bg Borovets

Villa Nikola Genadiev

- Borovets -
The construction of the two-story villa was completed in 1906 and was built as a summer residence for the prominent Bulgarian journalist and politician from the People's Liberal Party Nikola Ivanov Genadiev. He was born on December 1, 1868, in , as the son of the Bulgarian enlightened activist and Vasilikia Genadieva. Nikola completed his primary education in his native Bitola, and in 1876, his family moved to , where in 1885 he graduated from Plovdiv High School. He took part in the of Bulgaria, and after that, during the , he was a volunteer in the squad of Captain . In 1891, he graduated in political and administrative sciences and law at the Free University of , after which he worked as a lawyer and journalist in Plovdiv. Together with his brother , he founded the newspaper Balkanska Zora in Plovdiv, which was the first lasting Bulgarian daily newspaper after the of Bulgaria.
The technical drawing of the villa
Since 1892, Nikola Genadiev has been among the active members of the People's Liberal Party. After the assassination of Prime Minister on February 26, 1907, he announced himself as the leader of the party but met the resistance of a part of the party around . In 1912, he volunteered in the , and the following year, in 1913, he participated in the . At the beginning of the , when Bulgaria was still neutral, but the cabinet sympathized with the Central Powers, he was sent by the government on an exploratory mission to France and Italy. In his report after his return in March 1915, he unexpectedly changed his foreign policy positions, announcing Bulgaria's rapprochement with the Entente. This reversal puts 's government in a delicate position, as Gennadiev could threaten his parliamentary majority. Radoslavov tried to retain his support in exchange for protection from prosecution. Gennadiev refused, which led to a split in the People's Liberal Party and to his being sent to prison. There he clashed with the leader of the Bulgarian National Agricultural Union, . Nikola Genadiev was released in 1918, and on August 30, 1923, he left the National Liberal Party. On October 17, 1923, he returned home from the Union Club to his home in , accompanied by . At the corner of the street, he was killed with several pistol shots by of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization ().
Nikola Ivanov Genadiev
In 1924, the villa was bought by Ivan Geshov's son, Evstratiy Ivanov Geshov, who was born on January 2, 1884, in Plovdiv. In 1900, he graduated from the First Boys' High School in Sofia, and in 1905 he graduated from economics in . After a stay in , he returned to Bulgaria and took part in the management of family businesses. In 1922, he married Anka Gubidelnikova, daughter of the banker . Evstratiy was elected as a member of the management of the Bulgarian National Bank and the Bulgarian Red Cross. He was the chairman of the insurance company named Balkan, a director of the Bulgarian Commercial Bank, and a member of the International Union of Bankers in Switzerland. After the coup of , 1944, he was interned in . Eustratiy Geshov died in 1959 at the age of 74. In the period between 1950 and 1992, the villa was managed by the Ministry of the Interior, and later on, after several adaptations, it became a hotel.
An old postcard that show the villa
The top gable of the Eclectic building features a supported by four , as well as a . The part of the building, of which the top gable is part of, contains several , which give the building a nice multidimensional touch. A , in different shapes and sizes, is placed above some of the second floor windows. The building features two , one of which is covered with a hip roof and supported by two cone-shaped corbels. A small balcony is placed on top of the central bay window, which before the adaptation used to be a porch.
The villa is shown in an old colorized postcard