Crna River (Vardar)

(Redirected from Cherna Loop)

The Crna River (Macedonian: Црна Река, "Black River"), traditionally known in English as the Cerna, is a river in North Macedonia. It is a right tributary of the Vardar River. It runs through much of the south and west of the country. Its source is in the mountains on the western part of North Macedonia, northwest of Demir Hisar.

Crna River
Crna River in Železnec, near Demir Hisar
Map
Native nameЦрна Река (Macedonian)
Location
CountryNorth Macedonia
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationŽeleznec
Mouth 
 • location
Vardar
 • coordinates
41°33′18″N 21°58′49″E / 41.55500°N 21.98028°E / 41.55500; 21.98028
Length207 km (129 mi)
Basin features
ProgressionVardarAegean Sea

It enters the Pelagonia valley at the village of Buchin and then flows through the village Sopotnica, and southwards through the plains east of Bitola. At Brod (Novaci Municipality) it turns northeast. It leaves the Pelagonia valley at the Staravina village and goes in the biggest canyon in North Macedonia, the Skočivir valley and flows into the Vardar River between Rosoman and Gradsko.

Thus, the river makes a bend of almost 180 degrees east of Bitola. This bend was part of the Macedonian front in World War I. It was known to the allied forces as the Cerna Bend or Cerna Loop, and two major battles were fought here: the Battle of the Cerna Bend (1916) and the Battle of the Crna Bend (1917).

The name Crna Reka means "Black River" in Macedonian, a translation of its earlier Thracian name, Erigon (Ancient Greek: Ἐριγών, romanizedErigón), meaning "black", akin to Greek érebos, "darkness"; Armenian erek, "evening"; Old Norse røkkr, "darkness"; Gothic riqis, "darkness"; Sanskrit rájas, "night"; and Tocharian B orkamo, "dark".[1]

The Erigon River is mentioned by Arrian in the Anabasis of Alexander,[2] Livy in the History of Rome[3] Strabo in the Geographica,[4] Athenaeus in the Deipnosophistae.[5]

The Roman provincial capital of Stobi sat at the intersection of the Vardar and the Crna[6]

References

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  1. ^ Katičic', Radoslav. Ancient Languages of the Balkans. Paris: Mouton, 1976: 147
  2. ^ Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander, §1.5.2
  3. ^ §31.39, §39.53
  4. ^ Strabo, Geography, §7.7.8,, §7.7.9, §7.8.12, §7.8.20, §7.8.22, §7.8.23, §7.8.48
  5. ^ Athenaeus, Deipnosophists ,§2.43
  6. ^ "Stobi-The Archeological Site". Stobi. April 25, 2024.