Shumen Fortress

Shumen Fortress
Bulgarian: Шуменска крепост
Shumenska krepost
Shumеn, Bulgaria
The main tower of the Shumen Fortress
Plan of the Shumen Fortress
Shumen Fortress is located in Bulgaria
Shumen Fortress
Shumen Fortress
Coordinates43°15′44″N 26°53′36″E / 43.2622°N 26.8933°E / 43.2622; 26.8933
TypeFortress
Site information
OwnerAncient Thrace, the Roman Empire, the Byzantine Empire, the Bulgarian Empire, and the Ottoman Empire.
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionDestroyed by the Ottomans, now partially restored
Site history
Battles/warsMany

The Shumen Fortress (Bulgarian: Шуменска крепост, Shumenska krepost) is an archaeological site overlooking the city of Shumen in north-eastern Bulgaria.

It is an ancient fortress with historical links to a village nearby traced to early Iron Age and later owned by the Thracians in the 5th century BC. Then, from 2nd to 4th centuries AD, it was controlled by the Romans who built towers and walls, and it was refurbished by the Byzantines as their garrison town. Shumen thrived in the Middle Ages as an important stronghold of the Bulgarian Empire. In 1444 the fort was destroyed by the Ottomans after their victory in the Battle of Varna over a Christian army under Władysław III of Poland. The fortress remained deserted ever since.

Restoration works on the fortress commenced in 2012 under the project titled “Bulgaria Begins Here”, and was completed partially in 2015 with financial assistance provided under the European Economic Area (EEA) and Norway Grants to the Shumen Municipality and the Shumen Regional Museum of History.