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  2. List of newspapers in Bulgaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_newspapers_in_Bulgaria

    Bulgarian transport newspaper; Bulgarian writer; C. Capital (weekly) [1] (liberal conservative, pro-business) D. Dar; Darjaven vestnik; Democratsiya [2]

  3. Makedoniya (Bulgarian newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makedoniya_(Bulgarian...

    Title page of the 4 July 1870 issue of Makedoniya. Makedoniya (Bulgarian: Македония, originally spelled Македонія) was a Bulgarian newspaper edited and published by Petko Slaveykov in Istanbul with the aim to help the foundation of an independent Bulgarian Church.

  4. Journalists of the Balkan Wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Journalists_of_the_Balkan_Wars

    Wrote some articles, as a war correspondent of the Greek newspaper Εμπρός. Romaidis, Aristotelis [88] Greek B.W.I Photographer, based in Athens Many photographs from the Greek front of the 1st Balkan War (1912–13). [89] Co-operated with the young photographer Zeitz. Zeitz, Friedrich German, working for a Greek photographer B.W.I

  5. Dnevnik (Bulgarian newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dnevnik_(Bulgarian_newspaper)

    Dnevnik (Bulgarian: Дневник, Journal) is a business-oriented Bulgarian daily newspaper, that is published Monday - Friday in Sofia since 2001. Until early 2005, it was printed in broadsheet format, the last Bulgarian daily to use the large format.

  6. Incident at Petrich - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incident_at_Petrich

    The Incident at Petrich (Greek: Επεισόδιο του Πετριτσίου; Bulgarian: Петрички инцидент), or the War of the Stray Dog (Greek: Πόλεμος του αδέσποτου σκύλου), [1] was a GreekBulgarian crisis in 1925 that resulted in a brief invasion of Bulgaria by Greece near the border town of Petrich after the killing of a Greek captain and a ...

  7. Category:Daily newspapers published in Bulgaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Daily_newspapers...

    Telegraph (Bulgarian newspaper) Trud (Bulgarian newspaper) Z. Zemia (Bulgarian newspaper)

  8. Telegraph (Bulgarian newspaper) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Telegraph_(Bulgarian_newspaper)

    The Telegraph (Телеграф) is a Bulgarian national daily newspaper published in Sofia. It was established in January 2005 as a low-cost, short-article alternative to the mainstream press. Its circulation rose rapidly: in May 2005 it was 38,000, [1] but by April 2007 it had reached 80,000. [2]

  9. Bulgaria–Greece relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgaria–Greece_relations

    Since Bulgaria joined NATO in May 2004, Greek-Bulgarian relations have been developing on all fronts, and the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs describes relations between Greece and Bulgaria as "excellent". [1] In 2018, declassified documents of the Communist Bulgaria revealed a plan to foment crisis between Turkey and Greece in 1971.