Lyuben Karavelov founds the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central …
Years: 1870 - 1870
Lyuben Karavelov founds the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee (BRCC) in Bucharest in 1870.
Rakovski had died in 1867 without achieving Bulgarian independence, but he had united the émigré intelligentsia, and the presence of his army influences Turkish recognition of the Bulgarian church in 1870.
Because the cultivation of Bulgarian national consciousness is initially a cultural rather than a political movement, it is consequently directed more against the “cultural yoke” of the Greeks than the “political yoke” of the Ottoman Empire.
After the Turkish conquest of the Balkans, the Greek patriarch had become the representative of the Rum millet, or the “Roman nation,” which comprised all the subject Christian nationalities.
The desire to restore an independent Bulgarian church is a principal goal of the national “awakeners,” whose efforts are rewarded in 1870 when the Sublime Porte issues a decree establishing an autocephalous Bulgarian church, headed by an exarch, with jurisdiction over the fifteen dioceses of Bulgaria and Macedonia.
Although the Greek patriarch refuses to recognize this church and excommunicates its adherents, it will become a leading force in Bulgarian life, representing Bulgarian interests at the Sublime Porte and sponsoring the further expansion of Bulgarian churches and schools.
Locations
People
Groups
- Christians, Eastern Orthodox
- Macedonia, Ottoman Vardar
- Bulgaria, Ottoman
- Ottoman Empire
- Greece, Kingdom of
- BRCC (Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee)
