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Ano Vrontou

Ano Vrontou
Άνω Βροντού
View from Ano Vrontou
View from Ano Vrontou
Ano Vrontou is located in Greece
Ano Vrontou
Ano Vrontou
Coordinates: 41°18′N 23°41′E / 41.300°N 23.683°E / 41.300; 23.683Coordinates: 41°18′N 23°41′E / 41.300°N 23.683°E / 41.300; 23.683
Country Greece
Administrative region Central Macedonia
Regional unit Serres
Municipality Serres
 • Municipal unit 47.3 km2 (18.3 sq mi)
Elevation 1,040 m (3,410 ft)
Population (2011)
 • Municipal unit 199
 • Municipal unit density 4.2/km2 (11/sq mi)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal code 621 00
Vehicle registration ΕΡ

Ano Vrontou (Greek: Άνω Βροντού; Bulgarian: Горно Броди, Gorno Brodi) is a remote mountain village and a former community in the northern Serres regional unit, Greece. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Serres, of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 47.306 km2. In 2011 its population was 199. Ano Vrontou is situated in the northeastern part of the Vrontous mountains, at about 1060 m elevation. It borders on the Drama regional unit to the north and east. Ano Vrontou is 6 km northwest of Kato Vrontou, 12 km east of Achladochori, 13 km northeast of Oreini, 16 km southwest of Kato Nevrokopi and 26 km northeast of Serres.

The finding of a Greek inscription of Roman (Imperial) times supports the conclusion that in the place of the present village there was an ancient settlement, whose residents were engaged in the exploitation of the iron mines of the mountain Vrontous.

Brodi (now Vrontou) was first mentioned in the 14th century in a letter from the Serbian tsar Stefan Dušan to Rayko, the ruler of Brodi and Trilisa (now Vathytopos). The Ottomans conquered the area and ruled until the Balkan Wars. Prior to the Second Balkan Wars, it had a Bulgarian majority and a Turkish minority.

It had around 2,700 Bulgarian inhabitants in 1873. By 1900, its population rose to 6,100 Bulgarian Christians. In 1905 according to the secretary of the exarch Dimitar Mishev the settlement had around 6,480 Bulgarian exarchists and 240 Bulgarian patriarchists, making it one of the largest places in the area.


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