Sofia, Bulgarie

Guide de la ville avec infos clés, voyages, business et culture.

Aperçu

Sofia is Bulgaria's capital and largest city — a place where Roman ruins, Ottoman mosques, and Soviet neoclassical boulevards coexist a short walk from each other. At the foot of Mount Vitosha (a national park within city limits), Sofia is one of Europe's most affordable capital cities and a compact base for day trips to Rila Monastery, Plovdiv, and the ski resorts of Bansko and Borovets.

Roman Ruins & History

Serdika Metro Roman forum, National Archaeological Museum (Thracian treasures, Rogozen Silver), Largo Square underpass ruins, and Sofia History Museum in the old central baths.

Orthodox Art & Churches

Alexander Nevsky Cathedral (neo-Byzantine, 1882–1912), the Rotunda of St George (4th century Roman church), Boyana Church (UNESCO, 13th-century realist frescoes), and the icon market at Nevsky Square.

City Centre Culture & Food

Vitosha Boulevard cafés and restaurants, the Women's Market for fresh produce, traditional mehana taverns with shopska salad and banitsa, and the National Palace of Culture for events.

Vitosha Mountain & Nature

Hiking and walking on Mount Vitosha (2,290 m), reachable by metro and cable car — alpine meadows, stone rivers at Zlatni Mostove, and panoramic views over the city.
Aperçu voyage

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.

Découvrir Sofia

The Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, completed in 1912, is the centrepiece of Sofia's skyline — a neo-Byzantine masterpiece built in gold, white, and green with a gilded dome visible from across the city. The interior is richly decorated with marble, onyx, Italian alabaster, and mosaics. In the adjacent Alexander Nevsky Square, an informal outdoor market of icons, antiques, Soviet-era memorabilia, old coins, and Bulgarian folk crafts operates every day of the week — one of the most atmospheric places in central Sofia to browse.

Missions diplomatiques à Sofia

3 missions dans cette ville, regroupées par région.