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Alexander Radev House

- Solunska Street 56 -
The residential building, which was built in 1909, was designed by the Bulgarian architect . It was built for the Bulgarian politician and Progressive Liberal Party activist Alexander Petrov Radev. He was born on March 7, 1864, in the city of , then the Ottoman Empire, today within Northern Macedonia. He is the grandson of the Revivalist , known as Dimko Pasha, and the son of . He was one of the leaders of the Bulgarian Bitola Party in the struggle against the Patriarchate and the Greeks for church independence and Bulgarian education. His brother was a Bulgarian diplomat.
Alexander Petrov Radev
Alexander Radev graduated from the Greek High School in Bitola and law at the University of in 1888, where he received his doctorate. He settled in Free Bulgaria and worked in the courts in several cities, and in 1892 he began practicing law in the capital Sofia. In 1895 he joined the Macedonian Committee and at the second, third, and ffith Congress of the organization, he was elected its treasurer. He is also chairman of the Law Society and associate professor of Byzantine law at the University of Sofia.

He actively participated in Bulgarian politics and in the late 1890s became a member of the Central Bureau of the Progressive Liberal Party. When in 1901 the party came to power, he left the teaching post at the Higher School and became Minister of Justice in the fourth government of . In 1902 in the first government of , as well as in his second and third governments, he became Minister of Education. Alexander Radev died after an operation for a bilateral hernia on June 4, 1911, in .
The The building in the 1970s
The architectural style can be described as Bulgarian Revival with some Art Nouveau elements. The most eye-catching features of this building are the two . One is located on the southern facade and the other hangs at an angle of 45 degrees on the southeastern corner. The oriel window on the corner changes quite drastically from a rectangular shape to an octagonal shape. Another nice feature is the , with wooden railings and the pronounced eave.

A stone stairwell with an iron railing leads to an elevated entrance on the east side of the building. The protruded balcony above this entrance is secured with a wooden construction, which is inspired by Bulgarian Revival architecture. The decorative above the windows are shaped like they are resembling an open book.

On the east side of the building, you'll see a memorial plaque was placed in honor of Alexander Petrov Radev.
The memorial plaque in honor of Alexander Petrov Radev