Resumen
Roman Ruins & History
Orthodox Art & Churches
City Centre Culture & Food
Vitosha Mountain & Nature
Sofia has been settled for over 7,000 years and has served as a capital since 29 CE under the Roman Serdica. Today's city reveals its layered history in unexpected moments: the ruins of the Roman forum appear in the floor of the Serdika Metro station; the Rotunda of St George (a 4th-century Roman church) stands in the courtyard of a Soviet-era government complex; the Banya Bashi Mosque (1576) is surrounded by a lively outdoor market. The compact city centre is walkable: from the Alexander Nevsky Cathedral — one of the largest Orthodox cathedrals in the world, built 1882–1912 to commemorate Bulgaria's liberation from Ottoman rule — to the antique and icon market in the adjacent square, to the underrated National Archaeological Museum (housed in a former mosque), to the Sofia History Museum in the former central baths. The city is young and relatively inexpensive: a coffee costs less than €1.50, a restaurant meal in a mehana (traditional Bulgarian tavern) under €10. Mount Vitosha rises to 2,290 metres immediately south of the city — reachable by metro and cable car — with hiking trails in summer and basic skiing in winter.
Descubre Sofia
3 misiones en esta ciudad, agrupadas por región.