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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SerdikaSerdika - Wikipedia

    Serdika or Serdica (Bulgarian: Сердика [ˈsɛrdikɐ]) is the historical Roman name of Sofia, now the capital of Bulgaria. Currently, Serdika is the name of a district located in the city. It includes four neighbourhoods: "Fondovi zhilishta"; "Banishora", "Orlandovtsi" and "Malashevtsi" as well as the central parts of "Draz mahala".

  2. Serdica was the capital of the Diocese of Dacia (337-602). An amphitheatre was built over the remains of the theatre under Diocletian (284–305) and later under Constantine the Great (306–337). For Constantine the Great it was 'Sardica mea Roma est' (Serdica is my Rome).

  3. Feb 7, 2022 · February 7, 2022. Was Serdica a real city, or a mystery like Atlantis? Serdica (Serdika) was very real, and even pre-dates the Romans! Here is everything you need to know about the lost city, including what you can see today. What Serdica may have looked like. What is Serdica?

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  5. The Amphitheatre of Serdica (Latin: Amphitheatrum Serdicense; Bulgarian: Амфитеатър на Сердика, Amfiteatar na Serdika) was an amphitheatre in the Ancient Roman city of Ulpia Serdica, now Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria. Discovered in 2004 and the subject of excavations in 2005 and 2006, the ruins of the amphitheatre lie on two ...

    • 3rd–4th century AD
  6. Serdica (Sofia, Bulgaria) Serdica (medieval Sredets, modern Sofia, Bulgaria) was a city in Bulgaria on the river Iskur, at the intersection o f the northwest-southeast Belgrade-Constantinople rout e and a north-south route linking the Aegean with the Danube. Originally the capital of the Thracian Serdi, it was raised to city status by Trajan ...

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  7. Bulgaria, Europe. Sofia. This remarkable, partly covered excavation site, situated just above the Serdika metro station, displays the remains of the Roman city, Serdica, that once occupied this area. The remains were unearthed from 2010 to 2012 during construction of the metro.

  8. www.ancientbulgaria.bg › listings › serdicaSERDICA | ANCIENT BULGARIA

    Serdica, the city he was referring to, is modern-day Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, and its downtown area has preserved bits of its Roman past. The Romans took Serdica, in an area populated by the Thracian Serdi tribe, in the mid-1st Century AD.

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