Panayot Panayotov

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Panayot Panayotov may refer to:

Panayot Mitov Panayotov was a Bulgarian football forward who played for Bulgaria in the 1962 FIFA World Cup.

Panayot Panayotov is a Bulgarian pop singer whose emotive songs of the 1980s and 1990s were often featured on national TV. The major themes of his songs were romantic love and – to a lesser extent – separation, loss and nostalgia.

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Alexander Alexandrov or Aleksandr Aleksandrov may refer to:

Aytos Place in Burgas, Bulgaria

Aytos, sometimes written Aitos and Ajtos, is a town located in eastern Bulgaria some 30 kilometers from the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and belonging to the administrative boundaries of Burgas Province. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous Aytos Municipality. As of December 2009, the town has a population of 21,067 inhabitants.

Bulgaria at the 1956 Summer Olympics

Bulgaria competed at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia and Stockholm, Sweden.

Stadion Panayot Volov is a multi-use stadium in Shumen, Bulgaria. It is used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of Volov Shumen. The stadium currently holds a license for 3,500 spectators.

<i>Velikite Balgari</i> Wikimedia list article

Velikite Balgari was the Bulgarian spin-off of the 2002 program 100 Greatest Britons produced by the BBC. Aired on the Bulgarian National Television's Kanal 1, its first stage began on 9 June 2006 and finished on 10 December, with a show on 23 December announcing the names of the Top 100 as chosen by popular vote. The Top 10 were announced in alphabetical order. In the second stage, which lasted until 17 February 2007, the viewers determined the order in the Top 10. Documentaries dedicated to every Top 10 personality were aired during the second stage.

Football Club Volov 1929 Shumen is a Bulgarian football club, playing in the city of Shumen, which currently competes in the Bulgarian Regional Amateur Football Groups. The club was established in 1929 under the name "Panayot Volov", and folded its senior team in 2014, before being 'refounded' in July 2018. They play their home games on "Panayot Volov", with a capacity of 24,390 people. The team's first kit colors are yellow and blue.

Kaloyan Cvetkov is a Bulgarian footballer, who plays for PFC Panayot Volov as a midfielder.

PFC Burgas

Professional Football Club Burgas was a Bulgarian association football club based in Burgas. The club was formed in 2009 and was dissolved in 2015 after union with Neftochimic Burgas.

Vladko Panayotov is a scholar and Bulgarian member of the European Parliament who sits on the committee for the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety. He is also a substitute for the Committee on Industry, Research and Energy. He is a member of the Movement for Rights and Freedoms party of Bulgaria and in the European Union he is part of the Group of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe.

Vasil Panayotov Bulgarian footballer

Vasil Panayotov is a Bulgarian professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Cherno More Varna. Panayotov primarily plays as a centre midfielder.

Aleksandar Karakachanov Bulgarian politician

Aleksandаr Panayotov Karakachanov is a Bulgarian politician, social activist, dissident and university professor.

Dobrujan Bulgarians ethnic group

Dobrujan Bulgarians — also spelled Dobrudžans, Dobrudzans, and Dobrudjans — is a regional, ethnographic group of ethnic Bulgarians, inhabiting or originating from Dobruja. Today, the larger part of this population is concentrated in Southern Dobruja, but much is spread across the whole of Bulgaria and the diaspora. Until the early 1940s, the Dobrujan Bulgarians lived also in the whole of Dobruja, then part of the Ottoman Empire and later Kingdom of Romania. In September 1940, the governments of Bulgaria and Kingdom of Romania agreed a population exchange according to the Treaty of Craiova. The Bulgarian population in Northern Dobruja, was expelled into Bulgaria-controlled Southern Dobruja, today Dobrich Province and Silistra Province.

Panayot Pipkov Bulgarian composer

Panayot Pipkov was a Bulgarian composer. He studied music in Milan, Italy, and taught in Lovech and Sofia. He was the father of composer Lyubomir Pipkov.

Plamen Panayotov Bulgarian politician and academic

Plamen Aleksandrov Panayotov is a Bulgarian politician and academic who served as deputy Prime Minister in charge of European integration in the Sakskoburggotski cabinet between 2003 and 2005.

The 1950 Bulgarian Cup Final was the 10th final of the Bulgarian Cup. It was contested by Levski Sofia and CSKA Sofia. It took three matches at People's Army Stadium to determine a winner. The first took place on 26 November, the second on 27 November and the third on 3 December 1950. The cup was won by Levski Sofia. They won the 2nd replay 1–0 after extra time.

Panayotov is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: