Landmarks
For a town with 25 centuries of history, Ahtopol preserves a remarkable amount of tangible heritage — fortress walls, a Revival-era church, a Greek school, an ancient harbour and a rocky cape with a lighthouse.
Landmarks
For a town with 25 centuries of history, Ahtopol preserves a remarkable amount of tangible heritage — fortress walls, a Revival-era church, a Greek school, an ancient harbour and a rocky cape with a lighthouse.
The old fortress
Partially preserved 14th-century Byzantine walls, reinforced by Emperor Michael IX in 1306. The towers and gate at the southern tip of the peninsula are the best-preserved section.
Ascension of the Lord Church (1776)
The oldest surviving building in Ahtopol and the only major structure to survive the 1918 fire. The church has a precious 19th-century carved-wood iconostasis and Greek and Old Bulgarian icons — rare witnesses to a bilingual age.
Greek School (1873)
A two-storey Revival-era stone building on the main square — the last surviving school from the time of the Greek community in Ahtopol. Today it houses a small ethnographic museum with exhibits on fishing and maritime trade.
Cape St. Yani and the lighthouse
The southern tip of the peninsula — a rocky cape with a small chapel and an active lighthouse from 1925. One of the most popular sunset spots on the entire southern Black Sea coast.
The fishing harbour
The small harbour with its moored fishing boats is perhaps Ahtopol's most characteristic view. Fresh fish is unloaded here in the morning for the restaurants, and nets and tackle are displayed in the evening.
Strandzha Nature Park
Ahtopol borders Strandzha Nature Park — 1,161 km² of protected forest. The village of Brodilovo is nearby, and 25 km west lies Balgari, famous for its unique fire-dancing rituals on 3–4 June.