lighthouse is much more than a sentimental
keepsake
. Similar to other Bulgarian lighthouses the
Shabla one was launched and managed by the French Compagnie des Phares de
l’Empire Ottoman in the mid-19 c., when Bulgaria was still under Ottoman rule.
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
The lighthouse
tower has a monogram of Ottoman Sultan Abdülmecid inscribed into it.
Monograms of the ruling
Ottoman monarch were inscribed in buildings of exceptional importance for the
empire. It is curious to know that the highest lighthouse in the Bulgarian
lands was built fast and its construction came cheaper than many other such
facilities. This is so, because building material for the lighthouse was taken
directly from the ruins of a Roman fortress that lied just a few meters from
its structure.
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
Cape Shabla has
seen human settlements since ancient times. Historical sources claim that more
than 2 millennia ago, a port with the name Karia existed in close proximity of
the present lighthouse. Karia survives in the name of the present-day locality
that offers wonderful sights. The picturesque rocks near the village of Tyulenovo,
whose name derives from “seal”, are dotted with myriad grottos, the home until
18 years ago, of a seal colony. Apart from its lovely
beaches, Shabla is also the scene of rather fearsome sea storms that artists
and photographers absolutely adore to watch and capture in their works.
Photo: Veneta Nikolova |
In 1901
a devastating quake caused colossal damage. The lighthouse however survived
almost unscathed. The Shabla Lighthouse has its private secret. In 1996 when
its 140th anniversary was marked the people managing the facility dug into its
foundation a message to future generations that should be opened in 2056, when
the facility turns 200.
English version
Daniela Konstantinova
Radio Bulgaria
Veneta Nikolova . Neverending Journey
Labels: Compagnie des Phares de l’Empire Ottoman, Shabla Lighthouse, village Karia
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