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Pirdop ( ) is a town located in central-west . As of 2024, it had a population of 6,739. on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, is named after Pirdop.


Geography
The town is situated in the Zlatitsa–Pirdop Valley, the highest of the eleven Sub-Balkan valleys at an altitude of 670 m. It is surrounded by the to the north, the mountain range to the south, and Koznitsa and Galabets saddles to the east and west, respectively. Several small tributaries of the river Topolnitsa run through the town.

Pirdop falls within the temperate continental climatic zone with cold influence from the Danubian Plain penetrating through the Zlatitsa Pass from the north and subtropical influence from the Topolnitsa valley from the south. The average annual temperature is 9.4 °C. The annual precipitation reaches 590 mm, with a maximum in June (97 mm) and a minimum in February (26 mm). Snow cover lasts for about 48 days. The soils are cinnamon forest soils.

Administratively, the town is the seat of the Pirdop Municipality, located in the eastern part of . Pirdop is served by the first class I-6 road and railway line No. 3 Iliyantsi (Sofia)–Karlovo––Varna operated by the Bulgarian State Railways.


History
The area of Pirdop was populated since Antiquity by the . It was later conquered by the Romans and eventually became part of the . From that period dates the nearby , constructed in the late 5th or early 6th century during the reign of emperor . In the Middle Ages it became part of the First and Second Bulgarian Empire. The medieval Bulgarian was discovered in a monastery near the town. It was eventually conquered by the Ottomans during the Bulgarian–Ottoman wars in the 14th century. The settlement was mentioned in Ottoman registers of 1430 as Protopopintsi. The name Pirdop was attested for the first time in 1727 in a book in the Glozhene Monastery.

During the Bulgarian National Revival in the 19th century Pirdop became a major economic center. Over 700 workshops produced ; other local crafts included carpet weaving, cloth making, shoe-making, and goldsmithing. In economic terms, it competed with important centers of the Bulgarian lands as , , , Kotel, etc. In 1870, during the struggle for national liberation, the founded a revolutionary committee in Pirdop. After the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878, the town was among the few to have four representatives in the Constituent National Assembly. In the period between 1 April 1978 and 31 August 1991 Pirdop was merged with the neighbouring to form a single town called Srednogorie.


Economy
The main economic activity is . The Pirdop copper smelter and refinery is the biggest in the and whole of Southeastern Europe. It was privatized in 1997 for $80,000,000 and is owned by the German . It has a capacity of about 300,000 tons refined copper. The factory also produces 830,000 tons of and employs about 1,000 workers. The main chimney of the factory is 325 metres tall and shares together with the chimneys of Maritza East Power Stations the title of tallest man-made objects of Bulgaria.


Gallery
File:Church of the Assumption in Pirdop.jpg | Church of the Assumption File:Lukanov-house-in-Pirdop.jpg | Museum of history File:Гара Пирдоп (3112856766).jpg | The railway station


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