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VIDIN (formerly written WIDIN Or WIDDIN) , a fortified See also: river-See also: port and the capital of a department in the extreme N.E. of See also: Bulgaria; on the right See also: bank of the river Danube, near the Servian frontier and 151 m
.
W.N.W. of Sofia
.
Pop
.
(1906) 16,168, including about 3000 See also: Turks and 1500 See also: Spanish Jews—descendants of the refugees who fled hither from the Inquisition in the 16th century
.
Vidin is an episcopal see and the See also: head-quarters of a brigade; it was formerly a stronghold of some importance, and was rendered difficult to besiege by the surrounding marshes, formed where the Topolovitza and other streams join the Danube
.
A steam See also: ferry connects it with See also: Calafat; on the Rumanian bank of the Danube, and there is a branch railway to Mezdra, on the See also: main See also: line Sofia-See also: Plevna
.
The city consists of three divisions—the See also: modern suburbs extending beside the Danube, the citadel and the old See also: town, still surrounded by walls, though only four of its nine towers remain See also: standing
.
The old town, containing several mosques and synagogues and a See also: bazaar, preserves its See also: oriental appearance; the citadel is used as a military See also: magazine
.
There are a modern See also: cathedral, a school of viticulture and a high school, besides an See also: ancient See also: clock-tower and the palace (Konak) formerly occupied by the See also: Turkish pashas
.
Vidin exports cereals and fruit, and is locally celebrated for its gold and See also: silver filigree
.
It has important See also: fisheries and manufactures of See also: spirits, See also: beer and See also: tobacco
.
Vidin stands on the site of the See also: Roman town of See also: Bononia in See also: Moesia See also: Superior, not to be confounded with the Pannonian Bononia, which stood higher up the Danube to the See also: north of Sirmium
.
Its name figures conspicuously in the military See also: annals of See also: medieval and See also: recent times; and it is specially memorable for the overthrow of the Turks by the imperial forces in 1689 and for the crushing defeat of the See also: hospodar Michael Sustos by Pasvan Oglu in 18or
.
It was again the scene of stirring events during the Russo-Turkish See also: Wars of 1854–55 and 1877–78, and successfully resisted the assaults of the Servians in the Servo-Bulgarian War of 1886–87
.
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[back] VIDAME (Lat. vice-dominus) |
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