Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Clock tower in Peshtera working again

Photo: svetimesta.com

The clock tower in Peshtera is more than 300 years old. This is the second oldest clock tower in Bulgaria and has already become one of the symbols of the Bulgarian town. Last year, "Sahata", as the local residents call the tower, was restored, and the clock mechanism was replaced with an electronic one. Recently, "Sahata" once again pleases the inhabitants of Peshtera several times a day with its pleasant sound.

Many years ago, the clock served to regulate economic life, marking the beginning and end of the working day of craftsmen and shops. Back then, the guilds were very serious organizations with strict bylaws and they all had to open and close at the same time so there was no unfair competition.

Documents indicate that the clock tower was abandoned after the Liberation and the mechanism stolen. It was subsequently restored in the 1970s.

Compiled by: Gergana Mancheva



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Presidential award "John Atanasoff" is recognition for young talents in informatics

Twelve beautiful young minds of Bulgaria were honoured by President Rumen Radev at a special ceremony, in which the annual John Atanasoff Awards were presented. The event took place two days after the birthday of the prominent..

published on 10/7/25 4:40 PM

Why foreign truck drivers are becoming targets of corruption on roads in Bulgaria

Bulgaria's State Automobile Inspectorate (DAI) is the official body that deals with the control of heavy-duty traffic on the territory of the country, as part of the Executive Agency "Automobile Administration" (IAAA). Its work became the subject of..

published on 10/6/25 4:05 PM
Ivan Nikolov

For 27 years Cultural and Information Center Bosilegrad has been assisting Bulgarians in the Western Outlands

With a concert by the Slavey Quartet created by folk singer Nadka Karadzhova and a conversation about the problems of our compatriots in the Western Outlands, the Cultural and Information Center of the Bulgarian Minority in..

published on 10/3/25 5:10 PM