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The Slavonic and East European Review. 58 (2): 218– 231. Riis, Carsten (2002). Religion, Politics, and Historiography in Bulgaria. East European Monographs. ISBN 9780880335065. Whitehead, Cameron Ean Alfred (2014). "The Bulgarian Horrors : culture and the international history of the Great Eastern Crisis, 1876-1878 (PhD Dissertation)".
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Cultural history of Bulgaria (4 C, 1 P) L. ... Pages in category "Culture of Bulgaria"
His book "The Bulgarian Jews and the Final Solution" was published in 1972. It earned a very positive echo in Bulgaria and in Jewish circles. [ 6 ] The book described the methods of the country's leadership and public to save the Bulgarian Jews from deportation to German death camps, the only case where the entire Jewish community of a German ...
The gaida of Bulgaria is worthy of its own subsection. In Bulgaria the gaida has been a long symbol of the country and its heritage, and is one of the more well-known instruments of the country. The gaida most widely used is the Thracian gaida. There is in the Rhodope Mountains the deep-sounding kaba gaida.
The Encyclopedia Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Енциклопедия "България") is an encyclopedia in seven volumes, published by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and dedicated to the 1300th anniversary of the founding of the Bulgarian state.
Maria Nikolaeva Todorova (Bulgarian: Мария Николаева Тодорова) (born 5 January 1949, Sofia) is a Bulgarian historian who is best known for her influential book, Imagining the Balkans, in which she applies Edward Said's notion of "Orientalism" to the Balkans.
The frescos in the tomb depict Thracian culture and burial rites. The tomb is a part of a larger necropolis, located near the ancient Thracian city of Seuthopolis, the capital of king Seuthes III. It was rediscovered in 1944, with frescos remarkably well-preserved. [8] Rock-Hewn Churches of Ivanovo: Ruse Province: 1979 45; ii, iii (cultural)
The book's first manual copy was done by Sophronius of Vratsa in 1765. Structurally, Istoriya Slavyanobolgarskaya consists of two introductions, several chapters that discuss various historic events, a chapter about the "Slavic teachers", the disciples of Cyril and Methodius, a chapter about the Bulgarian saints, and an epilogue.