- The
Kalofer m****acre (Bulgarian: Калоферското клане) was the m****acre of a
total of 618
civilian Bulgarians,
accompanied by the
looting and
arson of the...
-
Kalofer (Bulgarian: Калофер pronounced:[
kɐˈɫɔfɛr]) is a town in
central Bulgaria,
located on the
banks of the
Tundzha between the
Balkan Mountains to the...
- in his political, philosophical, and
aesthetic views.
Botev was born in
Kalofer, Bulgaria, to
Botyo Petkov and
Ivanka Boteva. His
father was a teacher...
-
Kalofer Petrov Hristozov (Bulgarian: Калофер Христозов) (born 19
March 1969) is a
Bulgarian gymnast. He
competed at the 1988
Summer Olympics, the 1992...
-
Kalofer Peak (Bulgarian: връх Калофер, romanized: vrah
Kalofer, IPA: [ˈvrɤx
kɐˈɫɔfɛr]) is a 300 m
sharp rocky peak in the
Levski Ridge,
Tangra Mountains...
-
Zagora Province, South-central Bulgaria,
located between the
towns of
Kalofer and Kazanlak. It is the
administrative centre of the
homonymous Pavel Banya...
-
water current is high,
reaching velocity of 1.5–2 m/s. At the town of
Kalofer the
Tundzha turns east and then
enters the
western reaches of the Kazanlak...
- of 350
meters and an area of 1895
square kilometers. Respectively, the
Kalofer Valley of
Roses covers an area of 1387
square kilometers with a length...
- Sub-Balkan
towns and villages. For example, such
units "liberated" both
Kalofer and Karlovo, twice, on 23 July [O.S. 10 July] 1877 and 27 July [O.S. 15...
- and
hunting lodges for the
Bulgarian royal family.
Fingov was born in
Kalofer (at the time part of the
Ottoman Empire, now in
central Bulgaria) to the...