Bulgaria

Alexandrovo Thracian Tomb

WHS Score 0.19
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  • Argo
  • Philipp Peterer
  • Stanimir

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  • Tarquinio_Superbo
The Aleksandrovo tomb is a domed Thracian tomb dated to the 4th century BCE. The elaborate interior wall painting scheme has been well-preserved. They are influenced by Greek paintings, showing beards and Greek footwear. The tomb was only discovered in the year 2000.

Site Info

Official Information
Full Name
Thracian Tomb with Wall Paintings beside Alexandrovo village (ID: 1949)
Country
Bulgaria
Status
On tentative list 2004 Site history
History of Alexandrovo Thracian Tomb
1985: Rejected
There are better examples of neolithic vestiges, Greco-Roman cities, Omayyad + Mameluke mons
2004: Added to Tentative List
Added to tentative list
2010: Upstream Process
Pilot Project
2014: Upstream process terminated
Pilot project stopped by Jordan and replaced by Gadara
Criteria
Links
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org
All Links
UNESCO.org
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Community Information

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First published: 03/09/18.

Argo

Alexandrovo Thracian Tomb

Alexandrovo Thracian Tomb (On tentative list)

Alexandrovo Thracian Tomb by Argo

The tumulus near Alexandrovo village was only investigated in the early 2000s. The tomb discovered inside is completely painted. While the paintings at Kazanlak WHS show a clear influence from Hellenic culture, the hunting scene depicted at Alexandro show people dressed (allegedly) in the “original” Thracian way and this, associated with the good preservation state of the paintings, was the reason to have this tomb on the TWHS list of Bulgaria.

The original tomb is closed and only a replica can be visited in the nearby museum. It was built a few years ago, funded by Japan. There is only one big room, with the replica in the middle (you can walk inside and around) and many pictures and explanations posted on the walls. We thought this replica is more “visitors friendly” than the one in Kazanlak. Staff of the museum was nice and helpful as well.

The tumulus with the original tomb can easily be seen from the museum, and you can also walk to it. So we did, although, frankly speaking, this did not add much to the visit, but the feeling to have (maybe!) entered a “tentative core area of a tentative WHS” (which, for a WHS hunter, is finally far from nothing).

The museum is interesting and of good quality, not far away from the Sofia to Turkey highway, and the visit does not take long: only good reasons to stop there. However, our car was the only one at the car park …

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