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{{More citations needed|date=March 2023}}[[File:Kosta Shahov.jpg|thumb|photo of Kosta Shahov]]
{{More citations needed|date=March 2023}}
[[File:Kosta Shahov.jpg|thumb|photo of Kosta Shahov]]
'''Kosta S. Shahov''' ([[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]] and [[Macedonian language|Macedonian]]: Коста С. Шахов) was a [[Macedonian Bulgarians|Macedonian Bulgarian]] public figure, journalist, activist of the [[Young Macedonian Literary Society]] and the [[Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee]].<ref>[http://macedonia-history.blogspot.com/2010/10/kosta-shahov-edno-osvetlenie-po-nashite.html Шахов, Коста. Едно осветление по нашите работи, в: От София до Костур. Спомени, ИК Синева, София, 2003, стр.38-68.]</ref>
'''Kosta S. Shahov''' ([[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]] and [[Macedonian language|Macedonian]]: Коста С. Шахов) was a [[Macedonian Bulgarians|Macedonian Bulgarian]] public figure, journalist, activist of the [[Young Macedonian Literary Society]] and the [[Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee]].<ref>[http://macedonia-history.blogspot.com/2010/10/kosta-shahov-edno-osvetlenie-po-nashite.html Шахов, Коста. Едно осветление по нашите работи, в: От София до Костур. Спомени, ИК Синева, София, 2003, стр.38-68.]</ref>


Shahov was born on April 14, 1862 in [[Ohrid]], [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Macedonia]]. He graduated law at [[Sofia University]] in 1894 and worked in [[Ruse, Bulgaria|Ruse]] in the municipality government, and later in the Court of Appeal. Shahov was among the founders of the Young Macedonian Literary Society, the author of its Statute and Rules and an active contributor to the magazine [[Loza (magazine)|Loza]]. He published the newspaper "Macedonia" (1888 - 1912 with some interruptions), "Strannik", "Glas Makedonski" (1893 - 1898), "Borba za svobodata na Makedonia i Odrinsko", "Borba" (1905) and others. In 1892 Shahov met with [[Ivan Hadzhinikolov]] and [[Gotse Delchev]] and facilitates the establishment of the future [[Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization]] (IMRO). Shahov was among the founders of the Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee in 1894. Shahov died on August 15, 1917 in [[Sofia]].
Shahov was born on April 14, 1862, in [[Ohrid]], [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman Macedonia]]. He graduated law at [[Sofia University]] in 1894 and worked in [[Ruse, Bulgaria|Ruse]] in the municipality government, and later in the Court of Appeal. Shahov was among the founders of the Young Macedonian Literary Society, the author of its Statute and Rules and an active contributor to the magazine [[Loza (magazine)|Loza]]. He published the newspaper "Macedonia" (1888 - 1912 with some interruptions), "Strannik", "Glas Makedonski" (1893 - 1898), "Borba za svobodata na Makedonia i Odrinsko", "Borba" (1905) and others. In 1892 Shahov met with [[Ivan Hadzhinikolov]] and [[Gotse Delchev]] and facilitates the establishment of the future [[Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization]] (IMRO). Shahov was among the founders of the Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee in 1894. After the Bulgarian army [[Bulgarian occupation of Serbia (World War I)|occupied a large part of then Eastern Serbia]] in 1915, Shakhov returned to his hometown and was appointed chairman of the Bulgarian regional commission. He died in Ohrid on August 15, 1917.<ref>
Борбите в Македония и Одринско. София, Български писател, 1981. с. 804.</ref>


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:19th-century Bulgarian people]]
[[Category:19th-century Bulgarian people]]
[[Category:Macedonian Bulgarians]]
[[Category:Macedonian Bulgarians]]
[[Category:People from the Ottoman Empire]]

Latest revision as of 07:56, 12 April 2024

photo of Kosta Shahov

Kosta S. Shahov (Bulgarian and Macedonian: Коста С. Шахов) was a Macedonian Bulgarian public figure, journalist, activist of the Young Macedonian Literary Society and the Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee.[1]

Shahov was born on April 14, 1862, in Ohrid, Ottoman Macedonia. He graduated law at Sofia University in 1894 and worked in Ruse in the municipality government, and later in the Court of Appeal. Shahov was among the founders of the Young Macedonian Literary Society, the author of its Statute and Rules and an active contributor to the magazine Loza. He published the newspaper "Macedonia" (1888 - 1912 with some interruptions), "Strannik", "Glas Makedonski" (1893 - 1898), "Borba za svobodata na Makedonia i Odrinsko", "Borba" (1905) and others. In 1892 Shahov met with Ivan Hadzhinikolov and Gotse Delchev and facilitates the establishment of the future Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO). Shahov was among the founders of the Supreme Macedonian-Adrianople Committee in 1894. After the Bulgarian army occupied a large part of then Eastern Serbia in 1915, Shakhov returned to his hometown and was appointed chairman of the Bulgarian regional commission. He died in Ohrid on August 15, 1917.[2]

References

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