Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Compatriots from Romania and Bulgaria celebrate 176th birth anniversary of Hristo Botev

The monument of Hristo Botev in "King Mihai I" park in Bucharest. Photo: FB/BulgarianEmbassyRomania

The Embassy of the Republic of Bulgaria in Bucharest has organized a solemn commemoration of the 176th anniversary of the birth of poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev. All citizens and guests of Bucharest are invited to the event and many Bulgarians have already announced their presence, including representatives of the "Hristo Botev" community center in the city of Ruse. The event will take place in front of the bust-monument of Botev in the King Michael I Park, the Bulgarian diplomatic representation announced on social networks.

Bucharest occupied an important place in the life path of poet and freedom fighter Hristo Botev, who became a national hero with the force with which he awakened the Bulgarian spirit and paved the way for the idea of freedom. Revolutionary, poet, journalist, publisher, Hristo Botev managed to create just about 20 poems during his short life, which are still considered a pinnacle in Bulgarian literature.

Hristo Botev was born on January 6, 1848 in Kalofer, in the family of teacher Botyo Petkov and his wife Ivanka Boteva. Later in life, the revolutionary went to foreign lands to devote "strength and youth" to the freedom of his beloved Fatherland.

He emigrated to Wallachia where he worked in the newspaper "Dunavska Zora", moved from town to town, and in 1872 near Bucharest, he temporarily lived with the revolutionary leader Vasil Levski. He edited and published the new paper of the National Liberation Movement, Zname newspaper. In support of the April Uprising in 1876, Botev organized a detachment and became its voivode. He bloodlessly seized control over the "Radetzky" ship and together with the other revolutionaries reached the Bulgarian bank of the Danube. He died for the freedom of Bulgaria on the peak of Okolchitsa in the Balkan Mountain on June 1, 1876.

Tradition dictates that on the date of his birth - January 6, the celebrations should start in the yard of the "Hristo Botev" National Museum in his hometown of Kalofer.

Celebrations are held all over Bulgaria, as well as among Bulgarians abroad, who pay honor to the hero by naming Sunday schools after him and erecting bas-reliefs with his image around the world.

See also:

Compiled by: Elena Karkalanova

English: Al. Markov




Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Pressconference on "Introduction of mandatory shared parenting - a dangerous experiment with Bulgarian children" takes place in Sofia

The introduction of the so-called automatic shared parenting will affect over half a million children, sociologist Donna Picard announced at a press conference on the topic “Mandatory shared parenting – a dangerous experiment with Bulgaria’s children”...

published on 3/13/25 2:40 PM

BG Folk Dance Club CHEMSHIR presents the beauty of Northern Ireland through a Bulgarian lens

Bulgarians from the BG Folk Dance Club CHEMSHIR in Northern Ireland showcased the diversity and cultural wealth of their homeland and the country in which they have settled through a photo exhibition in the town of Omagh, entitled "Northern Ireland..

published on 3/13/25 12:13 PM
Gabriela Gadzsikostova

Gabriela Hadzikostova: Bulgarians in Hungary enjoy great respect

An actress born in Sofia in the family of Liliana Kisyova and Konstantin Hadzsikostov, extremely popular Bulgarian artists of the second half of the last century, Gabriella Hadzsikosztova has lived in Budapest for more than 40 years . Her husband is a..

published on 3/12/25 12:05 PM