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In
1824 Dr Peter Beron, one of the few Bulgarians of that time to have
received college education abroad, in Heidelberg, published his
remarkable primer known as 'ABC of the Fish'. It contained grammar,
natural science, arithmetics, anatomy and literature. In this book
Dr Peter Beron pleaded for the introduction of the progressive Bell-Lancaster
method of education in the Bulgarian schools of the future. After
that memorable event, it took only a few decades for 1500 primary
schools and dozens of secondary schools to be established in the
Bulgarian lands. All these had been set up on the analogy of the
most advanced European patterns. Thousands of Bulgarians enrolled
in the universities of Russia, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary
and Britain. Highly educated elite gradually evolved in a short
time to take the Bulgarian literature, press and the arts in Bulgarian
capable hands.
It is worth noting that all these successes of the Bulgarian culture
had been achieved in an atmosphere of constant bridging over difficulties
arising from the opposition of both the Turkish political authorities
and the still foreign church administration. It is still more noteworthy
that the powerful network of schools had been set up without any
subsidies by the state or the church. All money for the building
and furnishing of the schools, as well as for need-based grants
or other school payments, as a rule, came from patriotically minded
Bulgarians or from the Bulgarian parish - communities whose budgets
were entirely dependent on donations or other willing Bulgarian
population contributions, but were never derived from state tax
deductions.
The highly erudite Bulgarian intelligentsia lay the beginnings
of new Bulgarian literature and saw to its further development.
As from the beginning of the 19th century new Bulgarian books were
published in the Bulgarian language spoken at the time. This testified
to the deeply rooted democratic literary traditions of the Bulgarian
people.
The Bulgarian periodical press appeared at the turn of the 40s
in the 19th century. By the mid 60s over fifty different newspapers
and magazines had been published both in Bulgaria and over the border,
in the neighboring countries. The latter were mainly papers and
magazines circulated by Bulgarian immigrants' revolutionary organizations.
Some Bulgarian scholars working in universities abroad - Dr Nicola
Piccolo (at the Sorbonne), Marin Drinov and Spiridon Palauzov (at
St Petersburg and Kharkov universities). Dr Peter Beron (at Heidelberg)
and others, had achieved serious results in the field of history,
philosophy, natural history, mathematics and medicine. A group of
Bulgarian academics laid the foundations of the Bulgarian Academy
of Sciences in Braila (in Romania) in 1869.
Historical research and intelligence gathering occupied a special
place in all academic activities, as these had most closely been
connected with the national political aspirations. Still in the
17th century works of great historical value were written by authors
like Peter Bogdan, Father Paisi (the Bulgarian monk at the Hilendar
monastery on Mount Athos whose All - Bulgarian History enjoyed extraordinary
popularity), Hristofor Zhefarovich, Georgi Rakovski, Vasil Aprilov
and others.
Poetry and fiction were particularly outstanding among the other
Bulgarian cultural achievements at that time. The first Bulgarian
verse was written between the 17th and the 18th centuries by authors
of the Catholic persuasion such as Peter Bogdan, Pavel Duvanliev
and Peter Kovachev. The acme of poetic perfection was reached in
the 19th century by poets who had cast in their lot with the national
revolutionary struggle such as Hristo Botev, Georgi Rakovski, Dobri
Chintulov and Petko Slaveikov.
Among the talented works of fiction, drama and literary critic
there stand out the names of Liuben Karavelov, Dobri Voinikov, Nesho
Bonchev and few others.
Along with the modern European trends, some of the traditional
arts had also made progress and had registered some really interesting
achievements. For instance, the fine arts were to remain inextricably
bound up with church mural and icon painting. However, the last
few decades of that period marked the appearance of secular art,
represented mainly by Bulgarian painters who had graduated from
the art schools of Russia, Munich and Vienna. Owing to the lack
of large-scale government assignments, architecture gave vent to
what it was worth by building numerous churches, monasteries, bridges
and private houses. Their beauty and practical value will never
cease to amaze everyone, moreover, they are all the work of self-made
architects.
Extract from the book "Bulgaria
Illustrated History"
Bojidar Dimitrov, PhD., Autor
Vyara Kandjieva, Photographer
Dimiter Angelov, Photographer Antoniy Handjiysky, Photographer
Maria Nikolotva, Translator
Published by BORIANA Publishing House, Sofia,Bulgaria
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