bg Shumen

Malush Enchev House

- Hristo Botev Street 13 -
The construction of the residential and commercial building, which was most likely designed by the Czech engineer , was completed in 1922. It was built for the Bulgarian lawyer Doctor Malush Enchev and his wife the Bulgarian Doctor Dosya Yanakieva Encheva. Malush was born in 1884, in Shumen, and graduated from the Boys' High School in his hometown in 1903 with very good results. In 1908, he was sent with a state scholarship by the Ministry of Education to to study law at the Charles University. He graduated from the Faculty of Law in 1915, returned to Shumen, and started practicing. He is fluent in Russian, Czech, and Turkish, which provides an advantage and a large clientele among the Turkish population of the city. Represents and defends not only in the court of Shumen but also in the courts of , , and the Supreme Court in . From 1912 until 1913, he was a participant in the and in 1913 the . In 1935, he moved to Sofia, where he practiced as a notary until 1945, after which in 1964 he retired.
Malush Enchev
Dosya was also born in Shumen, but in 1885, and graduated with full honors from the High School. She supported her three sisters, students, 4 to 8 years younger than her, as they were orphaned during the typhus epidemic. In 1910, she began studying at the Women's Medical Institute. In early 1918, she opened a dental practice equipped with the most modern German surgical instruments of the time. In 1922, she moved the practice to the second floor newly built building, on the same floor as the legal office of her husband. Her clientele were mostly women who previously did not have the opportunity to go to the dentist due to the religious and moral norms of society. From 1937 to 1944, after they moved to Sofia, they rented out the place to the Shumen Popular Bank. The building was purchased in 2004 by the School of Informatics and Mathematics.
Dosya Yanakieva Encheva
The symmetrical building, which is built in the style of Eclectic, is characterized by the two semi-hexagonal , which are crowned with a . The segmental top gable features a richly decorated , which is surrounded by foliage and contains the initials Д.М.Е. (D.M.E.) of the former owners, as well as the construction year 1922. Underneath the top gable, you'll be able to see a Greek key motif, and a bit further down, four ornamental clovers. The two that reach from the second until the third floor, are crowned with an Ionic .
A newspaper advertisement annouching that Dosya's practise will move to the newly built place