Jump to content

Mihail Solunov

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Teachers and pupils from Bulgarian boys' school in Bitola. Solunov is the second person on the third row from right to left.

Mihail Petrov Solunov (Macedonian and Bulgarian: Михаил Петров Солунов; 1877-1956) was a Macedonian-Bulgarian journalist and monk.

Biography

[edit]

Born in Prilep, in the then-Ottoman Empire, he completed the Bulgarian boys' school in Bitola and afterwards studied at the Bulgarian Men's High School of Thessaloniki. In 1901 he graduated from the Faculty of Philosophy in Belgrade. Solunov was one of the founders of the Macedonian Club in Belgrade in 1902. There he also co-founded the Balkanski Glasnik newspaper,[1] which promoted Macedonian nationalism and separatism with regard to church, language, and autonomy.[2]

Solunov completed law school in Geneva and theology school in Sofia.[3] Later he moved to Ruse, where he worked as a teacher.[4] After the 1934 military coup in Bulgaria, he was the mayor of Ivaylovgrad.[5] During World War II, Solunov subsequently served as mayor of Dolneni, Vitolište, Samokov and Žbevac in the Bulgarian occupation zone of Yugoslavia.[6] After the war, he became a monk under the name Mina and died at Rila Monastery in 1956.[7][8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Blaže Ristovski (1989). Portreti i procesi od makedonskata literaturna i nacionalna istorija. p. 86.
  2. ^ Kiselinovski, Stojan (2000). Македонски историски речник. Skopje: INI. pp. 60–61. ISBN 9989-624-46-1.
  3. ^ Blaže Ristovski (1980). Naučna misla. p. 399.
  4. ^ Л. Брашованова-Станчева (1993) Проф. д-р Стоян Брашованов: първият български музиколог, ISBN 9548329026, p. 17.
  5. ^ Blaže Ristovski, Dimitrija Čupovski (1878-1940) i Makedonskoto naučno-literaturno drugarstvo vo Petrograd: prilozi kon proučuvanjeto na makedonsko-ruskite vrski i razvitokot na makedonskata nacionalna misla, Kultura, 1978, str. 165.
  6. ^ "Списък на кметовете на градските и селски общини в присъединените към Царството земи през 1941-1944 година" (PDF).
  7. ^ Ristovski, Blaže. Македонскиот клуб во Белград и весникот „Балкански гласник“: свечен собир по повод стогодисхнината од издавањето на весникот „Балкански гласник одржан“ на 11 јули 2002, том 43 от Свечени собири, Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2002, pg. 10.
  8. ^ Blaže Ristovski (1978). Dimitrija Čupovski (1878-1940) i Makedonskoto naučno-literaturno drugarstvo vo Petrograd. p. 346.