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The Art School of Tarnovo (in Bulgarian: Търновска художествена школа) was an art school in the old Bulgarian capital — Tarnovo (now Veliko Tarnovo [1]) — during the Second Bulgarian Empire [2] and Bulgarian National Revival from the 15th to 19th centuries.
The architecture of the Bulgarian Revival is an Ottoman style architecture developed between 1770 and 1900. [ 1 ] Plovdiv's Old Town [ 2 ] is a living museum of the type of National Revival architecture that developed there (there were regional differences) in the early to mid-1800.
It collected examples of contemporary Bulgarian art. The department grew into the State Art Gallery in 1934 and was moved to a separate building. Among its exhibits were works by Bulgarian National Revival artists, foreign art and works of first-generation Bulgarian painters from after the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878.
Medieval Bulgarian architecture (1 C, 6 P) Pages in category "Architecture in Bulgaria" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
The Bulgarian scholars and writers, as St. Clement of Ohrid and St. Naum of Preslav, were among the most prominent and close disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodius and among the creators not only of the first Slavic alphabet – the Glagolitic (not officially used nowadays), but also of the new Bulgarian Cyrillic alphabet, named after their ...
The Round Church (Bulgarian: Кръгла църква, Kragla tsarkva), also known as the Golden Church (Златна църква, Zlatna tsarkva) or the Church of St John (църква "Свети Йоан", tsarkva "Sveti Yoan"), is a large partially preserved early medieval Eastern Orthodox church.
The Achaemenid Empire at its greatest territorial extent, under the rule of Darius I (522 BC–486 BC) [21] Ever since the Macedonian king Amyntas I surrendered his country to the Persians in about 512-511 BC, Macedonians and Persians were strangers no more. [3]
A man from Florence, 1888 Renaissance-style painting by Konstantin Velichkov.. A number of ancient civilizations, including the Thracians, ancient Greeks, Scythians, Celts, ancient Romans, Goths (Ostrogoths and Visigoths), Slavs (East and West Slavs), Varangians and the Bulgars have left their mark on the culture, history and heritage of Bulgaria.