bg Plovdiv

Father Paisiy Bookstore

- Raiko Daskalov Street 1 -
The commercial building, which was built somewhere at the end of the 19th century, was in use around 1903 by a shop called Knyaz Boris. In the year 1918, the bookstore named after of the Bulgarian book printer and book publisher, Simeon Vasilev, moved into the building. Simeon was an apprentice to various craftsmen in his hometown Haskovo and earned his living as a shoemaker, carpenter, and tobacco worker. In 1913, he opened a booth for the sale of tobacco, cigarettes, and newspapers near the theater in Plovdiv. In 1914, he opened a small bookstore opposite the . In 1916, he began his book publishing activity by publishing his first book.
Simeon Vasilev and his wife and daughter
During the , he was sent to the front just when he made a list of the books to be published. Towards the end of the war, he was imprisoned in a prison camp. After his release, he returned to Plovdiv, where he had to start from scratch. Apart from owning a bookstore on the first floor, how owned the first large private library in Plovdiv on the upper floor. Over the years, he worked tirelessly and opened two more bookstores, a stationery store, a store for music goods, and a publishing house. Simeon Vasilev died on February 7, 1942, at the age of 55 from a heart attack, leaving a remarkable legacy of loads of published books, dictionaries, catalogs, reference books, and brochures. After his death, his wife and daughter took over the business. For many years, there continued to be a bookstore in this place, until the closure and then transformation into the Plovdiv Tourist Center in June 2017.
One of his published works
On top of the second floor of the building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Classical and Neo-Renaissance, you can see a that's supported by loads of , which are all adorned with foliage and . The same corbels, but slightly larger, are used to support the balcony, which is located at the corner. A decorative band of is placed on both the first and second floor. The keystones that are placed on top of the arched windows, which are located on the second floor, are all embellished with a . The that flank these same windows are all crowned with a Corinthian .
The building shown in an old postcard