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Dragia Delidelvov House

- Strumitsa Street 4 -
The residential building, which was built in 1905, was constructed by a design of the Bulgarian architect . The building was built for the Bulgarian teacher, official, public figure, and benefactor Dragia Delidelvov. He was born on November 23, 1863, in and graduated from the Classical High School in Sofia in 1884.

He worked as a teacher and later he became the director of a fourth-grade school in Koprivshtitsa. In 1887 he went to , where he studied pedagogy and defended his doctorate in philosophy, Latin and Greek literature at the University of Ghent. After his return to Bulgaria, in the period between 1891 and 1894, he was a teacher at the Boys' High School in . Between 1894 and 1896 he taught at the Bulgarian Boys' High School, and from 1896 to 1900 in Sofia. Later he became the director of the Plovdiv Boys' High School and in the period from 1901 until 1907 he worked as a chief inspector in the Ministry of Public Education. He was chief school inspector and head of the school department at the Bulgarian Exarchate in and chief secretary of the Ministry of Public Education.

On May 24, 1920, he left this three-storey house to the Ministry of National Education. With its rental to be used as a scholarship for young people whose parents are from Koprivshtitsa and to successfully pass a competitive exam, and after graduation to return to Bulgaria and help improve agriculture, industry, or trade. He died on May 22, 1928, in Sofia.
Dragia Delidelvov as director on the photo with the teachers of the Plovdiv Boys' High School.
The building, which is built in the Art Nouveau style, is colored in a nice sandy yellow and orange color. It is richly decorated with a lot of different geometric shapes. Like the different sized vertical relief lines that find their origin in a . As well as in the whiplash frame around the windows with various sized white dots. Some of the on the first floor contain the same white dot. The same playful elements can be seen in the orange between the first and second floor once it reaches a window or door. The geometric shapes above the windows on the first and third floor have three on each side.
The playful frame around the windows