The South East European nation of Bulgaria is located in the heart of what is sometimes called the Balkan Peninsula. As the tourist brochure states, Bulgaria is a territory of 111,000 square kilometers (43,000 square miles) and it is washed by the flowing waters of the Blue Danube in the north, and by the splashing waves of the Black Sea in the east. High rugged mountain ranges are found to the west, and wide plains & verdant valleys to the south.
The
tourist brochure goes on to tell us that the Black Sea was known in ancient
times as “Pontus Euxinos”, the “Friendly Sea”, with an average of 280 sunny
days each year. The clean blue water is
without ebb & flow, the salt content is quite low, and there is a gradual
slope from the beach into deeper waters.
It is said that the Black Sea derives its name from the fact that heavy
fogs in the winter time occasionally make the waters appear black.
The main beach resort on
the edge of the Black Sea in Bulgaria is Golden Sands, and if you could see
across to the far coastline 700 miles distant, you would catch your first
glimpse of the western edge of Asia.
The
entire country of Bulgaria is just 300 miles across from east to west, and 170
miles from north to south, with a total population of around 8 million
people. The capital city Sofia is both
ancient & modern, and it is located rather near to the western border with
Serbia.
The
history of Bulgaria goes way back into antiquity, and the first settlers were
the Thracians, who migrated into the area some 3,000 years ago. The territory was conquered by Alexander the
Great; it was absorbed into the old Roman Empire; and the Slavic & Bulgar
peoples moved in around 1500 years ago.
History tells us that the 1st Bulgarian kingdom was
established in the year 681 AD.
Bulgaria
remained neutral, at the beginning of World War 1; and a quarter century later,
it was heavily involved in World War 2.
The Russians came in on September 8, 1944, though Bulgaria has
subsequently become a parliamentary democracy.
Bulgaria
is famous for its flower gardens containing the Bulgarian Rose, which is the
country’s national flower. The
delightfully unique Bulgarian Rose is shown as a national emblem on one of
the QSL cards issued by Radio Sofia more
than half a century ago.
These
pretty flowers may be seen everywhere in Bulgaria, and you may breath its
fragrance in the commercial gardens in the Valley of the Roses, which is
located in central Bulgaria. Bulgaria
produces 80% of the world’s Rose Oil.
Bulgaria
is also noted for its pretty folk music.
Perhaps you might like to listen to this appealingly delightful folk
music from Bulgaria.
Wireless in Bulgaria is now 100 or more
years old. It was in the year 1896 that
the first wireless equipment was imported into Bulgaria for experimental use by
the national Post Office and by the Bulgarian Army. It would appear that this equipment could
have been a mixture of items, maybe from England &/or Germany &/or
Russia.
However,
it was during the year 1903 that the Bulgarian army assembled a set of wireless
equipment and made the 1st known wireless transmissions in their
country. The location for this historic
wireless event was at a military encampment near Sofia, their national
capital.
It
was during the year 1911 that wireless equipment was installed aboard the 13
year old torpedo gunboat, the “Nadezhda” in the Black Sea. During the following year, 1912, the
“Nadezhda” made wireless contact with the very new wireless station located in
the military encampment at Franga, near Varna, close to the Black Sea coast. That major wireless development took place
exactly 100 years ago.
The
original callsign of this land based radio station was FRG, an abbreviation of
its location name, Franga, and even way back then this station was available to
the general public for the transmission of wireless telegrams in Morse
Code. At this time, 1912, the
Franga-Varna station is listed as the only wireless station in the entire
nation of Bulgaria.
When
international callsigns were allocated a few years later, the wireless station
at Franga was granted the callsign LZP.
However, in more recent time, the maritime radio station at Varna has
identified on air under the callsign VZW.
During
the year 1914, a new wireless station was installed at Sofia; and soon
afterwards, 3 additional wireless stations were installed in areas nearby to
Sofia.
In
1926, the government called for tenders for the erection of a modern radio
station in the Sofia area and this contract was awarded to the Marconi Company
at Chelmsford in England. This new
communication station was ready for on air usage in 1929, and one of the three
transmitters was a longwave unit for use in Morse Code & voice
transmission, on the longwave channel 105 kHz.
And
that’s as far as we go in the Bulgarian wireless & radio scene today; and
next month, we plan to present the story of early radio broadcasting in
Bulgaria.
(AWR Wavescan/NWS198 via Adrian Peterson)