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											The Day of Sofia, which is celebrated every year on 17 September, is a good occasion to get to know more about the rich past of the capital of Bulgaria - from ancient times to the present day. Besides being named after one of its symbols - the Basilica of St. Sophia (the Wisdom of God), Sofia has another symbol with an equally exciting history - its coat of arms.
It was designed  at the dawn of XX century. According to the then acting Tarnovo Constitution it  was forbidden to use any coats of arms and and insignia outside the already existing official ones, but the Sofia City Council decided to  commission the design  of its own coat  of arms. The occasion was the participation of the Bulgarian capital in the  1900 Paris Exposition. 
The coat of arms was approved by Prince Ferdinand  the First, but the short deadline for its production caused a serious turmoil  in the affairs of the city and posed a challenge to the then mayor Hristo Popov and the  experts he convened, among whom  was the  artist Haralampi Tachev: 
"After having collected enough information to  compose a coat of arms, Tachev began work on the artistic project," says  Erina Krasteva, a PR expert at the Sofia Regional History Museum, in an  interview with Radio Bulgaria.  – He designed the coat of arms in the form of a shield divided into four parts  where he placed specific symbols related to Sofia's history from ancient times  to the present day. 

In the upper corner he depicted the city goddess  Ulpia Serdica. Her image is taken from an ancient coin minted during the reign  of Emperor Septimius Severus and his wife Julia Domna. Next to it, to the right  is the Basilica of St Sophia**,  which gives the city its modern name. In the lower left corner is Mount  Vitosha, which, according to Haralampi Tachev, is a centuries-old witness to  the historical transformations of this land. The lower right section is  dedicated to the temple of Apollo Medicus - the artist has depicted this by  painting a statue of the deity, one of the most revered deities in Serdica (the  historical Roman name of Sofia). In the centre of the shield Tachev has added a  smaller shield, in which he has placed the image of a lion. 
The significance of this image is that it was taken  from a medallion found in the old Bulgarian capital Veliko Tarnovo. Its  placement in the centre of the coat of arms is meant to symbolise the  continuity between the two capitals of Bulgaria - the old capital Veliko  Tarnovo and the new capital Sofia. 
To the original coat of arms the artist added one  more detail - the mural crown, a symbol of European heraldry, especially for  cities and towns. Later he made another  two  changes to the coat of arms: 
"In 1911, the motto was added under the coat of  arms, which in its present form we know as "Расте, но не старее"  (Ever Growing, but Never Aging) - Ekaterina Krasteva explains. Originally the motto read "Расте,  не старее“ (Ever  Growing, Never Aging).  The  authors added a "but" to make the letters more than 13. Haralampi  Tachev gave the coat of arms a final touch in 1928 when he added a band with the motto and laurel  twigs. 

In the 1940s, the Bulgarian artist Boris Angelushev  proposed a simpler stylized version, but the main change in the city symbol  came in 1974 when a pentacle was added andall  the elements were furter stylized. We have a plaster cast of the modified coat  of arms in the museum. In 1991 the 1928 coat of arms was restored." 
English version:  Elizabeth Radkova 
Photos: sofia.bg, impressio.dir.bg, library
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