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The historical transition from the Bulgarian Kingdom through the Soviet period to the present state of Bulgaria has affected humans and their land use preferences, leading to repeated transformations of the vegetation. We analysed the proportional change of vegetation types in the Tsentralen Balkan National Park in Bulgaria using aerial imagery over the last 65 years and object based image segmentation. Segments were classified into three land cover classes (vegetation types): shrubland, grassland, and shrub-grassland mosaic. In order to interpret the observed proportional changes of these vegetation types we collated livestock numbers over the same period. The shrub-grassland mosaic constantly decreased over the first 20 years, whereas shrublands and grasslands both increased. During the period 1969–1989, the trend continued and areas covered by the shrub-grassland mosaic decreased by 82%, while shrublands increased by 56% and grasslands increased by 18%. The species rich shrub-grassland mosaics were most affected by the land use changes. The overall land cover diversity pattern reduced to two classes. The period with the least changes was 1989–2012, when changes in landscape cover stabilized after the area was designated a National Park. Livestock numbers varied throughout the study period due to the transformation processes. This probably also affected the change in the vegetation patterns analyzed, as few other drivers are known from the Stara Planina Mts. The aerial imagery time series was helpful to reconstruct the changes in the vegetation of the study area, however, extending the time series would allow for a better correlation with livestock numbers.