Ivan Naumov (Bulgarian: Иван Наумов), nicknamed Alyabaka or Alyabako was a Bulgarian revolutionary, a member of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO).[1][2][3][4]
Ivan Naumov Alyabaka | |
---|---|
Born | Around 1870 Oraovec, today North Macedonia |
Died | August 24, 1907 Belica, today North Macedonia |
Organization | IMARO |
Biography
editIvan Naumov was born in the village of Oraovec, Veles region, in a poor family.[5] Because of the lack of finances, he was not able to study and went to work in Thessaloniki. There he learnt about the ideas of the revolutionary organization IMARO and in 1900 he was invited to join the organization by Mihail Apostolov Popeto. He worked as a grocer in Drama and Kavala.
Stoyan Avramov described Ivan Naumov as follows:
Alyabaka was a tall, broad-shouldered and strong man with a dark face and black hair, that made him appear as a Moor. This was the reason he was nicknamed "Alyabak". His look of an eagle, belligerent spirit, gait, courage, self-denial and faith in the cause, raised him in the eyes of his friends and opponents. During the battles, both with Turks and Serbs, he attacked like a furious lion, carrying his fellow freedom fighters with him. In the regions of Veles, Prilep and Porechie he was the only leader, who frightened the Serbian propaganda, whose agents treated him as invincible and invulnerable.
In 1902 he killed a Turk and escaped to Sofia. The same year, he returned as a freedom fighter in the regions of Odrin and Pashmakli. From the beginning of 1903, he was an organizational leader in the region of Krushevo. During the Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising, he headed one of the sections that participated in the burning of the police station in Krushevo.
After the uprising, he went back to Bulgaria. In 1904, he was arrested in Sofia, together with Mamin Kolyu, after the unsuccessful attempt to murder the Turkish consul. They were arrested for six months because of this action in which the consul's bodyguard was wounded. Afterwards, he entered Macedonia again as a leader of a revolutionary band. When certain disagreements happened in the IMARO, he was among the supporters of Boris Sarafov.[6] As a leader of a revolutionary band, he toured the regions of Veles, Prilep, Kičevo and Porečje, but because of his conflict with Stefan Dimitrov, who was a leader of a revolutionary band operating in the Veles region, he was ordered not to return there. Ivan Naumov had battles not only with the Turkish military, but also with the Serbian armed propaganda. In 1904, his and Bobi Stoychev’s band were destroyed by the Turkish military, when 16 of his 20 freedom fighters were killed. The same year, a skirmish between his band and Stefan Dimitrov’s band occurred, but fortunately they agreed on the misunderstandings without causing casualties.
In 1905, Ivan Naumov's band expelled Dimitar Chupovski from Macedonia, who came to Veles to spread the Misirkov's ideas, which were considered as "pro-Serbian" and "anti-Bulgarian".[7][8][9]
In the summer of 1907, Alyabaka entered Macedonia as a leader of one of the largest revolutionary bands, which had 60 freedom fighters, mostly soldiers of the Bulgarian army. Konstantin Kyurkchiev was among its members. This band participated in the Battle of Nozhot (the Knife) and Popadiski Chukari together with the bands of Tane Nikolov, Mihail Chakov, Hristo Tsvetkov, that came from Bulgaria, as well as with the regional bands of Gyore Spirkov and Mircho Naydov, from Prilep, and the village bands of Sekula Oraovdolski and Velko Popadiyski.
The same year in August, while he returned from the congress of the IMARO's Bitola revolutionary region, held at the Prostranska Mountain, at which he was elected inspector of the bands, Alyabaka witnessed the kidnapping of a girl from the village of Belica by Arnauts. He went to save the girl and the ordinary skirmish with the bandits soon turned into a battle with the Turkish military, which came in the meantime. Ivan Naumov was killed in this battle and the inhabitants of Belica buried him beneath the altar of the local church.
Notes
edit- Енциклопедия България, том 4, Издателство на БАН, София, 1984.
References
edit- ^ The IMARO activists saw the future autonomous Macedonia as a multinational polity, and did not pursue the self-determination of Macedonian Slavs as a separate ethnicity. Therefore, Macedonian was an umbrella term covering Bulgarians, Turks, Greeks, Vlachs, Albanians, Serbs, Jews, and so on. Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Historical Dictionaries of Europe, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009, ISBN 0810862956, Introduction.
- ^ During the 20th century, Slavo-Macedonian national feeling has shifted. At the beginning of the 20th century, Slavic patriots in Macedonia felt a strong attachment to Macedonia as a multi-ethnic homeland... Most of these Macedonian Slavs also saw themselves as Bulgarians. By the middle of the 20th. century, however Macedonian patriots began to see Macedonian and Bulgarian loyalties as mutually exclusive. Regional Macedonian nationalism had become ethnic Macedonian nationalism... This transformation shows that the content of collective loyalties can shift. Region, Regional Identity and Regionalism in Southeastern Europe, Ethnologia Balkanica Series, Klaus Roth, Ulf Brunnbauer, LIT Verlag Münster, 2010, ISBN 3825813878, p. 127.
- ^ At first the revolutionary organization began to work among the Bulgarian population, even not among the whole of it, but only among this part, which participated in the Bulgarian Exarchate. IMRO treated suspiciously to the Bulgarians, which participated in other churches, as the Greek Patriarchate, the Eastern Catholic Church and the Protestant Church. As to the revolutionary activity among the other nationalities as Turks, Albanians, Greeks and Vlahs, such question did not exist for the founders of the organization. This other nationalities were for IMRO foreign people... Later, when the leaders of IMRO saw, that the idea for liberation of Macedonia can find followers among the Bulgarians non-Exarchists, as also among the other nationalities in Macedonia, and under the pressure from IMRO-members with left, socialist or anarchist convictions, they changed the statute of IMRO in sense, that member of IMRO can be any Macedonian and Adrianopolitan, regardless from his ethnicity or religious denomination “Борбите на македонския народ за освобождение”. Димитър Влахов, Библиотека Балканска Федерация, № 1, Виена, 1925, стр. 11.
- ^ Стефан Аврамов за Иван Наумов-Алябака, Илюстрация Илинден, г. I, бр. 3, с. 10.
- ^ Iliustratsia Ilinden., Tomove 1–3, Ilindenska organizatsia (Sofia, Bulgaria) 1927, str. 27.
- ^ Революционната дейност в Кумановско (спомени), Кръстю Лазаров
- ^ Cărnušanov, Kosta (1992) (in Bulgarian). Македонизмът и съпротивата на Македония срещу него (Macedonism and the resistance of Macedonia against it) reprint by Sofia University Publishing house, p. 75.
- ^ Blaže Ristovski, Stoletija na makedonskata svest, Skopje: Kultura, 2001, p. 35. as cited by Tchavdar Marinov in We, the people fellow, 2004–2005, p. 16.
- ^ Родината ми - права или не!: Външнополитическа пропаганда на балканските страни (1821-1923), проф. Иван Илчев, Университетско издателство "Св. Климент Охридски", 1995, стр. 134.
External links
edit- Песен за Иван Алябака
- Аврамов, Стефан. "Революционни борби въ Азот (Велешко) и Поречието", Материали за историята на македонското освободително движение, книга X, Македонски Научен Институт, София 1929
- Стефан Аврамов за Иван Наумов-Алябака, Илюстрация Илинден, г. I, бр. 3, с. 10
- „Илюстрация Илинден“, година III, брой 3