Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

150th birth anniversary of revolutionary Dame Gruev

Photo: BGNES

Damyan Gruev was born on January 19, 1871 in the village of Smilevo near Bitola. He remains in Bulgarian history with the name Dame. He studied at the Bulgarian Men’s High School in Thessaloniki, but young Dame was expelled because of a students’ riot. The Saint Sava Society sent him to Belgrade to study at the "Velika škola". There he expressed his dissatisfaction with Serbian propaganda spread on Bulgarian youth and was expelled because of that. In 1889 he started studying history in the newly-established higher school in Sofia, which later became the Sofia University. He became acquainted with the ideas of Vasil Levski and Hristo Botev. He read "Notes on the Bulgarian Uprisings" by Zahari Stoyanov and embraced the idea of the liberation of Macedonia through the creation of a revolutionary organization and network of committees.

In 1891 he left for Macedonia, where he was one of the organizers of the Bulgarian Macedonian-Adrianopolitan Revolutionary Committee, which later became the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization - IMRO. He was a Bulgarian teacher and inspector at Bulgarian schools in Thessaloniki and he undertook a number of tours to expand the organization's network. He was arrested by the Ottoman authorities and spent over 2 years in prison and exile.

Gruev was among the organizers of the Ilinden–Preobrazhenie Uprising in 1903. He was chairman of the Smilev Congress, which took place in his house, where the plan for the uprising was approved. After the defeat he remained in Macedonia to restore IMRO and to fight against the armed propaganda of Serbia and Greece. In 1904, after a betrayal, Dame was wounded and arrested by Serbian voivode Micko Krstić but IMRO managed to free him.

Dame Gruev died on December 23, 1906 in the Maleshevo Mountain on his way to Bulgaria. Passing through the village of Rusinovo, he was ambushed by Ottoman forces. He was wounded and fled with two fellow revolutionaries up in the mountain but was confronted by Ottoman forces again and died in the battle. Prof. Lyubomir Miletich wrote about his tragic death: "The whole of Bulgaria back then felt the blow inflicted and it became clear how much the humble Gruev was revered and valued as a true apostle of freedom…”

Compiled by: Ivo Ivanov

English: Alexander Markov



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

An exhibition in Sofia presents the ancient "lords of salt" from Provadia

The exhibition "The Lords of Salt: Provadia - The Saltworks 5600 - 4350 BC" will be presented in Sofia. The temporary exhibition will be officially opened on June 11 at the National Archaeological Institute and Museum of the Bulgarian Academy of..

published on 6/8/24 3:30 PM
From left to right - Hristo Botev, Ivan Drasov and Nikola Slavkov.

Bulgaria lost one of the greatest heroic figures of our times in the fire of the fight for national independence

The testimonies of those who took part in the fateful events of 1876 are numerous and often contradictory. But the letters and documents about the April Uprising, which led to the liberation of Bulgaria , paint a fuller picture of the events that goes..

published on 6/2/24 6:35 AM

Tsar Ferdinand’s last will to be buried in Bulgaria is now fulfilled

76 years after his death, the remains of the first Bulgarian Tsar of the Third Bulgarian Tsardom, Ferdinand I, were returned to the "Vrana" Palace and his last will has finally been fulfilled. The Tsar wrote that he wished to be..

published on 5/30/24 5:01 PM