bg Sofia

Stefan Salabashev House

- Murgash Street 6 -
The residential building was built in 1905 and was designed by the Bulgarian architect . The house was built for the Bulgarian cavalry officer and Colonel Stefan Petrov Salabashev. He was born on January 1, 1865, in the city of and comes from the famous Salabashevi family. His grandfather Hadji Nacho is among the Stara Zagora leaders and Stefan's brother is , a former Minister of Finance.

In 1885 he fought in the in , present-day Serbia. After the war, he entered the Military School and after his graduation in 1887 he was enlisted in the Second Cavalry Regiment in . He was later transferred to the First Cavalry Regiment, and in 1890 became one of the winners of a competition of the Ministry of War and was sent to study at the Austro-Hungarian Royal Cavalry School for 2 years. After these 2 years, he became an adjutant of the Cavalry Division in Sofia.

In 1894 he married Venka Karagiozova, daughter of the manufacturer and philanthropist, Stefan Karagiozov from Tarnovo, nowadays . In 1913, their daughter Smaraida Salabasheva married the famous financier, politician, and diplomat . Stefan Salabashev died on October 4, 1920, in Sofia.
Stefan Petrov Salabashev
In 1917, the Lieutenant General, diplomat, and politician Stefan Georgiev Paprikov bought the building. He lived in the building until his death in 1920. Paprikov was born in on April 12, 1858. From 1875 until 1876 he was a teacher in , where he joined the Stara Zagora Uprising in 1875 and the in 1876.

Stefan Paprikov also fought in the Serbo-Bulgarian War, as well as in the . In the period from 1914 until 1919, Paprikov was a member of parliament in the 17th Ordinary National Assembly and from 1915 to 1918 he was chairman of the Commission for Support of Soldiers' Families. Lieutenant General Stefan Paprikov died on May 30, 1920, in Sofia.
Stefan Georgiev Paprikov
The architectural style of the building is Eclectic but has a strong Art Nouveau influence. The influence of this can be clearly seen in the and the wooden , that are placed on the first and second floors. As well as in the corbels underneath the on the east side of the building, is lavishly decorated with floral ornamentation. On the south side of the building, there is a beautiful wooden with two balconies above it.
An old photo shows the building in the 1970s