bg Vratsa

Tsvetko Boboshevski House

- Dimitraki Hadjitoshev Street 15 -
The two-story building, which was built somewhere at the beginning of the 20th century, was built with a residential and commercial function. The construction, which was executed according to the design of the Bulgarian architect Slavi Nikolov Stamatov, was commissioned by the Bulgarian politician and lawyer Tsvetko Boboshevski, who was born on August 20, 1884, in Vratsa, in the family of a wealthy merchant Petar Boboshevski and Ivanka Boboshevska, maiden name Hadzhigeorgieva. He began his studies in his hometown, and later on, he continued his studies at the Boys' High School in . In 1906 he graduated in law in and until 1923 he was a lawyer in Vratsa. In 1920, he became a member of the People's Party, and in the spring of 1923, he actively participated in the preparation of the . After the coup, he became the Minister of Trade, Industry and Labor in the first and second governments of . At the end of 1924, during changes in Tsankov's cabinet, he held the position of Minister of Justice. After the removal of Tsankov at the beginning of 1926, Boboshevsky remained in the government as Minister of Trade, Industry and Labor in the first and second cabinets of . He opposed the binding of Bulgaria to Germany during the , and in August 1944 he became a non-party member of the pro-communist Fatherland Front. After the coup of , 1944, that followed, he was appointed regent, and he remained in this post until the monarchy was abolished in 1946.
Tsvetko Boboshevski
On September 30, 1923, after a fire in a military warehouse, a large part of Vratsa burned down. A huge amount of houses and a large part of the bazaar were destroyed by the fire. As a commissioner, Tsvetko Boboshevski actively helps his fellow citizens to overcome the suffering and damages caused by the fire. It was at his request that Tsar sent to the burnt city the best Bulgarian surgeon at the time, Professor , with almost the entire staff of the Alexandrovsk Hospital.

Tsvetko Boboshevski was married to Joanna Boboshevska, maiden name Moshanova, with whom he had three children, one son Stefan, and two daughters, Elka and Milka. Tsviatko Boboshevski died on December 21, 1952, in Sofia and was honored by the government as a prominent statesman.
Tsvetko Boboshevski is located on the right next to his wife Joanna
The corner building, which is built in the Neo-Renaissance style, contains a wide variety of dormers, some of which are topped with a . Above the second floor windows, in addition to , you can see a straight pediment that's supported by two adorned with foliage, as well as a Corinthian . The same capitals are used for the that stretch all the way up from the first to the second floor. A is placed underneath the second floor windows, which contain a total of five . The balcony that runs around the corner of the building is secured with a wrought iron railing embellished with and supported with multiple corbels embellished with .
An old photo that shows the building