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- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association abstract "The Young Macedonian Literary Society was founded in 1891, in Sofia, together with its magazine Loza. The society formed primarily as a scholarly and literary organization. After a distinct Bulgarian state was established in 1878, Macedonia remained outside its borders. In the 1880s, the Bulgarian codificators rejected the idea of a Macedono-Bulgarian linguistic compromise, and chose eastern Bulgarian dialects as a basis for standard Bulgarian. One purpose of the Young Macedonian Literary Society magazine was to defend the Macedonian dialects, and to have them more represented in the Bulgarian language. The articles were historical, cultural, and ethnographic. The government of the Bulgarian dictator Stefan Stambolov suspected the organization of lack of loyalty and separatism, and banned the magazine and the Society at the end of 1892. However, some linguists identify this magazine as an early platform of Macedonian linguistic separatism.The authors considered themselves Macedonian Bulgarians, As a whole, the Lozars demonstrated both Bulgarian and Macedonian loyalty, and combined their Bulgarian nationalism with Macedonian regional and cultural identity.The society's founders included Kosta Shahov, its chairman. In May 1894, after the fall of Stambolov, the Macedonian Youth Society in Sofia revived the Young Macedonian Literary Society. The new group had a newspaper called Glas Makedonski, and opened a Reading Room Club. The group included a number of educators, revolutionaries, and public figures from Macedonia—Evtim Sprostranov, Petar Pop Arsov, Thoma Karayovov, Hristo Popkotsev, Dimitar Mirchev, Andrey Lyapchev, Naum Tyufekchiev, Georgi Balaschev, Georgi Belev, etc.—all known as the Lozars. Later, for a short time in the company were involved also Dame Gruev, Gotse Delchev, Luka Dzherov, Ivan Hadzhinikolov and Hristo Matov. These activists went on to various careers. Some became leaders in the Macedonian revolutionary movement—both the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization in 1894, and the Supreme Macedonian Committee in 1895. Others became later prominent Bulgarian intellectuals, and Andrey Lyapchev became prime minister of Bulgaria.".
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association wikiPageExternalLink mm_6.htm.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association wikiPageID "30319033".
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association wikiPageRevisionID "574047090".
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association subject Category:1891_establishments_in_Bulgaria.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association subject Category:Defunct_organizations_of_Bulgaria.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association subject Category:History_of_Bulgaria.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association subject Category:Macedonia_under_the_Ottoman_Empire.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association subject Category:Organizations_established_in_1891.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association comment "The Young Macedonian Literary Society was founded in 1891, in Sofia, together with its magazine Loza. The society formed primarily as a scholarly and literary organization. After a distinct Bulgarian state was established in 1878, Macedonia remained outside its borders. In the 1880s, the Bulgarian codificators rejected the idea of a Macedono-Bulgarian linguistic compromise, and chose eastern Bulgarian dialects as a basis for standard Bulgarian.".
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association label "Young Macedonian Literary Association".
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association sameAs m.0g5r_wc.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association sameAs Q3407220.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association sameAs Q3407220.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association wasDerivedFrom Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association?oldid=574047090.
- Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association isPrimaryTopicOf Young_Macedonian_Literary_Association.