Rila Monastery: The Different Side of Bulgaria
@kolibrarium
Posted 6d ago · 6 min read
After 3 days of cities, streets, and buildings stacked against more buildings, I needed a change of scenery. @kolibrarium/sofia-a-city-of-contrasts" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Sofia and @kolibrarium/from-sofia-to-plovdiv" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Plovdiv had been generous with surprises, but I wanted to know what Bulgaria looked like when you took the urban layers away. So I did what everyone does. I googled it, and one name kept showing up regardless of what I searched. Rila Monastery.
The Way to Rilla
If you have a car, getting to Rila Monastery is easy. If you don't, public transport technically exists but requires the kind of patience and logistical optimism I wasn't feeling that morning, so I went with an organized tour instead. There were surprisingly few companies offering it, which felt like either a well-kept secret or a missed opportunity, and I'm still not sure which.
We got picked up in central Sofia in a comfortable bus, which was already a significant upgrade on the minibus from Plovdiv. The drive took about two hours, and somewhere along the way the city quietly disappeared behind us.
As we ventured deeper into the Rila Mountains, the landscape transformed gradually. City buildings faded into vast open spaces, which flowed into lush forests before ascending to majestic peaks. By the time we fully immersed ourselves in Bulgaria's highest mountain range, we experienced a dramatic change in weather—cycling through sun, clouds, rain, and even a fleeting flirtation with snow. Our guide had rightly cautioned us: it would indeed be chillier than Sofia.
A Monastery Or A Fortress?
The first thing you notice when you arrive is not the monastery. It's the walls. Rila Monastery looks like a fortress from the outside, thick and heavy and not particularly interested in welcoming you, the kind of architecture that was designed to keep things safe rather than to impress passersby.
And then you walk through the gate and the whole logic inverts itself. Inside, white and red arches frame painted facades covered in detail, and the scale of it hits you all at once. It does not feel like a religious site so much as a small city that decided to take its visual vocabulary very seriously. Standing in the courtyard, you understand immediately why the walls needed to be that solid.
Rila Monastery: What's the fuzz? 🤔
Founded in the 10th century by Saint Ivan of Rila, the monastery became something much larger than a religious institution during the centuries of Ottoman rule. While Bulgaria was under foreign control, this place preserved the Bulgarian language, culture, and identity from disappearing. It copied manuscripts, educated people, and held something together that could very easily have been lost.
Most monasteries are minimal.
Rila is the opposite.
The moment you walk inside, you’re surrounded by color, patterns, frescoes, arches. Every wall tells a story. Every surface is detailed. It’s also officially recognized by UNESCO.
Reading Bible Live
If you are reading this and genuinely wondering which stories are there to be found? Let me tell you this. The main church in the center is where things get genuinely overwhelming. Every surface is covered in frescoes, heaven, hell, saints, judgment, the full narrative of Christianity. It is told in vivid color across every wall and ceiling, with nowhere for your eyes to rest and nothing left out. It looks extraordinary even without context, but we had a guide, and with context it became something else entirely.
One detail I didn't see coming: I grew up thinking Adam and Eve ate an apple. The Bible never actually specifies an apple. It says "fruit", and the apple arrived later through centuries of translation choices and artistic convention. I stood in front of a fresco that had been there since the 14th century and realized I had been wrong about something since childhood.
Have you ever wondered what is so special about frescoes? 💭 Back then, most people couldn’t read, so all those frescoes were not just there to look nice.They were the story to follow with your eyes.
At its peak the monastery housed several hundred monks, a remarkable number given how remote the location is. Today around 6 to 8 monks live there. The monastery still functions and also takes overnight guests, simple rooms and minimal comfort.
Orthodox vs Catholic
Bulgaria is Orthodox, and if you come from a Catholic background you might wonder what's the difference. First, the visual inside the church looks immediately different: richer, denser, more narrative, faces of saints covering every available surface rather than the cleaner lines of Catholic interiors. Second, Orthodox Christianity has no central authority equivalent to the Pope, operating instead as a collection of independent churches each with its own patriarch. Next to this the calendar runs differently and its holidays don't always happen at the same dates. And the main difference is Catholic priests are not allowed to marry. Orthodox priests can marry, but only before they become priests. You know what they say, if you can manage your woman, kids and a family, you can run the entire church 😁.
Boyana Church: the oldest of them all
On the way back to Sofia we stopped at Boyana Church, which looks from the outside like a small and not particularly remarkable building, the kind of thing you would drive past without slowing down. What makes it so special? Inside it holds frescoes from 1259 that look nothing like 1259. The most particular feature is the faces of the saints have expression. It is not your typical flat symbolic saint figures you find in most medieval religious art but something closer to portraiture, to people rather than icons.
This level of realism appeared in Western Europe during the Renaissance, two centuries later. Boyana Church got there first and then stayed quietly in the Sofia suburbs while history moved on without acknowledging it. It survived everything, wars and time and general indifference, and it is still there, still showing faces that look like they have something to say.
One thing caught me off guard. There’s a saint painted on the wall, and his gaze follows you wherever you go. You take a step, and it feels like he turns with you. You think of the Mona Lisa effect, but this was painted long before that, which makes it even more impressive.
If you want to experience not just faith but the living bones of Bulgarian history and heritage, do not miss Rila Monastery. The trip alone already tells you something about this country. And what waits on the other side of those fortress walls tells you even more. 👀
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