Stopića Cave

The Stopića Cave (Serbian: Стопића пећина, romanized: Stopića pećina) is a limestone cave near Sirogojno, on the slopes of Mount Zlatibor in western Serbia.[1][2] It has been protected by the state as a natural monument.[2] By 2022 it became the most visited cave in Serbia.[3][4]

Stopića Cave
Serbian: Стопића пећина
Stopića pećina
Water filled cascading tufa "bathtubs"
Map showing the location of Stopića Cave
Map showing the location of Stopića Cave
LocationSirogojno, Mount Zlatibor, Serbia
Coordinates43°42′08″N 19°51′18″E
Length1,691.5 m (5,550 ft)
GeologyTriassic limestone
Accesseasy
Show cave opened2009
Show cave length400 m (1,300 ft)
Visitors>100,000 (2022)
Featureswaterfall, tufa bathtubs

Location

The Stopića Cave is located on the territory of the Rožanstvo village. It is situated 19 km (12 mi) from Zlatibor, in the Sirogojno direction.[5] The location where to turn from the road between two villages is marked by the representation of the large bottle, posted as the commercial for the former Vapa Spa.[6]

Geology

The cave is easily accessed. The cave entrance is 18 m (59 ft) tall and 35 m (115 ft) wide. It has a total length of 1,691 m (5,548 ft). It is a river cave, as the stream of Trnavski Potok flows through it. It was named after the nearby Stopići hamlet of the Rožanstvo village.[2][5][6]

It contains a 9.5 m-tall (31 ft) waterfall called the "Spring of Life", speleothems and unusual tufa "bathtubs", cave formations which fill with water in time, and then overspill creating a cascade flow. In the section of the cave known as the River Canal, there is a whirlpool. Beneath it, the tufa slide is formed, which spreads into the tufa cascades. Between the cascades, the "bathtubs" and gigantic "pots" are located. During the higher influx of water, the cascading water forms the fully fledged "Spring of Life" waterfall.[2][5][6]

It has two major halls, Dark Hall and Light Hall, and specific openings in the ceiling called dugure or vigledi. There are seven of them, but only one, 66 m (217 ft) deep, is directly connected to the cave. Others are interconnected with each other by the network of slanted corridors.[2][5][6]

Human history

Local population preserved myths of the unknown voices coming from dugure, falling into them, falling into the abyss when getting off the path and various other aberrations in the cave. It was used as the hideout by the local Serbian population, hiding from the Ottoman army during the First Serbian Uprising. Local population still claims that the corridors are much longer than officially measured.[6]

Radoslav Vasović published first description of the cave in the 1901 manuscript of the Serbian Geology Society. The first speleological surveys were conducted in 1909 and 1913 by Jovan Cvijić.[6]

Pane Stopić, local hero, allegedly was hiding in the cave for over a decade, evading the Chetniks, the Yugoslav Partisans and the OZNA pursuers, during and after World War II.[6]

At the turn of the 21st century, local population tried to dig into the dugure, believing it contained hidden gold. Some thought it was the hidden treasure of the medieval Nemanjić dynasty, while others claimed it was gold hidden by the Chetniks during the war.[6]

The cave was open for public in 2009. In had 61,280 visitors in 2017,[2] and 89,113 in 2019.[5] Due to the acoustics, concerts and performances are being held in the cave.[7] In 2022, additional 60 m (200 ft) of pathways were arranged for visitors, bringing a total to 400 m (1,300 ft). That way, Dark and Light Hall, Spring of Life waterfall, Hall with Pots, and whirlpools, all became accessible. The number of visitors reached over 100,000.[3][4]

Vapa Spa

Vapa Spa (Бања Вапа, Banja Vapa), or Toša's Spa (Тошина Бања, Tošina Banja) is a former spa located close to the Rožanci-Sirogojno road and in the vicinity of the cave. Small Prištavica river flows through it, while there are two pipes where the water springs in the spa. It has been used for centuries by the local population who claimed it had healing properties (nerves, skin diseases, eyes).[8]

The unfinished spa complex, designed in the castle style, is left to the elements, derelict and covered in overgrowth. Construction began by the local Toša Lazović (1914–1999; hence the spa's second name) in 1974 and continued until 1999. On the road, there is a large brick object, designed in the shape of a bottle, marking the turn to the spa. The complex is entered via a fenced concrete bridge through the semicircular built gate. There is another, even more derelict entrance which also consists of a small bridge and a gate.[8]

The castle with towers and terraces is made of red façade bricks and was supposed to be a hotel and the central part of the complex. There are paved pedestrian paths around it, and a small pool next to the river. There are several other built bottle-shaped objects around the building. There are pipes built into each one of them, where the water was supposed to spring out. Lazović for a while bottled and sold the water, but the complex ultimately remained unfinished and in ruins.[8]

See also

References

  1. Nenad Banjac, Ljubinko Savić, Aleksandra Maran, Milena Cukavac, Meri Ganić, Zoran Nikić (2011). Field Trip Guide, Geological excursion, 17–18 September 2011 Archived 19 February 2023 at the Wayback Machine. 17th Meeting of the Association of European Geological Societies, Beograd 2011. p. 32.
  2. Branko Pejović, 9 January 2018, Politika, Stopića pećina sve posećenija i uređenija
  3. Стопића пећину прошле године посетило више од 100.000 туриста [Stopića Cave visited by more than 100,000 tourists last year]. Politika (in Serbian). 26 January 2023. p. 10.
  4. eKapija (25 January 2023). "Stopića pećinu prošle godine posetilo više od 100.000 ljudi – Za 10% više nego ranije" [Stopića Cave visited by more than 100,000 tourists last year – 10% more than previous year] (in Serbian). eKapija. Archived from the original on 28 January 2023. Retrieved 28 January 2023.
  5. Branko Pejović (12 May 2020). Стопића пећина отворена за посетиоце [Stopića Cave opened for visitors]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 20.
  6. Branko Pejović (4 October 2020). ""Džinovski lonci" i bigrene kade" ["Gigantic pots" and tufa bathtubs]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1201 (in Serbian). pp. 22–23. Archived from the original on 11 October 2020. Retrieved 6 October 2020.
  7. Branko Pejović (3 November 2020). Етно-звуци у пећини код бигрених када [Ethnic sounds at the tufa bathtubs in the cave]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 20.
  8. Branko Pejović (8 July 2019). "Od Tošine banje i dvorca ostale zidine" [Only derelict walls remained of Toša's spa and castle]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 8. Archived from the original on 9 July 2019. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
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