bg Shumen

Nikola Batsarov House

- Tzar Osvoboditel Street 104 -
The construction of the residential, which was built according to a design of the Czech architect Toma Varhota, was completed in 1911. It was built for the Bulgarian teacher and public figure Nikola Ivanov Batsarov, who was born in in 1818. He received his primary education in his hometown and in , later he studied under and in . In 1849, he settled in , where he became a city councilor, teacher, and founder of a Bulgarian school. He stayed there until the end of the , after which he settled in as a member of a specially designated Bulgarian delegation for the official coronation ceremony of Tsar .

In 1858, he moved to Shumen where he worked as a teacher and became actively involved in the fight against the Greek clergy for an independent Bulgarian church. He became a contributor to many Renaissance magazines and newspapers and maintained correspondence with the national revolutionary . After 1866, Batsarov developed public activities in various places in North-Eastern Bulgaria and assisted in the organization of the Diocese. After the , he settled in , became the mayor of the city, and subsequently was a justice of the peace. He got married to Maria Batsarova, with whom he had six children, among which are Major General and Krastina Zlatoustova, who was a teacher and manager of the Girls' Boarding School in . Nikola Ivanov Batsarov passed away on December 13, 1892, at the age of 74, in Novi Pazar.
Nikola Ivanov Batsarov
On the east side of the Art Nouveau building, there's a bay window, which also acts as a main entrance. At the top, just above the construction year 1911, you can see some beautiful woodwork including a simplified . At the same height, you'll be able to see two dormers that are embellished with . The frieze and , as well as the frames around the windows, are decorated with many geometric shapes, among which are . An is placed underneath the windows, which also contains geometric shapes and guttae, while above these same windows, you can admire a small straight .
Maria Batsarova