Russia
Bolgar
The Bolgar Historical and Archaeological Complex is an important historical and religious site for the Islamic Volga Tatars.
Within the confinement of an earthen wall and a moat are various monuments, including mosques, mausoleums, bathhouses, a palace and an orthodox church. Under the buildings lie the remains of medieval Bolgar, which was an important trading city on the route between Eastern Europe and Central Asia. It was the settlement of the Volga Bolgars, which existed between the 7th and the 15th centuries.
Community Perspective: It has a stunning location on the Volga river banks. The remains are quite spread out, so a visit should take 2-3 hours. You can get there by fast ferry (Thomas) or bus (Wojciech) (both these options may sell out quickly), a bus tour organized by Hotel Tatarstan (Els) or rental car (Alexander). The BlaBlaCar-option mentioned by Michael isn't valid anymore.
Site Info
Official Information
- Full Name
- The Bolgar Historical and Archaeological Complex (ID: 981)
- Country
- Russia
- Status
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Inscribed 2014
Site history
History of Bolgar
- 2000: Deferred
- To provide more detailed information about the reconstruction of the Great Minaret, confirmation that the industrial project has been definitively abandoned, and a more detailed comparative analysis
- 2001: Deferred
- 2011: Incomplete - not examined
- 2012: Incomplete - not examined
- 2013: Referred
- After a very long discussion
- 2013: Advisory Body overruled
- ICOMOS recommended rejection
- 2014: Inscribed
- Inscribed
- WHS Type
- Cultural
- Criteria
- ii
- vi
Links
- UNESCO
- whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
- whc.unesco.org — whc.unesco.org/
Related Resources
- bolgar.info — Bolgar.info
Community Information
- Community Category
- Urban landscape: Medieval European
Travel Information
Kazan Hotspot
Recent Connections
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Moats
"The site preserves its spatial context… -
Kazan Hotspot
181 km/ 2h20min by car. There are also … -
Spolia
The Church of the Dormition of the Virg…
Connections of Bolgar
- Geography
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Volga Basin
lies on the shores of the Volga River
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- Trivia
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Minority communities
Tatars -
Cultural sites taking up an entire island
It also integrates early parts of a Volga Bolgar settlement located ... on the closest Volga island. (AB ev)
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- History
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Golden Horde
became a centre of a separate province (or duchy) within the Golden Horde. During the period of Mongol domination Bolgar acquired immense wealth, many imposing buildings, and grew tenfold in size (wiki)
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- Architecture
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Spolia
The Church of the Dormition of the Virgin was built between 1732 and 1734 in the centre of the archaeological site... During its construction stone from the ruined buildings of Bolgar was reused and the wall plinths still carry Arabic and Armenian inscriptions. (AB ev)
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- World Heritage Process
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Reconstruction regarded as unsatisfactory
Great Minaret, Eastern Mausoleum, Black Chamber: "ICOMOS considers that the restoration measures conducted are extensive, sometimes without clear justification and that since the ICOMOS evaluation of this property in 2001, its authenticity in material, substance, craftsmanship and setting has been reduced." (AB ev) -
Ten years or more to inscribe
2000-2014 -
Inscribed at third attempt or more
Def 2000, Def 2001, Ref 2013, Ins 2014
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- Religion and Belief
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Multiple Religions
Islam and Russian Orthodox -
Notable mosques
The central feature is the historic mosque of tetragonal shape, preserved as an architectural ruin and one of the rare surviving architectural manifestations of the early Golden Horde period (late 13th century). The minaret of this former mosque collapsed in 1841 but was reconstructed in the year 2000 on the basis of historical drawings made on site in 1827. (AB ev) -
Islamic pilgrimage sites
Muslim pilgrimage centre (AB ev)
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- Constructions
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Baths
bath houses -
Notable minarets
The minaret of this former mosque collapsed in 1841 but was reconstructed in the year 2000 on the basis of historical drawings made on site in 1827. The new minaret was reerected on its original foundations and integrates historic stones, which belonged to the original minaret. (AB ev) -
Mausolea
several mausoleums -
Moats
"The site preserves its spatial context with its historic moat and walls" (OUV)
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- Timeline
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Built in the 10th century
The historical and archaeological complex of Bolgar is a symbolic reminder of the acceptance of Islam by the Volga-Bolgars in 922 AD (Nom File).
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- WHS Hotspots
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Kazan Hotspot
181 km/ 2h20min by car. There are also full-day trips by tour buses on offer.
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- Science and Technology
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Archaeological potential
The historical and archaeological complex of Bolgar retains considerable and multi-layered archaeological potential reaching back to earlier periods than the preserved architectural evidence (AB ev)
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- Visiting conditions
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Shoe covers required
At the Museum and the Koran center
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News
No news.
Recent Visitors
Visitors of Bolgar
- Alexander Barabanov
- Alexander Lehmann
- A. Mehmet Haksever
- Atila Ege
- Carlo Sarion
- Csaba Nováczky
- Els Slots
- Emili Xaus
- Fan Yibo
- George Evangelou
- Hanming
- Harald T.
- Iain Jackson
- Ivan Rucek
- Jonas Kremer
- Junwang111
- Kasper
- Luis Filipe Gaspar
- marcel staron
- Marcobrey
- Martina Rúčková
- Michael anak Kenyalang
- Michael Novins
- Mikhail
- Miloš Tašković
- Nihal Ege
- Onkrad
- Pasha Globus
- Roman Bruehwiler
- Sergio Arjona
- SHIHE HUANG
- Stanimir
- Stanislaw Warwas
- Szucs Tamas
- Tarquinio_Superbo
- Thomas Buechler
- triath
- Valentina
- willc1515
- Wojciech Fedoruk
- Yevhen Ivanovych
- Yuri Samozvanov
Community Reviews
Show full reviews
A trip to Bolgar is just what ICOMOS did not want it to be: an introduction to the Volga Bolgar civilization. It was an uphill struggle to get this site inscribed as a WHS: only on the 4th try did it succeed and with a significantly limited OUV statement. However, for the Tatar Republic and especially the Islamic Volga Tatars this is so much more – nothing less than the heartland of their civilization. Volga Bulgaria (c. 700–1238), the earliest known organized state within the boundaries of Tatarstan, was an advanced mercantile state with trade contacts throughout Inner Eurasia, the Middle East, and the Baltic.
Getting there is a bit tricky because it is in a remote location not close to any sizeable town; see this Forum post for transport options. I visited Bolgar on a Russian group tour by bus, organized by Hotel Tatarstan. This only cost 1899 rubles (26 EUR), including lunch and entrance fees. The normal admission price is 400 rubles (EUR 5.50). It was a full day trip from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m, of which we spent 5 hours at the site itself. The site is very extensive, we were transported by bus between the various museums and monuments. There are bikes and golf carts for hire at the entrance if you make it here under your own steam.
The drive up to Bolgar is already worth it: good, quiet roads lead through a rolling green landscape. There were many sunflower fields along …
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In July 2019, I made the nearly 200 km and three hour day trip from Kazan to Bolgar, on the shores of the Volga River. The day before my trip, I took a Yandex to Kazan's port to see if I could get tickets for the supposed boat trip to Bolgar, but (and I'm not sure what I was told by the ticket agent) either the boat doesn't run on weekdays or at all or was sold out, but, in any event, I left empty handed. I also learned that the bus schedule from Kazan to Bolgar wouldn't allow a day trip. So, a friendly and helpful receptionist at my hotel used her BlaBlaCar app to book me a day trip from Kazan to Bolgar. Apparently, an enterprising local, whose sister lives in Bolgar, has decided to make nearly daily trips from Kazan to Bolgar, departing from the MegaMall (a short drive from Kazan's city center) at 11:00am and returning from Bolgar at 5:00pm (so allowing three hours at Bolgar, which was sufficient) for ₽400 each way (about $6.30). Since I was concerned that I wouldn't be able to find him at the MegaMall, I paid an extra ₽200 ($3.15) each way for him to pick me up and return me to my hotel. So, a total of less than $20 for the nearly 9-hour day trip.
I shared the BlaBlaCar driver's WhatsApp contact details with Els, so if she's able to repeat the trip and thinks it worth …
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Visited this site in August 2017 with day-trip on a rented car from Kazan.
The site includes a number of ruins and restored monuments mainly dating back to 13th-14th centuries (however, the site was inhabited since 7th till 15th century).
Interesting that in 922 Bolgar was visited by a mission from Baghdad (well documented) after which Bolgar accepted Islam as official religion. Bolgar was capital of Volga Bolgar civilization at the crossroads of evolving Russian state and Asia.
It is noted in the Unesco assessment that the number of restoration works and interventions is high and it's visible. However, several surviving buildings are quite unusual and interesting architecturally. The site is well maintained, the monuments are labelled with information in Russian, Tatar and English. There is also ongoing archeologoical research and through the fence one could glimpse at 3-4 meter deep excavation works.
There is also mosque called Memorable sign built in 2012 to honour anniversary of Islam acceptance, where the largest Koran in the world is kept (weighing 800 kg).
Brand new museum of Bolgar civilization has a number of artefacts and information, as well as model of the city.
It would take around 2-3 hours to see all the monuments. The overall area was quite touristy and visited by the large groups of locals. Also there is another recreation area with some ruins and museum of bread located around 3 km to the south of main site, which could be of interest as well.
In overall, not an …
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It is strange that according to this site Bolgar is one of the least visited WHS in Europe, as the place is very popular during summertime. Probably the reason is that most users are from Western Europe and few of them explore Russia, especially places distant from Moscow or Saint Petersburg.
Bolgar is the most significant remnant of Volga-Bulgarian Kingdom, ruling this part of Europe from X to XIII century. Bolgar was the capital of that kingdom and the place where they took Islam as their religion. It seems that current policy of Tatarstan is to praise local and Islamic elements, so the site was recently largely renovated, however excavation works are not finished yet.
There are many well-preserved buildings in Bolgar, such as several mosques and mausoleums and remainings of Khan’s Palace. The site is quite large and to visit all inscribed sites it is necessary to have at least 2-3 hours. You may cut this time significantly by renting a bike (100 rubles per hour) which I did. The whole site is very nice and the view on Volga river banks is really stunning.
Bolgar is located about 180km from Kazan, but getting there during summertime is not an easy task. I tried the speedboat (once per day) but the tickets were sold out for the next five days. Bus tickets from the central station (near the river boat station) were sold up to three days. Fortunately, there was one remaining ticket for that day from south bus …
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170km south of Kazar lie the ruins of the ancient Tatar city of Bolgar.Its a sacred place for the Tatar community, but also a place of pilgrimage for different religions.This is the exact location where way back in 922 the Bulgars have embraced Islam, its the place where lies the foundation of Tatar statehood.The remains of a 13th century mosque, the Grand Minaret,
a few different Mausoleums, a courtroom building that became a smokehouse (Black chamber), the White Chambers with its bath installations.There is also a good museum at the new Shipyard.
Exhibits are mostly from the excavations in Bolgar itself.
Work is still going on.
From Kazan riverside pier there is a 8am fast ferry, near the bus station,
every day.However, they could not provide me with a return ticket.At the end, I was unable to return to Kazan with the speedboat, but had to arrange a shared taxi.
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