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The article presents an annotated edition of the parts of František Kubka’s Bulgarian Diary (1949) where the author — at that time the ambassador of the Czechoslovak Republic in Bulgaria — describes the life in Voyvodovo, the only Czech village in Bulgaria. Most of the information in the Diary comes from Kubka’s own visit in the village in 1948, in the time of preparation for remigration of its inhabitants...
ABSTRACT. The subject matter of this study emerged from a hypothesis that the members of emigrant groups who left the Czech lands before the period of “national revival” did not have shared Czech national identity, which was created only after their departure and was transmitted to these groups within the scope of the ‘protection programme for compatriots’ implemented by the Czechoslovak Republic...
The text describes the history of the first Czech village in Bulgaria - Sesek. It is the first attempt to present systematically all known information about this village scattered in publications, unpublished materials and archives. One of the main purposes of the study is to prove that 'Sesek' was de iure as well as de facto standard village inhabited by (primarily though not exclusively) Czech families...
The text describes the history of the first Czech village in Bulgaria – Sesek. It is the first attempt to present systematically all known information about this village scattered in publications, unpublished materials and archives. One of the main purposes of the study is to prove that “Sesek” was de iure as well as de facto standard village inhabited by (primarily though not exclusively) Czech families...
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