With its stone-roof old houses, steep alleyways winding  up into the mountain, and stone fences, Kovachevitsa stands out as one of the  most delightful romantic villages in the country, a breathtaking corner in the  Rhodopes that seems untouched by time. Some of the houses have been abandoned  and are rundown, but others have been restored without any change to the way  they looked originally. Kovachevitsa has  been declared an architectural reserve and it is thanks to this fact that  it has continued untouched by glass and concrete, or by mass tourism.
There are just 7 guest houses and 3 dining  establishments in the village. Everything else is architecture, nature, silence  and crystal-clear air. Our first stopover is at the one-time school, built in  1892 by benefactor Yordje Dimitrov. The building has been restored and is now a  museum. Its first floor hosts exhibitions of works by contemporary Bulgarian artists.  We talk to young curator Toma Zhuglev who gives us the rounds of the museum.
“What is left of the school are these desks, the blackboard,  the main beams you can see here. There is a whole classroom with ink-pots, pen  holders, exercise books, text books, compasses, maps… Everything that has come down to us from the time the school was established  is on display here. 
We have another room where you can see what kind of  life people led in those days, and a weaving room with a loom that is about 200  years old. We also have an exposition connected with the Macedonian-Adrianople revolutionary movement which includes a collection of old weapons.”

Kovachevitsa is first mentioned in Ottoman registers  in the 15th century. At approximately the same time some of the  first settlers arrived in this part of the Rhodopes – people from the one-time Bulgarian villages which are now in Albania. 
“That is where they came from and they settled in the  lower, or Arnaut neighbourhood,” Toma says. “After the fall of Tarnovgrad  (under Ottoman domination – editorial note), the boyars came from that town and  settled in the upper neighbourhood of the village. Those living in the lower  part of the village brought with them the construction, the cattle breeding,  the stockbreeding. And those in the upper neighbourhood, the boyars, what they  brought with them was the literature, the knowledge, the writing. There were no  Ottoman authorities in Kovachevitsa, as was the case throughout Bulgaria,  because people here were very well-off. 
In  1877, one year after the Batak massacre,  the Turks shut up the entire male population of Kovachevitsa inside the St. Nikola  church, which is still functioning today, and the same way as in Batak, they  were getting ready to kill them. But then the rest of the inhabitants of  Kovachevitsa collected some money and handed it over to the ruler of Nevrokop  district, and he ordered that their lives be spared.”
Kovachevitsa was not destroyed by the invaders, unlike  many other Bulgarian towns and villages at the time. And it is thanks to this  fact that it has been preserved as it stood 200 years ago. The first thing that  strikes any visitor to the village are its magnificent houses – with two, three  and even four storeys. And each has its own style. 
“They were among the best builders at the time,”  explains Toma. “For example, the houses in Batak in those days were built by  master-builders from Kovachevitsa, we have people who built houses in Italy or  in Greece – in towns like Drama, Kavala, like Nevrokopi… Typically, the  builders used stone and wood. Take a look at this stone masonry, made of stone,  straw, wood and mud. The roofs weigh at least 30 tons and are covered entirely  in stone slates.”
Translated and posted by Milena Daynova
Photos: Veneta Nikolova
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