Exarchist

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Exarchist
Exarchist (ˈɛksɑːkɪst, ɛkˈsɑːkɪst) [f. exarch + -ist.] A supporter of the Exarch of Bulgaria against the Patriarch of Constantinople. Also attrib.1903 Daily Record & Mail 10 Apr. 5 The Greeks..declare that they will kill two exarchists in the towns for every patriarchist killed in the country. 1903 ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Musinci
Demographics In the 1905 Austrian ethnographic map of the region of Macedonia, Musinci appears as being inhabited by an Exarchist Orthodox Macedonian Slavic wikipedia.org
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Patriarchist
Patriarchist (ˈpeɪtrɪɑːkɪst) [f. patriarch n. + -ist.] A supporter of the Patriarch of Constantinople against the Exarch of Bulgaria during the schism of 1872–1945. Also attrib.1903, etc. [see Exarchist]. 1903 Daily Chron. 23 Sept. 3/5 They [sc. the Vlachs] are attached to the Greek or Patriarchist ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Brashlyan
Bulgarians in 1913, published in 1918, before the wars Sarmashik (Сармашикъ) was a village in the district of Malko Tarnovo inhabited by 150 Bulgarian Exarchist wikipedia.org
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Psarades
According to the Exarchist secretary Dimitar Mishev (1906), there were 528 Bulgarian Exarchists in Nivitsi. wikipedia.org
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-phone
-phone (fəʊn) ad. Gr. ϕων-ή voice, ϕῶν-ος sounding. 1. Used in the sense ‘sound’ in the names of various instruments (scientific and musical), as gramophone, magnetophone, megaphone, mellophone, microphone, vibraphone. 2. Used in the sense ‘speaker of’ or ‘-speaking’ in the formation of nouns and ad... Oxford English Dictionary
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Konopište, North Macedonia
In the 1905 Austrian ethnographic map of the region of Macedonia, Konopište appears as being inhabited by an Exarchist Orthodox Macedonian Slavic majority wikipedia.org
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Brusnik, Bitola
Brancoff, the town had a total Christian population of 944 in 1905, consisting of 488 Patriarchist Bulgarians and 456 Exarchist Bulgarians. wikipedia.org
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Kleidi, Florina
Brancoff, the village had a total Christian population of 400 in 1905, consisting of 200 Exarchist Bulgarians and 200 Patriarchist Bulgarians (Grecomans wikipedia.org
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Church of the Nativity of the Virgin Mary, Bitola
The church was built in 1870 and consecrated in 1876 by the Bulgarian Exarchist community and has icons dating from the 19th century. wikipedia.org
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Vasil Adzhalarski
The Istanbul Exarchist newspaper "Vesti" about the murder of Vasil Adzhalarski by the Turkish authorities (in Bulgarian) . wikipedia.org
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Politis–Kalfov Protocol
Greek side agreed to sponsor Bulgarian minority schools; to allow the presence of Exarchist priests if they obtained Greek citizenship and to open a minority Bulgarian Exarchist minority was completely unacceptable. wikipedia.org
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Globočica, Struga
According to Dimitar Mishev, the village had 360 Bulgarian Exarchist residents. wikipedia.org
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Podgorci, Struga
Brankov) concluded that the Christian part of the local population in 1905 was composed of 288 Exarchist Bulgarians and 352 Patriarchist Bulgarians. wikipedia.org
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Selnik, North Macedonia
Brankov) concluded that village has 112 Exarchist Bulgarians in 1905. wikipedia.org
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