Greben (Cyrillic: ÃÂÃÂõñõý, meaning "ridge" or literally "comb") is a mountain in southeastern Serbia, with a small section of the southwestern ridge in Bulgaria. It is named after a large karst ridge that runs along its spine. Greben rises near the village of Poganovo in Serbia, in the municipality of Dimitrovgrad, and extends southeast towards the Bulgarian village of Vrabcha. Prior to the Treaty of Neuilly of 1919, after the First World War, the area was part of Bulgaria.
Its highest peak Beà ¾enià ¡te (or Dziglina livada) stands at an elevation of 1,338 meters above sea level. The highest peak within Bulgaria is called Golesh (ÃÂþûõÃÂ) at 1,157m, which is on the border between Serbia and Bulgaria. The most famous peak within Bulgaria is Dragovski kamak (ÃÂÃÂðóþòÃÂúø úðüÃÂú), at 1,118 m. Due to the characteristic pyramidal shape of its north face, Dragovski kamak is referred to as the "Matterhorn of Tran".
With nearby Vlaà ¡ka planina, Greben forms the attractive canyon (Poganovsko à ¾drelo) of the Jerma (Erma) river.
Greben Hill in the Antarctica was named after the mountain by the Bulgarian Antarctic Place-names Commission.