Hadji Trendafila (1785-1845) was a Bulgarian school teacher. [1] She and her husband opened a school in Sliven in 1815, where he taught the boys and she the girls (she was herself educated in a convent). She was likely the first professional female teacher in Bulgaria.[ citation needed ]
Manush Georgiev, also known as Manush voivoda, was a Bulgarian revolutionary from Ottoman Macedonia, a member of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization. He graduated from the Bulgarian schools in Strumitsa and Serres, and was later appointed as a teacher in the villages of Barbarevo, Robovo, Borievo and Stinik.
Hristo Batandzhiev was a Macedonian Bulgarian revolutionary, one of the founders of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization.
Football is the most popular sport in Bulgaria. It was introduced in 1893–1894 by Swiss gymnastics teachers invited to the country. A football match was first played in Varna's High School for Boys in 1894, where it was introduced by Georges de Regibus, and the game was brought to Sofia by Charles Champaud the following year. The rules of the game were published in Bulgarian by Swiss teachers in the Uchilishten pregled magazine in 1897, and football continued to gain popularity in the early 20th century. Among the founders of the Turkish team Galatasaray in 1905 was the Bulgarian Lycée de Galatasaray student Blagoy Balakchiev, and the first Bulgarian club, Futbol Klub, was established in Sofia in 1909 on the initiative of Sava Kirov. Botev Plovdiv was founded in 1912, Slavia Sofia in 1913, and Levski Sofia in 1914.
Nayden Gerov, born Nayden Gerov Hadzhidobrevich February 23, 1823, Koprivshtitsa – October 9, 1900, Plovdiv) was a Bulgarian linguist, folklorist, writer and public figure during the Bulgarian National Revival.
Emanuil Vaskidovich was a Bulgarian National Revival enlightener, the founder of the first secular school in the Bulgarian lands.
Karel Václav Škorpil was a Czech-Bulgarian archaeologist and museum worker credited along with his brother Hermann with the establishment of those two disciplines in Bulgaria.
Václav Hermenegild Škorpil was an archaeologist and museum worker credited along with his brother Karel with the establishment of those two disciplines in Bulgaria, as well as a geologist, botanist, architect and librarian.
Kamche Nikov Popangelov, widely known as Daskal Kamche, was a Bulgarian teacher, printer and engraver, founder of one of the first printing houses for books in Bulgarian in the Ottoman Empire.
Kostadin Alakushev was a Macedonian Bulgarian revolutionary of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO).
Metodi Aleksiev Yanushev was a Bulgarian revolutionary, a member of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO) and the Bulgarian Communist Party.
Krastyo Hadzhipetrov Asenov, nicknamed Mechkata, Ogneniot daskal and Cherkeza, was a Bulgarian revolutionary figure active in the region of Macedonia, one of the voyvodas of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO) for the Enidzhe Vardar region. He took part in the liberation struggles of the Macedonians at the beginning of the 20th century.
Kosta Atanasov Manushkin was a Bulgarian teacher and a revolutionary, a worker of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO).
Paril is a village in Hadzhidimovo Municipality, in Blagoevgrad Province, Bulgaria.
Ghana Naydenova, was a Bulgarian teacher, known for her participation in the national liberation movement.
Naum Hristov Tomalevski was a Bulgarian revolutionary, participant in the Macedonian revolutionary movement, member of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO).
Ekaterina Hristova Zalatareva (1868–1924) was a Bulgarian actress.
Vera Ignatieva-Kirova was a Bulgarian stage and film actress. She was also the spouse of Geno Kirov.
Maria Toromanova-Hmelik was a Bulgarian actress, best known for her role in Love is Madness (1917).
Ruska Mihaylova Manuilova or better known as her stage name Roza Popova, was a Bulgarian actress and theater director and the wife of the Bulgarian writer Chicho Stoyan.
Marin Vasilev Selovlev, known professionally as Marin Vasilev was a Bulgarian sculptor and art professor. Together with Boris Schatz and Zheko Spiridonov, he is considered to be a founding figure of modern Bulgarian sculpture.
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