-
largest town in
Bulgaria that is not a
province center.
Previously known as
Stanimaka (Станимака; Gr****: Στενήμαχος), it was
renamed in 1934
after the 13th-century...
-
Bulgarian army fled
leaving the city
without resistance.
Refugees settled in
Stanimaka.
During the
Ottoman Interregnum in 1410, Musa Çelebi
conquered the city...
-
Doxiadis teaching the
principles of
ekistics Born (1913-05-14)14 May 1913
Stanimaka,
Kingdom of
Bulgaria Died 28 June 1975(1975-06-28) (aged 62) Athens, Greece...
-
Samokov eparchy (diocese),
Ottoman Empire (now Bulgaria) Died c. 1773
Stanimaka (now Asenovgrad),
Ottoman Empire (now Bulgaria) Venerated in
Eastern Orthodox...
- were:
Department of Plovdiv: Plovdiv,
Konush (the
canton seat was in
Stanimaka),
Ovchi Halm (seat in
Golyamo Konare),
Stryama (seat in Karlovo), Sarnena...
-
Kaloyan of Bulgaria, and took
refuge in Asen's
Fortress (at the time
called Stanimaka).
Renier of Trit
would be
besieged in the
fortress for
eleven months with...
-
property after Daud
Pasha cut off the
water supplies. In the same way
Stanimaka (Asenovgrad) was
taken and soon
after fell the
northern Rhodopes fortress...
-
southern Thrace, the Rhodopes, and Macedonia—including Adrianople, Tsepina,
Stanimaka, Melnik, Serres, Skopje, and Ohrid—meeting
little resistance. The Hungarians...
- 100
Trifon Trifonov Bulgarian Wedding:
Music of the Last
Century With
Stanimaka 2003 910 101 Noël Akchoté
Cabaret Modern An AudioFilm: A
Night in the...
-
Brooketon →
Muara Padang Berawa →
Seria Ratiaria →
Archar Asenovgrad →
Stanimaka →
Asenovgrad (1934)
Scaptopara → ****a-i Bala (Yukarı ****a) →
Gorna Dzhumaya...