Found this video on Youtube quite interesting, a native Bulgarian speaker trying to understand various Macedonian phrases. She doesn't do too well, even though the Bulgarians claim both languages to be identical!
Admittedly not sure where this girl is from in Bulgaria, as that could obviously make a difference with how similar her dialect is to Macedonian.
I haven't ever come across any Bulgarians so have never been put in a situation where I have to try and understand them, from the little I have been exposed to it can understand bits and pieces. Definitely not the same though and I think it would be difficult to hold a conversation and properly interact.
Have a watch of the video here.
Exposing Bulgarian Myths and Lies
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Originally posted by Carlin15 View PostTHE BULGARIAN HORRORS: CULTURE AND THE INTERNATIONAL HISTORY OF THE GREAT EASTERN CRISIS, 1876-1878 by Cameron Ean Alfred Whitehead
THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver)
April 2014
Bulgarian identity still hadn't established itself fully even by the 1870s. Rumelian Christians didn't identify as Bulgar & opposed the Bulgar April Uprising against the Turks.
PS, URL:
https://www.expres.mk/ifimes-bugarij...donci-i-turci/
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THE BULGARIAN HORRORS: CULTURE AND THE INTERNATIONAL HISTORY OF THE GREAT EASTERN CRISIS, 1876-1878 by Cameron Ean Alfred Whitehead
THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA (Vancouver)
April 2014
Bulgarian identity still hadn't established itself fully even by the 1870s. Rumelian Christians didn't identify as Bulgar & opposed the Bulgar April Uprising against the Turks.
PS, URL:
Словенечкиот Меѓународен институт за блискоисточни и балкански истражувања (ИФИМЕС) без дипломатски речник за Бугарија и Бугарите во својата најнова анализа насловена „Избори 2021 во Бугарија: Бугарски ‘напад’ врз Северна Македонија“ и објавена денеска. „Блокирајќи го интегративниот процес на Северна Македонија, Бугарија го блокира интегративниот процес на сите земји од Западен Балкан во ЕУ. конкретен повод […]
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"A century previously, the very concept of ‘Bulgarian’ was practically unheard of...In the 19th century, then, this amorphous group was constituted into a Bulgarian nation."
-Becoming Bulgarian: the articulation of Bulgarian identity in the 19th century - Sampimon, J.
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1913 London Daily Telegraph, UK, story in an Australian newspaper
Rival Claims in Macedonia.
"The Macedonian Slavs, strictly speaking, are neither Servians nor Bulgarians. Ethnically, and by their language they stand midway between them, being, however, by their dialect, their traditions, customs and folklore, nearer to the Servian than to the Bulgarians."
Undoubtedly, and unfortunately, the divergence of opinion between Servia and Bulgaria concerning the partition of Macedonia is great and grave enough. But ...
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The Bulgarian Nikola Kuchukov published in 1900, in Bulgaria, autobiographical notes on his participation in the Herzegovinian uprising of 1875.
Page 21: "... 280 people of different nationalities: Montenegrins, Croats, Bosniaks, Germans, Serbs, MACEDONIANS and 15-16 Bulgarians ..."
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4 December 1975 -The Times (UK)
URL:
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1941 British colonial press in Australia - front page headline:
BRITAIN WARNS BULGARIA ON NAZI AFFINITY
The Telegraph (Brisbane), Wednesday 19 February 1941
BRITAIN WARNS BULGARIA ON NAZI AFFINITY - The Telegraph (Brisbane, Qld. : 1872 - 1947) - 19 Feb 1941WASHINGTON, February 18.-A report received here from Sofia says that Britain has warned Bulgaria that ...Last edited by Carlin; 12-19-2020, 09:40 AM.
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Originally posted by Karposh View PostThat was really interesting Carlin. Thanks for sharing. I watched close to an hour of it late last night and I really enjoyed it. I'm about to watch the rest of it tonight and I recommend others watch it too as it shines a light on a number of very interesting facts about the modern Bulgarians which, I imagine, they'd rather not speak of. Who knew that there are areas in north-eastern Bulgaria, especially the Dobruja region where there are still compact communities who are descendants of the proto-Bulgars and still speak the old Turko-Tatar language which they brought with them from Asia. That same Turko-Tatar language was in use well into the 16th Century in Bulgaria and known simply as Bulgarian by all who spoke it. And they have the nerve to suggest the Macedonian language is in fact a dialect of Bulgarian today. The point was also stressed that the fact of the matter is, the Russians had a significant role to play in constructing the Bulgarian national identity around 200 or so years ago as it helped to serve a Russian agenda in the Balkans.
What I found especially interesting was the point made by Natasha with regard to the Ohrid Archbishopric before it was abolished by the Turks. Apparently, when the Ohrid Archbishopric had jurisdiction over the Montenegrin Orthodox Church, the Montenegrins referred to themselves as "Macedonians". This shows us that the Ohrid Archbishopric was more Macedonian in character than we probably realise or tend to give it credit for. Often there's a Bulgarian cloud hanging over it but I think that's got more to do with Bulgarian propaganda rather than reality.
Here is something else from https://twitter.com/UZI9mmmm/status/1337572644363747331
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Contemporary evidence: 16 August 1903 US newspaper The San Francisco Call reports that Bulgarian Premier Petroff regards uprising [Ilinden] in Macedonia as purely a Macedonian affair & nothing to do with Bulgaria. Petroff happy at Ottoman Turks brutally suppressing it.
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The daily worker. [volume] (Chicago, Ill.) 1924-1958, April 07, 1930, Final City Edition, Page Page Two, Image 2, brought to you by University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library, Urbana, IL, and the National Digital Newspaper Program.
7 April 1930 - US workingman's newspaper. The Daily Worker alleges that Britain has ordered Bulgaria to come down very hard on ethnic Macedonians in Bulgaria.Last edited by Carlin; 12-19-2020, 09:38 AM.
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Originally posted by Carlin15 View PostРодина Македонија Политичка партија - НАТАША КОТЛАР, ТОМЧЕ ШИРКОВ И ВЛАДИМИР ТРАЈКОВСКИ:
РОДИНСКИ РАЗГОВОРИ! 21:00 ЧАСОТ, ПЕТОК, 27 НОЕМВРИ 2020 ГОД, ВО ЖИВО НА НАШАТА ФЕЈСБУК СТРАНАТЕМА:ЗА И ОКОЛУ ПРЕДАВСТВАТА НА МУРТИНСКИОТ ТРГОВЕЦ З.ЗАЕВ И ОБИ...
Highly recommend watching Tomche Shirkov from roughly 5:00 to 14:20.
What I found especially interesting was the point made by Natasha with regard to the Ohrid Archbishopric before it was abolished by the Turks. Apparently, when the Ohrid Archbishopric had jurisdiction over the Montenegrin Orthodox Church, the Montenegrins referred to themselves as "Macedonians". This shows us that the Ohrid Archbishopric was more Macedonian in character than we probably realise or tend to give it credit for. Often there's a Bulgarian cloud hanging over it but I think that's got more to do with Bulgarian propaganda rather than reality.
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Originally posted by Carlin15 View PostIn 1905, Mary Edith Durham claimed in her book, "The Burden of the Balkans" (pp. 77-79), to "have met people who believe in a special race which they call Macedonian" and who told her their language is not Bulgarian saying herself "the dialect... is neither Serbian or Bulgarian".
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Родина Македонија Политичка партија - НАТАША КОТЛАР, ТОМЧЕ ШИРКОВ И ВЛАДИМИР ТРАЈКОВСКИ:
РОДИНСКИ РАЗГОВОРИ! 21:00 ЧАСОТ, ПЕТОК, 27 НОЕМВРИ 2020 ГОД, ВО ЖИВО НА НАШАТА ФЕЈСБУК СТРАНАТЕМА:ЗА И ОКОЛУ ПРЕДАВСТВАТА НА МУРТИНСКИОТ ТРГОВЕЦ З.ЗАЕВ И ОБИ...
Highly recommend watching Tomche Shirkov from roughly 5:00 to 14:20.
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Gagauz people:
- The Encyclopedia of World Cultures lists the ethnonym of the Gagauz as "Turkish" and "Turkish speaking Bulgars". Astrid Menz writes this about the etymology:
Older ethnographic works such as Pees (1894) and Jireček (1891)—both covering the Gagauz in Bulgaria—mention that only their neighbors used the ethnonym Gagauz, partly as an insult. The Gagauz themselves did not use this self-designation; indeed, they considered it offensive. Both Pees and Jireček mention that the Gagauz in Bulgaria tended to register either as Greek because of their religion (clearly an outcome of the Ottoman millet-system) or as Bulgarian because of the newly emerging concept of nationalism. According to Pees informants from Moldova, the Gagauz there called themselves Hıristiyan-Bulgar (Christian Bulgars), and Gagauz was used only as a nickname (Pees 1894, p. 90). The etymology of the ethnonym Gagauz is as unclear as their history. As noted above, they are not mentioned—at least not under that name—in any historical sources before their immigration into Bessarabia. Therefore, we have no older versions of this ethnonym. This, combined with the report that the Gagauz felt offended when called by this name, makes the etymology somewhat dubious.
- The Steppe hypothesis suggests that the Gagauzes may be descendants of other Turkic nomadic tribes than Seljuks: such as Bulgars and Cumans-Kipchaks from the Eurasian steppes. In the 19th century, before their migration to Bessarabia, the Gagauzes from the Bulgarian territories of the Ottoman Empire considered themselves Bulgarians. Ethnological research suggest that "Gagauz" was a linguistic distinction and not ethnic. Gagauzes to that time called themselves "Hasli Bulgar" (True Bulgars) or "Eski Bulgar" (Old Bulgars) and considered the term Gagauz, applied to them by the Slavic-speaking Bulgarians (who they called toukan), demeaning. The Gagauzes called their language Turkish and accordingly claimed descent from early Turkic Bulgars who in the 7th century established the First Bulgarian Empire on the Danube. Indeed, one modern Gagauz surname is Qipcakli.
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