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Simeon Dobrevski House

- Knyaz Boris I Street 116 -
The residential building was built in 1908 and was designed by its owner, the Bulgarian General Simeon Manev Dobrevski, who was also a military engineer and military historian. He was born on January 17, 1869, in the North Macedonian city of , then in the Ottoman Empire. On October 7, 1886, he entered military service and graduated from His Highness Military School on May 18, 1889. In 1897, as a lieutenant, he served in the Sofia Fortress Battalion and was sent to study at the Nikolaev Engineering Academy in , where he graduated in 1900.

During the and the , he led an engineering unit and was chief and inspector of the engineering troops at the Headquarters of the Active Army. In January 1915, he was the head of the technical fortification department at the Engineering Inspectorate. During the , he was the chief of engineering troops in the Second Army, and after the war, in March 1920, he was dismissed from service.
Simeon Dobrevski and his wife Anastasia Dobrevska
After the First World War, he participated in the activities of the Macedonian to Bulgaria. On April 16, 1925, during the on the church called Holy Sunday in Sofia, he miraculously survived but he injured his right eye which left him blind in that eye for the rest of his life. He deals with the theoretical issues of engineering troops and is the author of numerous studies. He examines methods and means of air defense and field fortification. He also deals with the history of the actions of the Bulgarian army during the Balkans and the First World War. He was a member of the Bulgarian Engineering and Architectural Society, an elected member of the Society's Supreme Council, and a publisher of his own magazine.
Simeon Dobrevski with an eye bandage just after the attack
Simeon Dobrevski was married to Anastasia Simeonova Dobrevska, who was born in the town of on July 11, 1884, as the daughter of the lawyer Georgi Tsukev. She graduated from a girls' high school in Sofia and showed a penchant for poetry from an early age. As a result of her inspiration, three poetry collections have been published. In them, a lot of space is given to a deep and unfeigned sympathy for the Macedonian Bulgarians and a high faith in his warm life. General Simeon Dobrevski lived in the building until his death in 1947, and until 1965 his wife Anastasia Dobrevska, and after that their heirs, but in the 1970s it was taken by the municipality.
Simeon Dobrevski and his wife Anastasia Dobrevska in their home
The most eye-catching features of the building are the young and elderly that carry the above them. The oriel window features two that contain five each. The , which can be admired on the second and first floor, are all crowned with a Corinthian . On the first floor, where the pilasters are missing, you can see that are decorated with the technique of . The open pointed that are placed above the first floor windows are embellished with a strip of and in two cases supported by two , which are adorned with foliage.
An old photo from the 1970s shows the building