Ivan Gologanov

Summary

Ivan Gologanov (Bulgarian: Иван Гологанов) was a Bulgarian folklorist and ethnographer.[1]

Ivan Gologanov
Born1839
Died1895
Other namesИван Илиев Гологанов

Biography edit

Ivan Iliev Gologanov was a Bulgarian National Revival activist, a brother of Theodosius Gologanov. Gologanov himself was fluent in ancient and modern Greek, he knew the Hellenic mythology in details. Gologanov became a collaborator of the pan-Slavic ethnographer and folklorist Stjepan Verković and is considered to be the author of the collection "Veda Slovena". At the request of Verkovic he collected folk songs, fairy tales, legends, etc., interrupting his work as Bulgarian teacher in the village of Krushevo. This had been going on for 12 years. However Verkovic issued the collected songs under his own name. This sensational Slavic Veda contained “Bulgarian folk songs of the pre-historical and pre-Christian times, discovered in Thrace and Macedonia”. The aim of Gologanov was to prove the ancient inhabitants of Thrace and Macedonia were not Hellenic but Slav-Bulgarian. In 1891 the Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov, offered Gologanov to move to Sofia and promising him a pension, but he refused. At the same time Verkovic came to Bulgaria desperated by the increasing distrust of the "Veda Slovena". With the cooperation of government, he undertook two trips in the Rhodopes, trying to prove its authenticity, but his mission failed. Today analysts deny the credibility of Veda Slovena.[2]

In 1893 Atanas Shopov - general secretary of the Bulgarian Exarchate in Istanbul wrote about him:

That Mr. Iv. Gologanov enjoyed and enjoys great importance and fame in Sersko. The Serian influential Greek circles, as well as the leadership of the Serres Monastery "St. Ivan the Forerunner" gives him great honors because he has influence among his cousins. Mr. Ivan Gologanov has deep knowledge of the Greek language, and he is self-taught in the Bulgarian language.[3]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Balazs Trencsenyi, Michal Kopecek as ed., National Romanticism: The Formation of National Movements: Discourses of Collective Identity in Central and Southeast Europe, Volume 2, Central European University Press, 2006, ISBN 963732660X, p. 182.
  2. ^ János M. Bak, Patrick J. Geary, Gábor Klaniczay, Manufacturing a Past for the Present: Forgery and Authenticity in Medievalist Texts and Objects in Nineteenth-Century Europe, BRILL, 2014, ISBN 9004276815, p. XII.
  3. ^ Шопов, Ат. Из живота и положението на българите във вилаетите, София, 2011, стр. 138.