1 / 14

On 3 March we celebrate the National day of the Republic of Bulgaria.

March 3rd. On 3 March we celebrate the National day of the Republic of Bulgaria. How it all began. The day was first celebrated in 1880, two years after the Bulgarian Liberation, as the date of coronation of Emperor Alexander II. Alexander II.

landen
Télécharger la présentation

On 3 March we celebrate the National day of the Republic of Bulgaria.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. March 3rd On 3 March we celebrate the National day of the Republic of Bulgaria.

  2. How it all began The day was first celebrated in 1880, two years after the Bulgarian Liberation, as the date of coronation of Emperor Alexander II. Alexander II

  3. The date 3 March signifies the first steps of Bulgaria towards her future as a sovereign country.

  4. First steps The “Istoriya Slavyanobulgarska” by the clergyman Paisius of Hilendar, the Independance of the Bulgarian church, and the April Uprising are the first steps towards independent Bulgaria. The flag of the 3rd party of the Bulgarian rebellion - the Samarian flag First independent Bulgarian church Second battle of Shipka 21-26 August 1877

  5. Paisius of Hilendar Paisius of Hilendar, the author of the infamous Istoriya Slavyanobulgarska, was the strategist of the Bulgarian uprising. Paisius inspired Bulgarians, pulled them from their despair and set the foundation for the Bulgarian revival.

  6. Istorya Slavyanobolgarskaya

  7. Georgi Sava Rakovski Born on 2 April 1821, Georgi Sava Rakovski devoted his life for the ideal of a free Bulgaria. He created a number of rebellion organizations, published newspapers, leaded legions and inspired uprisings.

  8. Georgi Sava Rakovski The Plan for the Liberation of Bulgaria, written in 1861, turned very important for our history. The plan set the foundation for the work of Lyuben Karavelov and Vasil Levski, among others. It stated that a Bulgarian legions should be formed and enter the Bulgarian lands from the outside-in.

  9. The fight for freedomThe liberation of Pleven On 10 December 1877, Pleven fell after five months’ of Russian siege. Osman Pasha handed the control of the city and its garnisons over to the Russian forces. This was a milestone in the War between Russia and the Ottoman Empire: it freed the way towards Istanbul, the capital of the Ottoman Empire.

  10. The fight for freedomThe liberation of Sofia On 4 January 1878, Sofia was liberated from Ottoman rule. General Iosif Gurko led his people on a winter trek through the Balkan mountains. Arriving, he had to defeat the army of Osman Nuri Pasha in order to take over Sofia.

  11. Peace Treaty of San Stefano The Peace Treaty of San Stefano was signed on 3 March 1878 and put an end to the War between the Russian and the Ottoman Empires, forcing the latter to admit her defeat.

  12. Peace Treaty of San Stefano The Treaty was signed at 17 o’clock on the 3 March 1878 in San Stefano by Count Ignatiev and A. Neludov on the Russian side, and Safet Pasha and Sadulah Bay on the Turkish. signing of the Peace Treaty of San Stefano

  13. Boris Simeonov Petar Dimitrov Aleks Kanev Dimitar Velikov Club ‘’I present’’

More Related