bg Ruse

Dimitar Mantov House

- Konstantin Dimchev Street 2 -
The residential and commercial building was built in 1892 by a project of the architect Spiros Valsamaki. It was built for the Bulgarian politician and Mayor of Ruse, Dimitar Mantov. On the ground floor, there are four shops, rooms for servants, and a laundry, and on the first floor, there are nine rooms inhabited by the Mantovi family. Dimitar Mantov is a , born in the town of , in the family of the merchant Vasil Mantov.

His family settled in , where he graduated from the local Bolhrad High School. During the pro-Russian Officers' Revolt in February 1887, Dimitar Mantov was a district governor in Ruse and took an active part in the investigation that followed its suppression. At the request of Prime Minister , he tried to establish informal contacts with the Russian legation in . On March 19, he met with a group of pro-Russian emigrant officers with whom he got into a heated argument, and a few hours later he was severely wounded after a shooting on a busy Bucharest boulevard. Dimitar Mantov survived the attack, but his diplomatic mission failed.

Dimitar Mantov was married to the Greek woman Efrosina and together they have three children, Vasil, Mihail, and Maria. Dimitar Mantov died in Ruse, in 1921.
The Mantovi family in the backyard
On the corner top of the Neo-Baroque and Neo-Renaissance building, you can see a fragment that contains . In the fragment underneath it, you can admire two lion head within the center of it a . A bit further down you'll see a decorative shell, as well as some beautiful motifs, like the motif. This motif can also be seen underneath the roof , as well as a motif that's adorned with foliage. A pointed is placed above the windows on the second floor, which contains two laying . The windows are flanked by with on top of it an Ionic . Underneath the windows, you'll see a , which contains either six or seven balusters.
An old postcard showing the building