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  2. Macedonian Bulgarians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_Bulgarians

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 30 January 2025. Bulgarians from the geographic region of Macedonia Not to be confused with Bulgarians in North Macedonia, Slavic speakers of Greek Macedonia, or Ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria. The Bitola inscription is a marble slab with Cyrillic letters of Ivan Vladislav from 1016. The text reports ...

  3. Macedonians (ethnic group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonians_(ethnic_group)

    The local educator Kuzman Shapkarev concluded that since the 1870s this foreign ethnonym began to replace the traditional one Bulgarians. [246] At the dawn of the 20th century the Bulgarian teacher Vasil Kanchov marked that the local Bulgarians and Koutsovlachs call themselves Macedonians, and the surrounding people also call them in the same ...

  4. Ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_Macedonians_in_Bulgaria

    The change in the population came in 1965 census, when the people in the province declared free as Bulgarians, within ten years the 187,789 strong Macedonian minority fell to just 9,632 individuals. [12] The 1965 census counted only 9,632 people declaring themselves to be Macedonians. [22]

  5. Bulgarians in North Macedonia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarians_in_North_Macedonia

    Bulgarians are mostly found in the Strumica area, [1] but over the years, the absolute majority of southeastern North Macedonia have declared themselves Macedonian. The town of Strumica and its surrounding area (including Novo Selo ) were part of the Kingdom of Bulgaria between the Balkan wars and the end of World War I , as well as during ...

  6. History of the Macedonians (ethnic group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Macedonians...

    Overall, the large majority of local Bulgarians remained Christian. The first page of Petko Slaveykov's article "The Macedonian question" published 18 January 1871, in which he mentions that some people from Macedonia declare themselves as separate people - Macedonians, different from Bulgarians. Those people he refers to as "Macedonists"

  7. Macedonia (region) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_(region)

    Macedonian Bulgarians are ethnic Bulgarians who self-identify regionally as "Macedonians" (Bulgarian: Mакедонци, Makedontsi). They represent the bulk of the population of Bulgarian Macedonia (also known as "Pirin Macedonia"). They number approximately 250,000 in the Blagoevgrad Province where they are mainly situated. There are small ...

  8. Resolution of the Comintern on the Macedonian question

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_of_the_Com...

    This question was discussed among them, however, there was a split when Vasil Hadzhikimov and his group, refused to agree that the Macedonians are a separate people from the Bulgarians. Nevertheless, the highest institutions of the Comintern were informed about this issue from Dino Kyosev who gave a lecture in Moscow in 1933 on the distinct ...

  9. Macedonian (obsolete terminology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonian_(obsolete...

    At first place it was an umbrella term to designate all the inhabitants of the region of Macedonia, regardless of their ethnic origin. [4] " Macedonians" as an umbrella term covered Greeks, Bulgarians, Turks, Aromanians and Megleno-Romanians, Albanians, Serbs, etc. [5] Simultaneously a political concept was created, to encompass all these "Macedonians" in the area, into a separate ...