bg Plovdiv

Gruev Brothers Building

- Hristo Gruev Danov Street 33 -
The residential building, which was built in 1886, was built according to a design of the Czech–Bulgarian architect . It was built for the Bulgarian educator, teacher, pedagogue, translator, book publisher, and public figure, Joakim Gruev Proychev, and his brother, the Bulgarian public figure and enlightened activist Georgi Gruev Proychev. Joakim was born on September 9, 1828, and Georgi was born on January 12, 1832, both born in in the family of merchant Gruyo Proichev and Tana Topalova. The brothers had one sister, Tana Karavelova, and three brothers, , , and Nikita.

Joakim received his primary education in his hometown under the famous teacher . At his father's request, he was sent to the Greek school in Plovdiv to improve his knowledge of Greek. For 20 years he taught in Koprivshtitsa and at the Plovdiv Class Bulgarian School, which in his time was the most famous school in Bulgaria. He took part in the Church Struggle and the April in 1876, which led to his arrest, but the charges were dropped. After , he became chairman of the judicial council in , director of education, member-advisor of the Supreme Administrative Court, and high school director. In 1884, he became a regular member of the , today the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. After the of Bulgaria, he was appointed assistant commissioner in southern Bulgaria.

He is the author of a large number of textbooks on various subjects. In 1858, he proposed celebrating Day on May 24 as a holiday for Bulgarian students. Joakim Gruev was married to Maria Salcho Grueva, and together they had three children, Gruyu, Sava, and Georgi. He died in Plovdiv on August 1, 1912, and was buried in the courtyard of the Church of the Holy Virgin, in Plovdiv.
Joakim Gruev Proychev
Georgi started his studies in his hometown under and continued his studies in Plovdiv. In 1854, he moved to , where he joined the struggle for Bulgarian church independence. In 1871, he became a delegate of the Plovdiv Diocese to the First Church-People's Council in Constantinople. In 1874, he was elected chairman of the newly created Board of Trustees of poor schools. Later on, he became the chairman of the criminal department at the Supreme Court in Plovdiv. He enjoys great respect in Plovdiv and the region and was elected chairman of the Standing Committee of Eastern Rumelia, a post he held from October 13, 1881, until December 11, 1882. Georgi Gruev died on December 22, 1899, in Plovdiv.
Georgi Gruev Proychev in Constantinople
The bottom of the that separates the roof from the rest of the symmetrical Neo-Renaissance building, is embellished with . Many of the second floor windows are crowned with a pointed , while above the three circle-top windows, a can be admired. These three last-mentioned windows are flanked by , which are all crowned with a Corinthian . The balcony underneath these windows is secured with a cast iron railing and supported by four simplified , which in their case are supported by a pillar.
Georgi sitting on the left and Joakim on the right surrounded by their children and Joakim's wife in the center