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Vasil Levski

Vasil Levski[1] (Bulgarian: Васил Левски, spelled in old Bulgarian orthography as Василъ Львскій,[2] pronounced [vɐˈsiɫ ˈlɛfski]), born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev[3] (Васил Иванов Кунчев; 18 July 1837 – 18 February 1873), was a Bulgarian revolutionary who is, today, a national hero of Bulgaria. Dubbed the Apostle of Freedom, Levski ideologised and strategised a revolutionary movement to liberate Bulgaria from Ottoman rule. Levski founded the Internal Revolutionary Organisation, and sought to foment a nationwide uprising through a network of secret regional committees.

Vasil Levski
Васил Левски
Born
Vasil Ivanov Kunchev

(1837-07-18)18 July 1837
Died18 February 1873(1873-02-18) (aged 35)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Resting placeSofia, Bulgaria
OccupationRevolutionary
Known forInternal Revolutionary Organisation
Signature

Born in the Sub-Balkan town of Karlovo to middle-class parents, Levski became an Orthodox monk before emigrating to join the two Bulgarian Legions in Serbia and other Bulgarian revolutionary groups. Abroad, he acquired the nickname Levski ("Lionlike"). After working as a teacher in Bulgarian lands, he propagated his views and developed the concept of his Bulgaria-based revolutionary organisation, an innovative idea that superseded the foreign-based detachment strategy of the past. In Romania, Levski helped institute the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee, composed of Bulgarian expatriates. During his tours of Bulgaria, Levski established a wide network of insurrectionary committees. Ottoman authorities, however, captured him at an inn near Lovech and executed him by hanging in Sofia.

Levski looked beyond the act of liberation and envisioned a Bulgarian republic of ethnic and religious equality, largely reflecting the liberal ideas of the French Revolution and contemporary Western society. He said, "We will be free in complete liberty where the Bulgarian lives: in Bulgaria, Thrace, Macedonia; people of whatever ethnicity live in this heaven of ours, they will be equal in rights to the Bulgarian in everything." Levski held that all religious and ethnic groups live in a free Bulgaria enjoy equal rights.[4][5][6] He is commemorated with monuments in Bulgaria and Serbia, and numerous national institutions bear his name. In 2007, he topped a nationwide television poll as the all-time greatest Bulgarian.[7]

Historical background edit

The 19th-century Ottoman Empire's economic hardships prompted its personification as the "sick man of Europe".[8] The reforms planned by the sultans faced insuperable difficulties.[9] Bulgarian nationalism gradually emerged during the mid-19th century with the economic upsurge of Bulgarian merchants and craftsmen, the development of Bulgarian-funded popular education, the struggle for an autonomous Bulgarian Church and political actions towards the formation of a separate Bulgarian state.[10] The First and Second Serbian Uprisings had laid the foundation of an autonomous Serbia during the late 1810s,[11] and Greece had been established as an independent state in 1832, in the wake of the Greek War of Independence.[12] However, support for gaining independence through an armed struggle against the Ottomans was not universal. Revolutionary sentiment was concentrated largely among the more educated and urban sectors of the populace. There was less support for an organized revolt among the peasantry and the wealthier merchants and traders, who feared that Ottoman reprisals would jeopardize economic stability and widespread rural land ownership.[13]

Biography edit

Early life, education and monkhood edit

Vasil Levski was born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev on 18 July 1837 in the town of Karlovo, within the Ottoman Empire's European province of Rumelia.[14] He was the namesake of his maternal uncle, Archimandrite (superior abbot) Vasil (Василий, Vasiliy).[15] Levski's parents, Ivan Kunchev and Gina Kuncheva (née Karaivanova), came from a family of clergy and craftsmen and were members of the emerging Bulgarian middle class.[16] An eminent but struggling local craftsman, Ivan Kunchev died in 1844. Levski had two younger brothers, Hristo and Petar, and an older sister, Yana;[17] another sister, Maria, died during childhood.[18]

 
Entrance to Levski's native house in Karlovo. Built in the 18th century and reconstructed in 1933, it has been a museum since 1937.[19]

Fellow revolutionary Panayot Hitov later described the adult Levski as being of medium height and having an agile, wiry appearance—with light, greyish-blue eyes, blond hair, and a small moustache. He added that Levski abstained from smoking and drinking. Hitov's memories of Levski's appearance are supported by Levski's contemporaries, revolutionary and writer Lyuben Karavelov and teacher Ivan Furnadzhiev. The only differences are that Karavelov claimed Levski was tall rather than of medium height, while Furnadzhiev noted that his moustache was light brown and his eyes appeared hazel.[20]

Levski began his education at a school in Karlovo, studying homespun tailoring as a local craftsman's apprentice. In 1855, Levski's uncle Basil—archimandrite and envoy of the Hilandar monastery—took him to Stara Zagora, where he attended school[21] and worked as Basil's servant. Afterward, Levski joined a clerical training course.[22] On 7 December 1858, he became an Orthodox monk in the Sopot monastery[23] under the religious name Ignatius (Игнатий, Ignatiy) and was promoted in 1859 to hierodeacon,[5][24] which later inspired one of Levski's informal nicknames, The Deacon (Дякона, Dyakona).[25]

First Bulgarian Legion and educational work edit

Inspired by Georgi Sava Rakovski's revolutionary ideas, Levski left for the Serbian capital Belgrade during the spring[26] of 1862. In Belgrade, Rakovski had been assembling the First Bulgarian Legion, a military detachment formed by Bulgarian volunteers and revolutionary workers seeking the overthrow of Ottoman rule. Abandoning his service as a monk, Levski enlisted as a volunteer.[22][27] At the time, relations between the Serbs and their Ottoman suzerains were tense. During the Battle of Belgrade in which Turkish forces entered the city, Levski and the Legion distinguished themselves in repelling them.[28][29] Further militant conflicts in Belgrade were eventually resolved diplomatically, and the First Bulgarian Legion was disbanded under Ottoman pressure on 12 September 1862.[30] His courage during training and fighting earned him his nickname Levski ("Lionlike").[21][31][32] After the legion's disbandment, Levski joined Ilyo Voyvoda's detachment at Kragujevac, but returned to Rakovski in Belgrade after discovering that Ilyo's plans to invade Bulgaria had failed.[33]

 
Levski in a First Bulgarian Legion uniform

In the spring of 1863, Levski returned to Bulgarian lands after a brief stay in Romania. His uncle Basil reported him as a rebel to the Ottoman authorities, and Levski was imprisoned in Plovdiv for three months, but released due to the help of the doctor R. Petrov and the Russian vice-consul Nayden Gerov.[34] On Easter 1864, Levski officially relinquished his religious office.[35] From May 1864 until March 1866, he worked as a teacher in Voynyagovo near Karlovo; while there, he supported and gave shelter to persecuted Bulgarians and organised patriotic groups among the population. His activity caused suspicion among the Ottoman authorities, and he was forced to move.[24] From the spring of 1866 to the spring of 1867, he taught in Enikyoy and Kongas, two Northern Dobruja villages near Tulcea.[36][37]

Hitov's detachment and Second Bulgarian Legion edit

In November 1866, Levski visited Rakovski in Iaşi. Two revolutionary bands led by Panayot Hitov and Filip Totyu had been inciting the Bulgarian diaspora community in Romania to invade Bulgaria and organise anti-Ottoman resistance. On the recommendation of Rakovski, Vasil Levski was selected as the standard-bearer of Hitov's detachment.[22][34][38] In April 1867, the band crossed the Danube at Tutrakan, moved through the Ludogorie region and reached the Balkan Mountains.[39] After skirmishing, the band fled to Serbia through Pirot in August.[38][40][41]

 
Levski as the standard-bearer of Panayot Hitov's armed detachment

In Serbia, the government was again favourable towards the Bulgarian revolutionaries' aspirations and allowed them to establish in Belgrade the Second Bulgarian Legion, an organisation similar to its predecessor and its goals. Levski was a prominent member of the Legion, but between February and April 1868 he suffered from a gastric condition that required surgery. Bedridden, he could not participate in the Legion's training.[42] After the Legion was again disbanded under political pressure, Levski attempted to reunite with his compatriots, but was arrested in Zaječar and briefly imprisoned.[5][34][43] Upon his release he went to Romania, where Hadzhi Dimitar and Stefan Karadzha were mobilising revolutionary detachments. For various reasons, including his stomach problems and strategic differences, Levski did not participate.[44] In the winter of 1868, he became acquainted with poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev and lived with him in an abandoned windmill near Bucharest.[45][46][47]

Bulgarian tours and work in Romania edit

Rejecting the emigrant detachment strategy for internal propaganda, Levski undertook his first tour of the Bulgarian lands to engage all layers of Bulgarian society for a successful revolution. On 11 December 1868, he travelled by steamship from Turnu Măgurele to Istanbul, the starting point of a trek that lasted until 24 February 1869, when Levski returned to Romania. During this canvassing and reconnaissance mission, Levski is thought to have visited Plovdiv, Perushtitsa, Karlovo, Sopot, Kazanlak, Sliven, Tarnovo, Lovech, Pleven and Nikopol, establishing links with local patriots.[34][48]

After a two-month stay in Bucharest, Vasil Levski returned to Bulgaria for a second tour, lasting from 1 May to 26 August 1869. On this tour he carried proclamations printed in Romania by the political figure Ivan Kasabov. They legitimised Levski as the representative of a Bulgarian provisional government. Vasil Levski travelled to Nikopol, Pleven, Karlovo, Plovdiv, Pazardzhik, Perushtitsa, Stara Zagora, Chirpan, Sliven, Lovech, Tarnovo, Gabrovo, Sevlievo and Tryavna. According to some researchers, Levski established the earliest of his secret committees during this tour,[24][47] but those assumptions are based on uncertain data.[34]

 
Map of the revolutionary districts in Vasil Levski's Internal Revolutionary Organisation

From late August 1869 to May the following year, Levski was active in the Romanian capital Bucharest. He was in contact with revolutionary writer and journalist Lyuben Karavelov, whose participation in the foundation of the Bulgarian Literary Society Levski approved in writing. Karavelov's publications gathered a number of followers and initiated the foundation of the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee (BRCC), a centralised revolutionary diasporic organisation that included Levski as a founding member[21][5] and statute drafter.[49] In disagreement over planning,[21] Levski departed from Bucharest in the spring of 1870 and began to put into action his concept of an internal revolutionary network.[34]

Creation of the Internal Revolutionary Organisation edit

Despite insufficient documentation of Levski's activities in 1870, it is known that he spent a year and a half establishing a wide network of secret committees in Bulgarian cities and villages. The network, the Internal Revolutionary Organisation (IRO), was centred around the Lovech Central Committee,[50] also called "BRCC in Bulgaria" or the "provisional government".[21][24] The goal of the committees was to prepare for a coordinated uprising.[51] The network of committees was at its densest in the central Bulgarian regions, particularly around Sofia, Plovdiv and Stara Zagora. Revolutionary committees were also established in some parts of Macedonia, Dobruja and Strandzha and around the more peripheral urban centres Kyustendil, Vratsa and Vidin.[50] IRO committees purchased armaments and organised detachments of volunteers.[52] According to one study, the organisation had just over 1,000 members in the early 1870s. Most members were intellectuals and traders, though all layers of Bulgarian society were represented.[21]

Individuals obtained IRO membership in secrecy: the initiation ritual involved a formal oath of allegiance over the Gospel or a Christian cross, a gun and a knife; treason was punishable by death, and secret police monitored each member's activities.[5][53] Through clandestine channels of reliable people, relations were maintained with the revolutionary diasporic community.[5][34] The internal correspondence employed encryption, conventional signs, and fake personal and committee names.[5] Although Levski himself headed the organisation, he shared administrative responsibilities with assistants such as monk-turned-revolutionary Matey Preobrazhenski, the adventurous Dimitar Obshti, and the young Angel Kanchev.[24][54]

 
Vasil Levski at the time of the creation of his internal revolutionary network

Apocryphal and semi-legendary anecdotal stories surround the creation of Levski's Internal Revolutionary Organisation. Persecuted by the Ottoman authorities who offered 500 Turkish liras for his death and 1000 for his capture, Levski resorted to disguises to evade arrest during his travels.[55] For example, he is known to have dyed his hair and to have worn a variety of national costumes.[56] In the autumn of 1871, Levski and Angel Kanchev published the Instruction of the Workers for the Liberation of the Bulgarian People,[24] a BRCC draft statute containing ideological, organisational and penal sections. It was sent out to the local committees and to the diasporic community for discussion. The political and organisational experience that Levski amassed is evident in his correspondence dating from 1871 to 1872; at the time, his views on the revolution had clearly matured.[34]

As IRO expanded, it coordinated its activities more with the Bucharest-based BRCC. On Levski's initiative,[24] a general assembly was called between 29 April and 4 May 1872. At the assembly, the delegates approved a programme and a statute, elected Lyuben Karavelov as the organisation's leader and authorised Levski as the BRCC executive body's only legitimate representative in the Bulgarian lands.[57] After attending the assembly, Levski returned to Bulgaria and reorganised IRO's internal structure[24] in accordance with BRCC's recommendations. Thus, the Lovech Central Committee was reduced to a regular local committee, and the first region-wide revolutionary centres were founded. The lack of funds, however, precipitated the organisation into a crisis, and Levski's solitary judgements on important strategic and tactical matters were increasingly questioned.[34]

Capture and execution edit

In that situation, Levski's assistant Dimitar Obshti robbed an Ottoman postal convoy in the Arabakonak pass on 22 September 1872,[21] without approval from Levski or the leadership of the movement.[43][58] While the robbery was successful and provided IRO with 125,000 groschen, Obshti and the other perpetrators were soon arrested.[5] The preliminary investigation and trial revealed the revolutionary organisation's size and its close relations with BRCC. Obshti and other prisoners made a full confession and revealed Levski's leading role.[21][34][58][59]

 
The Kakrina inn where Levski was captured by the Ottoman authorities in late December 1872

Realising that he was in danger, Levski decided to flee to Romania, where he would meet Karavelov and discuss these events. First, however, he had to collect important documentation from the committee archive in Lovech, which would constitute important evidence if seized by the Ottomans.[21][24] He stayed at the nearby village inn in Kakrina, where he was surprised and arrested on the morning of 27 December 1872. Starting with the writings of Lyuben Karavelov, it was widely accepted that a priest named Krastyo Nikiforov betrayed Levski to the police. This theory has been disputed by the researchers like Ivan Panchovski and Vasil Boyanov for lack of evidence.[60]

Initially taken to Tarnovo for interrogation, Levski was sent to Sofia on 4 January. There, he was taken to trial. While he acknowledged his identity, he did not reveal his accomplices or details related to his organisation, taking full blame.[61] Ottoman authorities sentenced Levski to death by hanging. The sentence was carried out on 18 February 1873 in Sofia,[62] where the Monument to Vasil Levski now stands.[63][64] The location of Levski's grave is uncertain, but in the 1980s, writer Nikolay Haytov campaigned for the Church of St. Petka of the Saddlers as Levski's burial place, which the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences concluded as possible yet unverifiable.[65][66]

Levski's death intensified the crisis in the Bulgarian revolutionary movement,[67] and most IRO committees soon disintegrated.[68] Nevertheless, five years after Levski's hanging, the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 secured the liberation of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule in the wake of the April Uprising of 1876. The Treaty of San Stefano of 3 March 1878 established the Bulgarian state as an autonomous Principality of Bulgaria under de jure Ottoman suzerainty.[69]

Revolutionary theory and ideas edit

At the end of the 1860s, Levski developed a revolutionary theory that saw the Bulgarian liberation movement as an armed uprising of all Bulgarians in the Ottoman Empire. The insurrection was to be prepared, controlled and coordinated internally by a central revolutionary organisation, which was to include local revolutionary committees in all parts of Bulgaria and operate independently from any foreign factors.[24][52] Levski's theory resulted from the repeated failures to implement Rakovski's ideas effectively, such as the use of foreign-based armed detachments (чети, cheti) to provoke a general revolt.[14][34][70] Levski's idea of an entirely independent revolution did not enjoy the approval of the entire population however—in fact, he was the only prominent Bulgarian revolutionary to advocate it. Instead, many regarded an intervention by the great powers as a more feasible solution.[68]

 
A relief of Vasil Levski at the Bulgarian embassy in Paris

Levski envisioned Bulgaria as a democratic republic,[5][71] occasionally finding common ground with the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen,[72] and largely reflecting the liberal ideas of the French Revolution and contemporary Western society.[73][74] He said, "We will be free in complete liberty where the Bulgarian lives: in Bulgaria, Thrace, Macedonia; people of whatever ethnicity live in this heaven of ours, they will be equal in rights to the Bulgarian in everything. We will have a flag that says, 'Pure and sacred republic'... It is time, by a single deed, to achieve what our French brothers have been seeking..."[4] Levski held that all religious and ethnic groups in a free Bulgaria—whether Bulgarians, Turks, Jews or others—should enjoy equal rights.[4][5][6] He reiterated that the Bulgarian revolutionaries fought against the sultan's government, not against the Turkish people[75] and their religion: "We're not driving away the Turkish people nor their faith, but the emperor and his laws (in a word, the Turkish government), which has been ruling not only us, but the Turk himself in a barbarian way."[4][71]

Levski was prepared to sacrifice his life for the revolution and place Bulgaria and the Bulgarian people above personal interests: "If I shall win, I shall win for the entire people. If I shall lose, I shall lose only myself."[22][47][76] In a liberated Bulgaria, he did not envision himself as a national leader or a high-ranking official: "We yearn to see a free fatherland, and [then] one could even order me to graze the ducks, isn't that right?"[4][71] In the spirit of Garibaldi, Levski planned to assist other oppressed peoples of the world in their liberation once Bulgaria was reestablished.[77] He also advocated "strict and regular accounting" in his revolutionary organisation, and did not tolerate corruption.[78]

Commemoration edit

Cry! For near the town of Sofia,
Sticks up, I saw, black gallows,
And your only son, Bulgaria,

Hangs on it with fearsome strength.

Hristo Botev's "The Hanging of Vasil Levski" (1875)[52]

 
Monument to Levski in his native Karlovo

In cities and villages across Bulgaria, Levski's contributions to the liberation movement are commemorated with numerous monuments,[79] and many streets bear his name.[80] Monuments to Levski also exist outside Bulgaria—in Belgrade, Serbia,[81] Dimitrovgrad, Serbia,[82] Parcani, Transnistria, Moldova,[83] Bucharest, Romania,[84] Paris, France,[85] Washington, D.C., United States,[86] and Buenos Aires, Argentina.[87] Three museums dedicated to Levski have been organised: one in Karlovo,[88] one in Lovech[89] and one in Kakrina.[90] The Monument to Vasil Levski in Sofia was erected on the site of his execution.

Several institutions in Bulgaria have been named in Vasil Levski's honour; these include the football and sports club of Levski Sofia, Levski Sofia (sports club),[91] the Vasil Levski National Sports Academy[92] and the Vasil Levski National Military University.[93] Bulgaria's national stadium bears the name Vasil Levski National Stadium.[94] The 1000 Bulgarian leva banknote, in circulation between 1994 and 1999, featured Levski's portrait on its obverse side and his monument in Sofia on the reverse.[95][96] The town of Levski and six villages around the country have also been named in his honour.[97] The Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria named an Antarctic ridge and peak on Livingston Island of the South Shetland Islands Levski Ridge and Levski Peak respectively.[98][99]

The life of Vasil Levski has been widely featured in Bulgarian literature and popular culture. Poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev dedicated his last work to Levski, "The Hanging of Vasil Levski". The poem, an elegy,[100] was probably written in late 1875.[101] Prose and poetry writer Ivan Vazov devoted an ode to the revolutionary. Eponymously titled "Levski", it was published as part of the cycle Epic of the Forgotten.[102] Levski has also inspired works by writers Hristo Smirnenski[103] and Nikolay Haytov,[104] among others. Songs devoted to Levski can be found in the folklore tradition of Macedonia as well.[105] In February 2007, a nationwide poll conducted as part of the Velikite Balgari ("The Great Bulgarians") television show, a local spin-off of 100 Greatest Britons, named Vasil Levski the greatest Bulgarian of all time.[7]

There have been motions to glorify Vasil Levski as a saint of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. However, historian Stefan Chureshki has emphasised that while Levski's post-monastical life was one of a martyr, it was incompatible with the Orthodox concept of sainthood. Chureshki makes reference to Levski's correspondences, which show that Levski threatened wealthy Bulgarians (чорбаджии, chorbadzhii) and traitors with death, endorsed theft from the rich for pragmatic revolutionary purposes and voluntarily gave up his religious office to devote himself to the secular struggle for liberation.[106]

Vasil Levski's hanging is observed annually across Bulgaria on 19 February[107] instead of 18 February, due to the erroneous calculation of 19th-century Julian calendar dates after Bulgaria adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1916.[108] Although the location of Levski's grave has not been determined, some of his hair is on exhibit at the National Museum of Military History. After Levski gave up monkhood in 1863, he shaved his hair, which his mother and later his sister Yana preserved. Levski's personal items—such as his silver Christian cross, his copper water vessel, his Gasser revolver, made in Austria-Hungary in 1869, and the shackles from his imprisonment in Sofia—are also exhibited in the military history museum,[109] while Levski's sabre can be seen in the Lovech regional museum.[89]

Vasil Levski is referenced by the video game Star Citizen, in which future society "The People's Alliance of Levski" adopt an ideology based upon his views.[110]

A pond in the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano, Texas is named in honor of Vasil Levski.[111]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ First name also transliterated as Vassil, alias archaically written as Levsky in English (cf. MacDermott).
  2. ^ Унджиев 1980, p. 53
  3. ^ Family name also transliterated as Kunčev, Kountchev, Kuntchev, etc.
  4. ^ a b c d e . Archived from the original on 11 April 2009. Retrieved 11 April 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), 170 години.
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  6. ^ a b Crampton 2007, p. 422
  7. ^ a b (in Bulgarian). Великите българи. 18 February 2007. Archived from the original on 17 March 2007. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
  8. ^ De Bellaigue, Christopher (5 July 2001). "The Sick Man of Europe". The New York Review of Books. from the original on 30 September 2008. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
  9. ^ Castellan 1999, pp. 221–222
  10. ^ Castellan 1999, pp. 315–317
  11. ^ Castellan 1999, p. 258
  12. ^ Castellan 1999, p. 272
  13. ^ Roudometof 2001, p. 136
  14. ^ a b "Vasil Levski". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2008. from the original on 12 March 2009. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
  15. ^ Кондарев 1946, p. 24
  16. ^ Стоянов 1943, p. 37
  17. ^ Кондарев 1946, p. 13
  18. ^ Дойчев, Л (1981). Сподвижници на Апостола (in Bulgarian). София: Отечество. OCLC 8553763.
  19. ^ . Музей "Васил Левски", гр. Карлово. Archived from the original on 24 April 2008. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
  20. ^ "Външен вид 18 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine", 170 години.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i Crampton 2007, pp. 89–90
  22. ^ a b c d Crampton 1997, p. 79
  23. ^ Кондарев 1946, pp. 27–28
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Бакалов & Куманов 2003
  25. ^ . Православие БГ (in Bulgarian). 20 February 2008. Archived from the original on 12 January 2009. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
  26. ^ Seasons in this article are to be understood as seasons in the Northern Hemisphere, i.e. spring is in the beginning of the year.
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  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . Archived from the original on 13 February 2010. Retrieved 23 October 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link), 170 години.
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  36. ^ Стоянов 1943, pp. 67–68
  37. ^ Унджиев 1980, pp. 63–64
  38. ^ a b Дойнов & Джевезов 1996, p. 12
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  41. ^ Кондарев 1946, p. 59
  42. ^ Кондарев 1946, pp. 59–61
  43. ^ a b Crampton 2007, p. 89
  44. ^ Кондарев 1946, pp. 78–79
  45. ^ "Христо Ботев загива на този ден през 1876 г" (in Bulgarian). Будилникъ. 2 June 2007. from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 24 October 2008.
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  48. ^ Кондарев 1946, pp. 86–87
  49. ^ Perry 1993, p. 9
  50. ^ a b Дойнов & Джевезов 1996, p. 19
  51. ^ Stavrianos 2000, p 378.
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  54. ^ Стоянов 1943, pp. 85–86
  55. ^ Дойнов & Джевезов 1996, p. 20
  56. ^ Стоянов 1943, p. 87
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Bibliography edit

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  • MacDermott, Mercia (1962). A History of Bulgaria 1395–1885. New York: Frederick A. Praeger – via Internet Archive.
  • MacDermott, Mercia (1967). The Apostle of Freedom: A Portrait of Vasil Levsky Against a Background of Nineteenth Century Bulgaria. London: G. Allen and Unwin. OCLC 957800.
  • Manova, Denitza; Zhelev, Radostin; Mitev, Plamen (19 February 2007). . BNR Radio Bulgaria. Archived from the original on 17 March 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
  • Miller, William (1966). The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors, 1801–1927. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-1974-4.
  • Perry, Duncan M. (1993). Stefan Stambolov and the Emergence of Modern Bulgaria, 1870–1895. Duke University Press. ISBN 0-8223-1313-8.
  • Roudometof, Victor (2001). Nationalism, Globalization, and Orthodoxy: The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-313-31949-9.
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  • Ternes, Elmar; Tatjana Vladimirova-Buhtz (1999). "Bulgarian". Handbook of the International Phonetic Association: A Guide to the Use of the International Phonetic Alphabet. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 55–57. ISBN 0-521-63751-1.
  • Todorova, Maria (2007). "Was there civil society and a public sphere under socialism? The debates around Vasil Levski's alleged burial in Bulgaria". Schnittstellen: Gesellschaft, Nation, Konflikt und Erinnerung in Südosteuropa : Festschrift für Holm Sundhaussen zum 65. Geburtstag. Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag. ISBN 978-3-486-58346-5.
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  • Бакалов, Георги; Куманов, Милен (2003). "ЛЕВСКИ, Васил (В. Иванов Кунчев, Дякона, Апостола) (6/19.VII.1837-6/18.II.1873)". Електронно издание "История на България" (in Bulgarian). София: Труд, Сирма. ISBN 954528613X.
  • Дойнов, Дойно; Джевезов, Стоян (1996). "Не щях да съм турски и никакъв роб". Къща-музей Васил Левски Карлово (in Bulgarian). София: Славина. OCLC 181114302.
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  • Симеонова, Маргарита Василева (2007). Езиковата личност на Васил Левски (in Bulgarian). София: Академично издателство "Марин Дринов". ISBN 978-954-322-196-7. OCLC 237020336.
  • Стоянов, Захарий (1943) [1883]. (in Bulgarian). Пловдив, София: Новъ Свѣтъ. OCLC 4273683. Archived from the original on 25 February 2021. Retrieved 23 October 2008.
  • Страшимиров, Димитър (1995). Левски пред Къкринската голгота: история и критика (in Bulgarian). София: Сибия. ISBN 954-8028-29-8. OCLC 33205249.
  • Унджиев, Иван (1980). Васил Левски. Биография (in Bulgarian) (Второ издание ed.). София: Наука и изкуство. OCLC 251739767.

External links edit

  • (in Bulgarian)
  • (in Bulgarian)
  • Vasil Levski in Haskovo (in English)
  • Vasil Levski Museum in Karlovo (in English and Bulgarian)
  • (in Bulgarian)

vasil, levski, other, uses, disambiguation, this, bulgarian, name, patronymic, ivanov, family, name, kunchev, bulgarian, Васил, Левски, spelled, bulgarian, orthography, Василъ, Львскій, pronounced, vɐˈsiɫ, ˈlɛfski, born, vasil, ivanov, kunchev, Васил, Иванов, . For other uses see Vasil Levski disambiguation In this Bulgarian name the patronymic is Ivanov and the family name is Kunchev Vasil Levski 1 Bulgarian Vasil Levski spelled in old Bulgarian orthography as Vasil Lvskij 2 pronounced vɐˈsiɫ ˈlɛfski born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev 3 Vasil Ivanov Kunchev 18 July 1837 18 February 1873 was a Bulgarian revolutionary who is today a national hero of Bulgaria Dubbed the Apostle of Freedom Levski ideologised and strategised a revolutionary movement to liberate Bulgaria from Ottoman rule Levski founded the Internal Revolutionary Organisation and sought to foment a nationwide uprising through a network of secret regional committees Vasil LevskiVasil LevskiBornVasil Ivanov Kunchev 1837 07 18 18 July 1837Karlovo Eyalet of Adrianople Ottoman EmpireDied18 February 1873 1873 02 18 aged 35 Sofia Danube Vilayet Ottoman EmpireCause of deathExecution by hangingResting placeSofia BulgariaOccupationRevolutionaryKnown forInternal Revolutionary OrganisationSignatureBorn in the Sub Balkan town of Karlovo to middle class parents Levski became an Orthodox monk before emigrating to join the two Bulgarian Legions in Serbia and other Bulgarian revolutionary groups Abroad he acquired the nickname Levski Lionlike After working as a teacher in Bulgarian lands he propagated his views and developed the concept of his Bulgaria based revolutionary organisation an innovative idea that superseded the foreign based detachment strategy of the past In Romania Levski helped institute the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee composed of Bulgarian expatriates During his tours of Bulgaria Levski established a wide network of insurrectionary committees Ottoman authorities however captured him at an inn near Lovech and executed him by hanging in Sofia Levski looked beyond the act of liberation and envisioned a Bulgarian republic of ethnic and religious equality largely reflecting the liberal ideas of the French Revolution and contemporary Western society He said We will be free in complete liberty where the Bulgarian lives in Bulgaria Thrace Macedonia people of whatever ethnicity live in this heaven of ours they will be equal in rights to the Bulgarian in everything Levski held that all religious and ethnic groups live in a free Bulgaria enjoy equal rights 4 5 6 He is commemorated with monuments in Bulgaria and Serbia and numerous national institutions bear his name In 2007 he topped a nationwide television poll as the all time greatest Bulgarian 7 Contents 1 Historical background 2 Biography 2 1 Early life education and monkhood 2 2 First Bulgarian Legion and educational work 2 3 Hitov s detachment and Second Bulgarian Legion 2 4 Bulgarian tours and work in Romania 2 5 Creation of the Internal Revolutionary Organisation 2 6 Capture and execution 3 Revolutionary theory and ideas 4 Commemoration 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 Bibliography 6 External linksHistorical background editFurther information History of early Ottoman Bulgaria and National awakening of Bulgaria The 19th century Ottoman Empire s economic hardships prompted its personification as the sick man of Europe 8 The reforms planned by the sultans faced insuperable difficulties 9 Bulgarian nationalism gradually emerged during the mid 19th century with the economic upsurge of Bulgarian merchants and craftsmen the development of Bulgarian funded popular education the struggle for an autonomous Bulgarian Church and political actions towards the formation of a separate Bulgarian state 10 The First and Second Serbian Uprisings had laid the foundation of an autonomous Serbia during the late 1810s 11 and Greece had been established as an independent state in 1832 in the wake of the Greek War of Independence 12 However support for gaining independence through an armed struggle against the Ottomans was not universal Revolutionary sentiment was concentrated largely among the more educated and urban sectors of the populace There was less support for an organized revolt among the peasantry and the wealthier merchants and traders who feared that Ottoman reprisals would jeopardize economic stability and widespread rural land ownership 13 Biography editEarly life education and monkhood edit Vasil Levski was born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev on 18 July 1837 in the town of Karlovo within the Ottoman Empire s European province of Rumelia 14 He was the namesake of his maternal uncle Archimandrite superior abbot Vasil Vasilij Vasiliy 15 Levski s parents Ivan Kunchev and Gina Kuncheva nee Karaivanova came from a family of clergy and craftsmen and were members of the emerging Bulgarian middle class 16 An eminent but struggling local craftsman Ivan Kunchev died in 1844 Levski had two younger brothers Hristo and Petar and an older sister Yana 17 another sister Maria died during childhood 18 nbsp Entrance to Levski s native house in Karlovo Built in the 18th century and reconstructed in 1933 it has been a museum since 1937 19 Fellow revolutionary Panayot Hitov later described the adult Levski as being of medium height and having an agile wiry appearance with light greyish blue eyes blond hair and a small moustache He added that Levski abstained from smoking and drinking Hitov s memories of Levski s appearance are supported by Levski s contemporaries revolutionary and writer Lyuben Karavelov and teacher Ivan Furnadzhiev The only differences are that Karavelov claimed Levski was tall rather than of medium height while Furnadzhiev noted that his moustache was light brown and his eyes appeared hazel 20 Levski began his education at a school in Karlovo studying homespun tailoring as a local craftsman s apprentice In 1855 Levski s uncle Basil archimandrite and envoy of the Hilandar monastery took him to Stara Zagora where he attended school 21 and worked as Basil s servant Afterward Levski joined a clerical training course 22 On 7 December 1858 he became an Orthodox monk in the Sopot monastery 23 under the religious name Ignatius Ignatij Ignatiy and was promoted in 1859 to hierodeacon 5 24 which later inspired one of Levski s informal nicknames The Deacon Dyakona Dyakona 25 First Bulgarian Legion and educational work edit Inspired by Georgi Sava Rakovski s revolutionary ideas Levski left for the Serbian capital Belgrade during the spring 26 of 1862 In Belgrade Rakovski had been assembling the First Bulgarian Legion a military detachment formed by Bulgarian volunteers and revolutionary workers seeking the overthrow of Ottoman rule Abandoning his service as a monk Levski enlisted as a volunteer 22 27 At the time relations between the Serbs and their Ottoman suzerains were tense During the Battle of Belgrade in which Turkish forces entered the city Levski and the Legion distinguished themselves in repelling them 28 29 Further militant conflicts in Belgrade were eventually resolved diplomatically and the First Bulgarian Legion was disbanded under Ottoman pressure on 12 September 1862 30 His courage during training and fighting earned him his nickname Levski Lionlike 21 31 32 After the legion s disbandment Levski joined Ilyo Voyvoda s detachment at Kragujevac but returned to Rakovski in Belgrade after discovering that Ilyo s plans to invade Bulgaria had failed 33 nbsp Levski in a First Bulgarian Legion uniformIn the spring of 1863 Levski returned to Bulgarian lands after a brief stay in Romania His uncle Basil reported him as a rebel to the Ottoman authorities and Levski was imprisoned in Plovdiv for three months but released due to the help of the doctor R Petrov and the Russian vice consul Nayden Gerov 34 On Easter 1864 Levski officially relinquished his religious office 35 From May 1864 until March 1866 he worked as a teacher in Voynyagovo near Karlovo while there he supported and gave shelter to persecuted Bulgarians and organised patriotic groups among the population His activity caused suspicion among the Ottoman authorities and he was forced to move 24 From the spring of 1866 to the spring of 1867 he taught in Enikyoy and Kongas two Northern Dobruja villages near Tulcea 36 37 Hitov s detachment and Second Bulgarian Legion edit In November 1866 Levski visited Rakovski in Iasi Two revolutionary bands led by Panayot Hitov and Filip Totyu had been inciting the Bulgarian diaspora community in Romania to invade Bulgaria and organise anti Ottoman resistance On the recommendation of Rakovski Vasil Levski was selected as the standard bearer of Hitov s detachment 22 34 38 In April 1867 the band crossed the Danube at Tutrakan moved through the Ludogorie region and reached the Balkan Mountains 39 After skirmishing the band fled to Serbia through Pirot in August 38 40 41 nbsp Levski as the standard bearer of Panayot Hitov s armed detachmentIn Serbia the government was again favourable towards the Bulgarian revolutionaries aspirations and allowed them to establish in Belgrade the Second Bulgarian Legion an organisation similar to its predecessor and its goals Levski was a prominent member of the Legion but between February and April 1868 he suffered from a gastric condition that required surgery Bedridden he could not participate in the Legion s training 42 After the Legion was again disbanded under political pressure Levski attempted to reunite with his compatriots but was arrested in Zajecar and briefly imprisoned 5 34 43 Upon his release he went to Romania where Hadzhi Dimitar and Stefan Karadzha were mobilising revolutionary detachments For various reasons including his stomach problems and strategic differences Levski did not participate 44 In the winter of 1868 he became acquainted with poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev and lived with him in an abandoned windmill near Bucharest 45 46 47 Bulgarian tours and work in Romania edit Rejecting the emigrant detachment strategy for internal propaganda Levski undertook his first tour of the Bulgarian lands to engage all layers of Bulgarian society for a successful revolution On 11 December 1868 he travelled by steamship from Turnu Măgurele to Istanbul the starting point of a trek that lasted until 24 February 1869 when Levski returned to Romania During this canvassing and reconnaissance mission Levski is thought to have visited Plovdiv Perushtitsa Karlovo Sopot Kazanlak Sliven Tarnovo Lovech Pleven and Nikopol establishing links with local patriots 34 48 After a two month stay in Bucharest Vasil Levski returned to Bulgaria for a second tour lasting from 1 May to 26 August 1869 On this tour he carried proclamations printed in Romania by the political figure Ivan Kasabov They legitimised Levski as the representative of a Bulgarian provisional government Vasil Levski travelled to Nikopol Pleven Karlovo Plovdiv Pazardzhik Perushtitsa Stara Zagora Chirpan Sliven Lovech Tarnovo Gabrovo Sevlievo and Tryavna According to some researchers Levski established the earliest of his secret committees during this tour 24 47 but those assumptions are based on uncertain data 34 nbsp Map of the revolutionary districts in Vasil Levski s Internal Revolutionary OrganisationFrom late August 1869 to May the following year Levski was active in the Romanian capital Bucharest He was in contact with revolutionary writer and journalist Lyuben Karavelov whose participation in the foundation of the Bulgarian Literary Society Levski approved in writing Karavelov s publications gathered a number of followers and initiated the foundation of the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee BRCC a centralised revolutionary diasporic organisation that included Levski as a founding member 21 5 and statute drafter 49 In disagreement over planning 21 Levski departed from Bucharest in the spring of 1870 and began to put into action his concept of an internal revolutionary network 34 Creation of the Internal Revolutionary Organisation edit Despite insufficient documentation of Levski s activities in 1870 it is known that he spent a year and a half establishing a wide network of secret committees in Bulgarian cities and villages The network the Internal Revolutionary Organisation IRO was centred around the Lovech Central Committee 50 also called BRCC in Bulgaria or the provisional government 21 24 The goal of the committees was to prepare for a coordinated uprising 51 The network of committees was at its densest in the central Bulgarian regions particularly around Sofia Plovdiv and Stara Zagora Revolutionary committees were also established in some parts of Macedonia Dobruja and Strandzha and around the more peripheral urban centres Kyustendil Vratsa and Vidin 50 IRO committees purchased armaments and organised detachments of volunteers 52 According to one study the organisation had just over 1 000 members in the early 1870s Most members were intellectuals and traders though all layers of Bulgarian society were represented 21 Individuals obtained IRO membership in secrecy the initiation ritual involved a formal oath of allegiance over the Gospel or a Christian cross a gun and a knife treason was punishable by death and secret police monitored each member s activities 5 53 Through clandestine channels of reliable people relations were maintained with the revolutionary diasporic community 5 34 The internal correspondence employed encryption conventional signs and fake personal and committee names 5 Although Levski himself headed the organisation he shared administrative responsibilities with assistants such as monk turned revolutionary Matey Preobrazhenski the adventurous Dimitar Obshti and the young Angel Kanchev 24 54 nbsp Vasil Levski at the time of the creation of his internal revolutionary networkApocryphal and semi legendary anecdotal stories surround the creation of Levski s Internal Revolutionary Organisation Persecuted by the Ottoman authorities who offered 500 Turkish liras for his death and 1000 for his capture Levski resorted to disguises to evade arrest during his travels 55 For example he is known to have dyed his hair and to have worn a variety of national costumes 56 In the autumn of 1871 Levski and Angel Kanchev published the Instruction of the Workers for the Liberation of the Bulgarian People 24 a BRCC draft statute containing ideological organisational and penal sections It was sent out to the local committees and to the diasporic community for discussion The political and organisational experience that Levski amassed is evident in his correspondence dating from 1871 to 1872 at the time his views on the revolution had clearly matured 34 As IRO expanded it coordinated its activities more with the Bucharest based BRCC On Levski s initiative 24 a general assembly was called between 29 April and 4 May 1872 At the assembly the delegates approved a programme and a statute elected Lyuben Karavelov as the organisation s leader and authorised Levski as the BRCC executive body s only legitimate representative in the Bulgarian lands 57 After attending the assembly Levski returned to Bulgaria and reorganised IRO s internal structure 24 in accordance with BRCC s recommendations Thus the Lovech Central Committee was reduced to a regular local committee and the first region wide revolutionary centres were founded The lack of funds however precipitated the organisation into a crisis and Levski s solitary judgements on important strategic and tactical matters were increasingly questioned 34 Capture and execution edit In that situation Levski s assistant Dimitar Obshti robbed an Ottoman postal convoy in the Arabakonak pass on 22 September 1872 21 without approval from Levski or the leadership of the movement 43 58 While the robbery was successful and provided IRO with 125 000 groschen Obshti and the other perpetrators were soon arrested 5 The preliminary investigation and trial revealed the revolutionary organisation s size and its close relations with BRCC Obshti and other prisoners made a full confession and revealed Levski s leading role 21 34 58 59 nbsp The Kakrina inn where Levski was captured by the Ottoman authorities in late December 1872Realising that he was in danger Levski decided to flee to Romania where he would meet Karavelov and discuss these events First however he had to collect important documentation from the committee archive in Lovech which would constitute important evidence if seized by the Ottomans 21 24 He stayed at the nearby village inn in Kakrina where he was surprised and arrested on the morning of 27 December 1872 Starting with the writings of Lyuben Karavelov it was widely accepted that a priest named Krastyo Nikiforov betrayed Levski to the police This theory has been disputed by the researchers like Ivan Panchovski and Vasil Boyanov for lack of evidence 60 Initially taken to Tarnovo for interrogation Levski was sent to Sofia on 4 January There he was taken to trial While he acknowledged his identity he did not reveal his accomplices or details related to his organisation taking full blame 61 Ottoman authorities sentenced Levski to death by hanging The sentence was carried out on 18 February 1873 in Sofia 62 where the Monument to Vasil Levski now stands 63 64 The location of Levski s grave is uncertain but in the 1980s writer Nikolay Haytov campaigned for the Church of St Petka of the Saddlers as Levski s burial place which the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences concluded as possible yet unverifiable 65 66 Levski s death intensified the crisis in the Bulgarian revolutionary movement 67 and most IRO committees soon disintegrated 68 Nevertheless five years after Levski s hanging the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 secured the liberation of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule in the wake of the April Uprising of 1876 The Treaty of San Stefano of 3 March 1878 established the Bulgarian state as an autonomous Principality of Bulgaria under de jure Ottoman suzerainty 69 Revolutionary theory and ideas editAt the end of the 1860s Levski developed a revolutionary theory that saw the Bulgarian liberation movement as an armed uprising of all Bulgarians in the Ottoman Empire The insurrection was to be prepared controlled and coordinated internally by a central revolutionary organisation which was to include local revolutionary committees in all parts of Bulgaria and operate independently from any foreign factors 24 52 Levski s theory resulted from the repeated failures to implement Rakovski s ideas effectively such as the use of foreign based armed detachments cheti cheti to provoke a general revolt 14 34 70 Levski s idea of an entirely independent revolution did not enjoy the approval of the entire population however in fact he was the only prominent Bulgarian revolutionary to advocate it Instead many regarded an intervention by the great powers as a more feasible solution 68 nbsp A relief of Vasil Levski at the Bulgarian embassy in ParisLevski envisioned Bulgaria as a democratic republic 5 71 occasionally finding common ground with the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen 72 and largely reflecting the liberal ideas of the French Revolution and contemporary Western society 73 74 He said We will be free in complete liberty where the Bulgarian lives in Bulgaria Thrace Macedonia people of whatever ethnicity live in this heaven of ours they will be equal in rights to the Bulgarian in everything We will have a flag that says Pure and sacred republic It is time by a single deed to achieve what our French brothers have been seeking 4 Levski held that all religious and ethnic groups in a free Bulgaria whether Bulgarians Turks Jews or others should enjoy equal rights 4 5 6 He reiterated that the Bulgarian revolutionaries fought against the sultan s government not against the Turkish people 75 and their religion We re not driving away the Turkish people nor their faith but the emperor and his laws in a word the Turkish government which has been ruling not only us but the Turk himself in a barbarian way 4 71 Levski was prepared to sacrifice his life for the revolution and place Bulgaria and the Bulgarian people above personal interests If I shall win I shall win for the entire people If I shall lose I shall lose only myself 22 47 76 In a liberated Bulgaria he did not envision himself as a national leader or a high ranking official We yearn to see a free fatherland and then one could even order me to graze the ducks isn t that right 4 71 In the spirit of Garibaldi Levski planned to assist other oppressed peoples of the world in their liberation once Bulgaria was reestablished 77 He also advocated strict and regular accounting in his revolutionary organisation and did not tolerate corruption 78 Commemoration editCry For near the town of Sofia Sticks up I saw black gallows And your only son Bulgaria Hangs on it with fearsome strength Hristo Botev s The Hanging of Vasil Levski 1875 52 nbsp Monument to Levski in his native KarlovoIn cities and villages across Bulgaria Levski s contributions to the liberation movement are commemorated with numerous monuments 79 and many streets bear his name 80 Monuments to Levski also exist outside Bulgaria in Belgrade Serbia 81 Dimitrovgrad Serbia 82 Parcani Transnistria Moldova 83 Bucharest Romania 84 Paris France 85 Washington D C United States 86 and Buenos Aires Argentina 87 Three museums dedicated to Levski have been organised one in Karlovo 88 one in Lovech 89 and one in Kakrina 90 The Monument to Vasil Levski in Sofia was erected on the site of his execution Several institutions in Bulgaria have been named in Vasil Levski s honour these include the football and sports club of Levski Sofia Levski Sofia sports club 91 the Vasil Levski National Sports Academy 92 and the Vasil Levski National Military University 93 Bulgaria s national stadium bears the name Vasil Levski National Stadium 94 The 1000 Bulgarian leva banknote in circulation between 1994 and 1999 featured Levski s portrait on its obverse side and his monument in Sofia on the reverse 95 96 The town of Levski and six villages around the country have also been named in his honour 97 The Antarctic Place names Commission of Bulgaria named an Antarctic ridge and peak on Livingston Island of the South Shetland Islands Levski Ridge and Levski Peak respectively 98 99 The life of Vasil Levski has been widely featured in Bulgarian literature and popular culture Poet and revolutionary Hristo Botev dedicated his last work to Levski The Hanging of Vasil Levski The poem an elegy 100 was probably written in late 1875 101 Prose and poetry writer Ivan Vazov devoted an ode to the revolutionary Eponymously titled Levski it was published as part of the cycle Epic of the Forgotten 102 Levski has also inspired works by writers Hristo Smirnenski 103 and Nikolay Haytov 104 among others Songs devoted to Levski can be found in the folklore tradition of Macedonia as well 105 In February 2007 a nationwide poll conducted as part of the Velikite Balgari The Great Bulgarians television show a local spin off of 100 Greatest Britons named Vasil Levski the greatest Bulgarian of all time 7 There have been motions to glorify Vasil Levski as a saint of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church However historian Stefan Chureshki has emphasised that while Levski s post monastical life was one of a martyr it was incompatible with the Orthodox concept of sainthood Chureshki makes reference to Levski s correspondences which show that Levski threatened wealthy Bulgarians chorbadzhii chorbadzhii and traitors with death endorsed theft from the rich for pragmatic revolutionary purposes and voluntarily gave up his religious office to devote himself to the secular struggle for liberation 106 Vasil Levski s hanging is observed annually across Bulgaria on 19 February 107 instead of 18 February due to the erroneous calculation of 19th century Julian calendar dates after Bulgaria adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1916 108 Although the location of Levski s grave has not been determined some of his hair is on exhibit at the National Museum of Military History After Levski gave up monkhood in 1863 he shaved his hair which his mother and later his sister Yana preserved Levski s personal items such as his silver Christian cross his copper water vessel his Gasser revolver made in Austria Hungary in 1869 and the shackles from his imprisonment in Sofia are also exhibited in the military history museum 109 while Levski s sabre can be seen in the Lovech regional museum 89 Vasil Levski is referenced by the video game Star Citizen in which future society The People s Alliance of Levski adopt an ideology based upon his views 110 A pond in the Arbor Hills Nature Preserve in Plano Texas is named in honor of Vasil Levski 111 References editFootnotes edit First name also transliterated as Vassil alias archaically written as Levsky in English cf MacDermott Undzhiev 1980 p 53 Family name also transliterated as Kuncev Kountchev Kuntchev etc a b c d e Idei za svobodna Blgariya Archived from the original on 11 April 2009 Retrieved 11 April 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 170 godini a b c d e f g h i j Manova Zhelev amp Mitev 2007 a b Crampton 2007 p 422 a b Vasil Levski beshe izbran za naj velikiya blgarin na vsichki vremena in Bulgarian Velikite blgari 18 February 2007 Archived from the original on 17 March 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2008 De Bellaigue Christopher 5 July 2001 The Sick Man of Europe The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on 30 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Castellan 1999 pp 221 222 Castellan 1999 pp 315 317 Castellan 1999 p 258 Castellan 1999 p 272 Roudometof 2001 p 136 a b Vasil Levski Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 2008 Archived from the original on 12 March 2009 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Kondarev 1946 p 24 Stoyanov 1943 p 37 Kondarev 1946 p 13 Dojchev L 1981 Spodvizhnici na Apostola in Bulgarian Sofiya Otechestvo OCLC 8553763 Vassil Levski s house Muzej Vasil Levski gr Karlovo Archived from the original on 24 April 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Vnshen vid Archived 18 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine 170 godini a b c d e f g h i Crampton 2007 pp 89 90 a b c d Crampton 1997 p 79 Kondarev 1946 pp 27 28 a b c d e f g h i j Bakalov amp Kumanov 2003 Levski Pravoslavie BG in Bulgarian 20 February 2008 Archived from the original on 12 January 2009 Retrieved 25 October 2008 Seasons in this article are to be understood as seasons in the Northern Hemisphere i e spring is in the beginning of the year Stoyanov 1943 pp 45 48 Trankova Dimana WHO WAS VASIL LEVSKI Vagabond Archived from the original on 24 September 2016 24 February 2012 Trotsky Leon Brian Pearce George Weissman Duncan Williams 1980 The War Correspondence of Leon Trotsky The Balkan Wars 1912 13 Resistance Books p 487 ISBN 0 909196 08 7 Trotsky Pearce Weissman amp Williams 1980 p 487 Avtobiografiya Archived from the original on 15 April 2009 Retrieved 15 April 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 170 godini Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 11 Kondarev 1946 pp 36 39 a b c d e f g h i j k Zhivot i delo Archived from the original on 13 February 2010 Retrieved 23 October 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 170 godini Undzhiev 1980 p 60 Stoyanov 1943 pp 67 68 Undzhiev 1980 pp 63 64 a b Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 12 Bakalov Georgi Milen Kumanov 2003 HITOV Panajot Ivanov 1830 22 II 1918 Elektronno izdanie Istoriya na Blgariya in Bulgarian Sofiya Trud Sirma ISBN 954528613X Stoyanov 1943 pp 70 72 Kondarev 1946 p 59 Kondarev 1946 pp 59 61 a b Crampton 2007 p 89 Kondarev 1946 pp 78 79 Hristo Botev zagiva na tozi den prez 1876 g in Bulgarian Budilnik 2 June 2007 Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Vasil Levski i Hristo Botev Archived from the original on 27 December 2008 Retrieved 27 December 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 170 godini a b c Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 17 Kondarev 1946 pp 86 87 Perry 1993 p 9 a b Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 19 Stavrianos 2000 p 378 a b c Vatahov Ivan 20 February 2003 Vassil Levski Bulgaria s only son The Sofia Echo Retrieved 24 October 2008 Stoyanov 1943 pp 83 86 Stoyanov 1943 pp 85 86 Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 20 Stoyanov 1943 p 87 Kondarev 1946 pp 160 161 a b Jelavich amp Jelavich 1986 p 138 Dikovski Cvetan 2007 Nyakoi sporni fakti okolo predatelstvoto na Vasil Levski in Bulgarian LiterNet Archived from the original on 29 December 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Krayat na edna kleveta in Bulgarian Crkoven vestnik Archived from the original on 7 December 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Stoyanov 1943 p 128 Todorova Maria 2003 Memoirs Biography Historiography The Reconstruction of Levski s Life Story Etudes balkaniques 1 Sofia Academie bulgare des sciences 23 Nikolov Grigor 8 November 2005 Za pametnika na Levski darili edva 3000 leva in Bulgarian Sega Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Miller 1966 p 346 Grobt na Vasil Levski in Bulgarian Ziezi ex quo Vulgares Archived from the original on 18 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Todorova 2007 p 165 Daskalov 2004 p 188 a b Dimitrov 2001 Castellan 1999 pp 322 324 Jelavich amp Jelavich 1986 p 136 a b c Dojnov amp Dzhevezov 1996 p 21 Cornis Pope amp Neubauer 2004 p 317 Chureshki Stefan 17 February 2006 Ideite na Levski i modernostta in Bulgarian Sega Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Hrissimova Ognyana 1999 Les idees de la revolution francaise de 1789 et les droits reels de l homme et du citoyen dans les Constitutions de Etats nationaux des Balkans Etudes balkaniques in French 3 4 Sofia Academie bulgare des sciences 17 ISSN 0324 1645 Daskalov 2004 p 61 Ako spechelya pechelya za cyal narod ako zagubya gubya samo mene si in Bulgarian Svyata i chista republika Archived from the original on 25 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Kosev Aleksandr 24 February 2007 Velichie i mizeriya v epohata na Vodoleya in Bulgarian Sega Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 25 October 2008 Todorov Petko Blizo li e vremeto PDF in Bulgarian Zemya Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Spisk na vojnishkite pametnici i pametnicite svrzani s borbite za nacionalno osvobozhdenie PDF in Bulgarian Nacionalno dvizhenie Blgarsko nasledstvo Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Petrov Plamen 11 October 2007 Misteriyata na varnenskite ulici in Bulgarian DARIK Radio Archived from the original on 15 January 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Otkrivat pametnik s likovete na Levski i Rakovski v Belgrad in Bulgarian Actualno com 18 December 2007 Archived from the original on 2 November 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Oresharski i Dachich otkriha byust na Levski v Caribrod in Bulgarian Btvnews bg 18 February 2014 Archived from the original on 19 February 2014 Retrieved 19 February 2014 Otkriha pametnik na Levski v Pridnestrovieto in Bulgarian Blic 23 September 2008 Archived from the original on 23 July 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Ministr Slavinski otkri pametnik na Levski v Bukuresh in Bulgarian Ministerstvo na transporta 12 May 2001 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Prvanov otkri barelef na Vasil Levski v Parizh in Bulgarian News bg 16 October 2007 Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Vasil Levski simvol na nacionalnoto ni dostojnstvo in Bulgarian Kazanlak com 19 February 2004 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Blgarskata obshnost v Arzhentina pochete pametta na Vasil Levski in Bulgarian Posolstvo na Republika Blgariya Buenos Ajres Arzhentina 18 February 2007 Retrieved 26 April 2009 dead link Vassil Levski Museum Karlovo Vassil Levski Museum Karlovo Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 a b Muzej Vasil Levski in Bulgarian Istoricheski muzej Lovech Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Muzej Kkrinsko hanche in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 7 January 2009 Retrieved 24 October 2008 History Patron PFC Levski Sofia Archived from the original on 11 December 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 National Sports Academy NSA Vassil Levski National Sports Academy NSA Vassil Levski Archived from the original on 17 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Dobre doshli v sajta na NVU V Levski in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 24 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Vassil Levski National Stadium National Sport Base Archived from the original on 13 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Natseva Rosalina Lyuben Ivanov Ines Lazarova Petya Krusteva 2004 Catalogue of Bulgarian Banknotes PDF Sofia Bulgarian National Bank p 109 ISBN 954 9791 74 2 Archived PDF from the original on 31 October 2008 Bulgarian Banknotes Ivan Petrov Archived from the original on 27 February 2009 Retrieved 20 January 2009 Tablica na naselenieto po postoyanen i nastoyash adres in Bulgarian Glavna direkciya Grazhdanska registraciya i administrativno obsluzhvane 16 June 2008 Archived from the original on 20 October 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Composite Antarctic Marine Gazetteer Placedetails Levski Ridge SCAR MarBIN Portal Archived from the original on 7 March 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Composite Antarctic Marine Gazetteer Placedetails Levski Peak SCAR MarBIN Portal Archived from the original on 7 March 2017 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Obesvaneto na Vasil Levski Hristo Botev in Bulgarian Izkustvoto com 23 May 2008 Archived from the original on 29 January 2010 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Botev Hristo Obesvaneto na Vasil Levski Slovo bg Archived from the original on 16 May 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Vazov Ivan Epopeya na zabravenite Levski in Bulgarian Slovo bg Retrieved 24 October 2008 Smirnenski Hristo Levski in Bulgarian Slovo bg Archived from the original on 16 October 2007 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Nikolaj Hajtov in Bulgarian Archived from the original on 12 September 2008 Retrieved 24 October 2008 Crnushanov Kosta 1989 Pesna za Vasil Levski ot Tikveshiyata Blgarski narodni pesni ot Makedoniya in Bulgarian Sofiya Drzhavno izdatelstvo Muzika p 395 OCLC 248012186 Chureshki Stefan 29 August 2005 Levski v izmereniyata na svetostta in Bulgarian Pravoslavie BG Retrieved 24 October 2008 permanent dead link Bulgaria Commemorates the Apostle of Freedom Sofia News Agency 19 February 2008 Archived from the original on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2008 Pavlov Petko 19 February 2007 Levski e obesen na 18 a ne na 19 fevruari in Bulgarian DARIK Radio Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 25 October 2008 Zhekov Vencislav Jordanka Toteva 2007 Lichnite veshi na Levski se shranyavat pri specialni klimatichni usloviya in Bulgarian Blgarska armiya Retrieved 25 October 2008 Galactic Guide Nyx System Roberts Space Industries Follow the development of Star Citizen and Squadron 42 Google Maps Bibliography edit Castellan Georges 1999 Histoire des Balkans XIVe XXe siecle in French transl Lilyana Tsaneva Bulgarian translation ed Paris Fayard ISBN 2 213 60526 2 Cornis Pope Marcel Neubauer John 2004 History of the literary cultures of East Central Europe junctures and disjunctures in the 19th and 20th centuries John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 90 272 3452 3 Crampton R J 2007 Bulgaria Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820514 2 Crampton R J 1997 A Concise History of Bulgaria Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 56183 3 Daskalov Rumen 2004 The Making of a Nation in the Balkans Historiography of the Bulgarian Revival Central European University Press ISBN 963 9241 83 0 Dimitrov Vesselin 2001 Bulgaria The Uneven Transition Routledge ISBN 0 415 26729 3 Jelavich Charles Jelavich Barbara 1986 The Establishment of the Balkan National States 1804 1920 A History of East Central Europe University of Washington Press ISBN 0 295 96413 8 MacDermott Mercia 1962 A History of Bulgaria 1395 1885 New York Frederick A Praeger via Internet Archive MacDermott Mercia 1967 The Apostle of Freedom A Portrait of Vasil Levsky Against a Background of Nineteenth Century Bulgaria London G Allen and Unwin OCLC 957800 Manova Denitza Zhelev Radostin Mitev Plamen 19 February 2007 The Apostle of Freedom organizer and ideologist of the national liberation struggle BNR Radio Bulgaria Archived from the original on 17 March 2008 Retrieved 25 October 2008 Miller William 1966 The Ottoman Empire and Its Successors 1801 1927 Routledge ISBN 0 7146 1974 4 Perry Duncan M 1993 Stefan Stambolov and the Emergence of Modern Bulgaria 1870 1895 Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 1313 8 Roudometof Victor 2001 Nationalism Globalization and Orthodoxy The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 31949 9 Stavrianos Leften Stavros 2000 The Balkans Since 1453 C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 551 0 Ternes Elmar Tatjana Vladimirova Buhtz 1999 Bulgarian Handbook of the International Phonetic Association A Guide to the Use of the International Phonetic Alphabet Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 55 57 ISBN 0 521 63751 1 Todorova Maria 2007 Was there civil society and a public sphere under socialism The debates around Vasil Levski s alleged burial in Bulgaria Schnittstellen Gesellschaft Nation Konflikt und Erinnerung in Sudosteuropa Festschrift fur Holm Sundhaussen zum 65 Geburtstag Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag ISBN 978 3 486 58346 5 Trotsky Leon Brian Pearce George Weissman Duncan Williams 1980 The War Correspondence of Leon Trotsky The Balkan Wars 1912 13 Resistance Books ISBN 0 909196 08 7 Bakalov Georgi Kumanov Milen 2003 LEVSKI Vasil V Ivanov Kunchev Dyakona Apostola 6 19 VII 1837 6 18 II 1873 Elektronno izdanie Istoriya na Blgariya in Bulgarian Sofiya Trud Sirma ISBN 954528613X Dojnov Dojno Dzhevezov Stoyan 1996 Ne shyah da sm turski i nikakv rob Ksha muzej Vasil Levski Karlovo in Bulgarian Sofiya Slavina OCLC 181114302 Kondarev Nikola 1946 Vasil Levski Biografiya in Bulgarian Sofiya Izdatelstvo na Blg Rabotnicheska Partiya Komunisti OCLC 39379012 Archived from the original on 26 August 2021 Retrieved 23 October 2008 Racheva Vanya Nikolova 2007 170 godini ot rozhdenieto na Vasil Levski in Bulgarian Drzhavna agenciya za blgarite v chuzhbina Archived from the original on 15 June 2008 Retrieved 23 October 2008 Simeonova Margarita Vasileva 2007 Ezikovata lichnost na Vasil Levski in Bulgarian Sofiya Akademichno izdatelstvo Marin Drinov ISBN 978 954 322 196 7 OCLC 237020336 Stoyanov Zaharij 1943 1883 Vasil Levski Dyakont Cherti iz zhivota mu in Bulgarian Plovdiv Sofiya Nov Svѣt OCLC 4273683 Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 23 October 2008 Strashimirov Dimitr 1995 Levski pred Kkrinskata golgota istoriya i kritika in Bulgarian Sofiya Sibiya ISBN 954 8028 29 8 OCLC 33205249 Undzhiev Ivan 1980 Vasil Levski Biografiya in Bulgarian Vtoro izdanie ed Sofiya Nauka i izkustvo OCLC 251739767 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vasil Levski nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Vasil Levski Pure and Sacred Republic Levski s letters and documents in Bulgarian Online edition of Vasil Levski s personal notebook in Bulgarian Vasil Levski in Haskovo in English Vasil Levski Museum in Karlovo in English and Bulgarian Vasil Levski Foundation in Bulgarian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vasil Levski amp oldid 1215844831, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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