Glloboçen

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Glloboçen (Albanian: Glloboçen, formerly Gollomboç; Macedonian and Bulgarian: Глобочени) is a village on Lake Prespa in the Pustec Municipality located in the Korçë County in Albania.[1]

Glloboçen
Glloboçeni
Gollomboç
Глобочени
Glloboçen is located in Albania
Glloboçen
Glloboçen
Coordinates: 40°51′22″N 20°56′43″E / 40.85611°N 20.94528°E / 40.85611; 20.94528
Country Albania
CountyKorçë
MunicipalityPustec
Municipal unitPustec
Elevation
879 m (2,884 ft)
Population
 (2000)
 • Total294
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)

Geography

Glloboçeni is situated on the western shore of the Greater Prespa Lake at an altitude of 879 meters (2884 feet) above sea level.[2] The nearest settlement to the north is Dolna Gorica and to the south is Šulin.

History

The "La Macédoine et sa Population Chrétienne" survey by Dimitar Mishev (D. Brankov) from 1905 shows that the inhabitants of the village of Glubochani were in the bosom of the Patriarchate of Constantinople.[3]

A survey by Georgi Trajchev in 1911 stated the village as having 33 houses and 319 residents.[4]

The French linguist André Mazon, in his study on Slavic folklore in Albania from 1936, noted Glomboč as a Bulgarian village in the region of Mala Prespa.[5]

During World War II, 24 of the village's 40 houses were burnt down.[6]

In 2013, the village's official name was changed back from Gollomboç to Glloboçeni.[7]

Bilingual road signs directing to Glloboçeni, written in both Albanian and Macedonian

Demographics

A 2007 estimate put the village's population at 300 to 350 people.[8] The village is composed of ethnic Macedonians,[9] which form part of the larger Macedonian minority in Albania.[10] According to Bulgarian sources, including a local one, the local inhabitants are Bulgarians.[11][12]

YearPopulation
1900248
1926472
1945346
1960217
1969239
1979252
1989299
2000294 [1]

Culture

Glloboçeni is the nearest village to the Church of the Annunciation, a rock church situated on the Lake Prespa shore at an altitude of roughly 25 meters (80 feet). It was established in the 14th century.[13]

People from Glloboçeni

References