Пише се “смъртЬ”, а не “смъртЪ”
А ако искаш може и още по-старото “смьрть”
Символ-верую на българската комуна, къде го забравихме. Хем сме първи, хем втори. Или пък не 😉
Source?
What a weird take! What’s your opinion on that part of history as you are both anarchist and Turk?
**Anarchism in Bulgaria**
**Hristo Botev** had friends among Russian anarchists, the most important of which was Sergei Nechayev, and was strongly influenced by their teachings. Having left Russia illegally, Nechayev had to sneak back to Moscow via Romania in August 1869 with help from Bakunin’s underground contacts. On the way, he met Hristo Botev. [Siljak, Ana (2009). Angel of Vengeance. p. 120.]
During the April Uprising of 1876, **Georgi Benkovski** led guerrillas in the capture of **Panagyurishte and ran the city as a commune, influenced by the Paris Commune**. All cattle were brought under common ownership, food was handed out for free and money was abolished, while non-essential goods were distributed by a system of labour vouchers. But the implementation of a truly self-managed economy was halted after 10 days, when the Ottoman Empire re-captured the city from the Bulgarians.
In April 1907, an anti-anarchist law was adopted, which resulted in the dissolution of legal anarchist groups, the banning of their written press and the arrest of certain militants.
The need for coordination of the many groups led to the founding, in June 1919, of the Federation of Anarchist-Communists in Bulgaria (FACB). Although it was only legal for a very short period of its existence, the organization held regular congresses, published printed publications and more.
After the **1923** Bulgarian coup d’état, the anarchists entered into a direct confrontation with the authorities. They thus partook in the **September Uprising**, alongside the Bulgarian Communist Party and the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, forming their own anarchist fighting groups.
After the **1944** Bulgarian coup d’état, the FACB could once again act legally on the political scene and began active propaganda among the population. At the beginning of 1946, **the new communist authorities began to indiscriminately persecute the anarchists**, this vast repression led to the destruction of the anarchist movement organized in the country until 1989.
7 comments
as anything anarcho-commie lasts only a few days
Пише се “смъртЬ”, а не “смъртЪ”
А ако искаш може и още по-старото “смьрть”
Символ-верую на българската комуна, къде го забравихме. Хем сме първи, хем втори. Или пък не 😉
Source?
What a weird take! What’s your opinion on that part of history as you are both anarchist and Turk?
**Anarchism in Bulgaria**
**Hristo Botev** had friends among Russian anarchists, the most important of which was Sergei Nechayev, and was strongly influenced by their teachings. Having left Russia illegally, Nechayev had to sneak back to Moscow via Romania in August 1869 with help from Bakunin’s underground contacts. On the way, he met Hristo Botev. [Siljak, Ana (2009). Angel of Vengeance. p. 120.]
During the April Uprising of 1876, **Georgi Benkovski** led guerrillas in the capture of **Panagyurishte and ran the city as a commune, influenced by the Paris Commune**. All cattle were brought under common ownership, food was handed out for free and money was abolished, while non-essential goods were distributed by a system of labour vouchers. But the implementation of a truly self-managed economy was halted after 10 days, when the Ottoman Empire re-captured the city from the Bulgarians.
In April 1907, an anti-anarchist law was adopted, which resulted in the dissolution of legal anarchist groups, the banning of their written press and the arrest of certain militants.
The need for coordination of the many groups led to the founding, in June 1919, of the Federation of Anarchist-Communists in Bulgaria (FACB). Although it was only legal for a very short period of its existence, the organization held regular congresses, published printed publications and more.
After the **1923** Bulgarian coup d’état, the anarchists entered into a direct confrontation with the authorities. They thus partook in the **September Uprising**, alongside the Bulgarian Communist Party and the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union, forming their own anarchist fighting groups.
After the **1944** Bulgarian coup d’état, the FACB could once again act legally on the political scene and began active propaganda among the population. At the beginning of 1946, **the new communist authorities began to indiscriminately persecute the anarchists**, this vast repression led to the destruction of the anarchist movement organized in the country until 1989.
Bulgarian Anarchism Armed – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/michael-schmidt-the-anarchist-communist-mass-line](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/michael-schmidt-the-anarchist-communist-mass-line)
Anarchism in Bulgaria – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/ryan-robert-mitchell-anarchism-in-bulgaria](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/ryan-robert-mitchell-anarchism-in-bulgaria)
After the Death of Stalin: The First Revolt – The Plovdiv Tobacco Workers’ Strike, May 1953 – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/nick-heath-after-the-death-of-stalin-the-first-revolt](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/nick-heath-after-the-death-of-stalin-the-first-revolt)
The Communist Terror in Bulgaria – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gregory-petrovich-maximoff-bulgaria-a-new-spain](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gregory-petrovich-maximoff-bulgaria-a-new-spain)
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The Commune and the Balkans. The Case of Bulgaria – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/yavor-tarinski-the-commune-and-the-balkans](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/yavor-tarinski-the-commune-and-the-balkans)
Down with the Sultan, long live the Balkan Federation! – [https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/georgi-khadzhiev-down-with-the-sultan-long-live-the-balkan-federation](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/georgi-khadzhiev-down-with-the-sultan-long-live-the-balkan-federation)
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[https://theanarchistlibrary.org/category/topic/bulgaria](https://theanarchistlibrary.org/category/topic/bulgaria)
https://www.anarchy.bg