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Panorama of Dimitrov (city). Virtual tour of Dimitrov (city). Attractions, map, photos, videos. Georgy Dimitrov - biography, photographs Streets, avenues and avenues renamed in honor of Georgy Dimitrov

DIMITROV Georgy Mikhailovich(June 18, 1882, village of Kovachevtsi, now Pernik region, Bulgaria - July 2, 1949, Barvikha near Moscow) - leader of the Bulgarian and international communist movement. Deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of the 1st convocation from the Yaroslavl region.

Georgi Dimitrov was born into the family of artisan Dimitar Trenchev and his wife Parashkeva Doseva. Since 1894 he worked as a typesetter. Since 1901 - secretary of the Sofia trade union of printers. In 1902 he joined the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party (BRSD), and in 1903 he joined its Bolshevik part - the “close socialists”. Since 1909 - member of the Central Committee of the BRSD, which in 1919 was transformed into the Bulgarian Communist Party (BKP). In 1909-1923 - secretary of the General Workers' Trade Union, organizer of strikes. From 1913 to 1923 he was a member of the Bulgarian Parliament.

In 1921 he participated in the work of the Third Congress of the Comintern and in the same year was elected a member of the Central Council of the Profintern. In September 1923 - one of the leaders of the armed uprising against the Tsankov government in Bulgaria. After the failure of the attempt to seize power, he fled with V. Kolarov and other agents of the Comintern to Yugoslavia, then lived in the USSR. For participation in an armed rebellion he was sentenced to death in absentia.

In the fall of 1929 he moved to Germany. Lived incognito in Berlin. He actively participated in the activities of the Comintern and conducted communist propaganda. In secret Soviet correspondence, the code name "Brilliant" was used for G. Dimitrov.

He was arrested by the Nazis on charges of involvement in the Reichstag fire on February 27, 1933, but was acquitted at the Leipzig trial in September-December 1933, as he proved an alibi. During the trial, Dimitrov competently built a defense, thanks to which he turned from an accused into an accuser of the Nazis. Dimitrov was fluent in German and his speeches at the trial were widely used in anti-Nazi propaganda, and Dimitrov himself and his associates Popov and Tanev were granted Soviet citizenship, and the USSR demanded his extradition.

On February 27, 1934 he arrived in the USSR. In the 1930s, along with Ernst Thälmann and Dolores, Ibarruri became a leader of the international communist movement.

At the end of April 1934, he was elected a member of the Political Commission of the Executive Committee of the Comintern (ECCI) and appointed head of the Central European Secretariat of the Comintern. At the end of May 1934, in connection with the upcoming VII Congress of the Comintern, Dimitrov was appointed rapporteur on the most important item on the agenda: the onset of fascism and the tasks of the Comintern in the struggle for the unity of the working class. In 1935 he was elected general secretary of the ECCI.

After the VII Congress, the Comintern proclaimed a course towards a broad anti-fascist coalition. However, due to the repressions of 1937-1938, the influence of the Comintern noticeably decreased. Dimitrov was not repressed, unlike most leaders of the communist parties in Eastern Europe.

On June 22, 1941, he was placed at the head of the “leading troika” of the ECCI and headed all its current activities. Since 1942 - at the head of the Bulgarian Fatherland Front, created under the control of Moscow. On May 15, 1943, the Comintern was dissolved, and Dimitrov in June 1943 was appointed head of the department of international politics of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, which, thanks to Dimitrov, became the de facto successor to the Executive Committee of the Comintern.

After the pro-fascist regime was overthrown in Bulgaria, Dimitrov arrived home in November 1945. On November 6, 1946, he was appointed Chairman of the Council of Ministers. From December 1947 until his death he held the position of General Secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP.

Dimitrov actively supported the idea of ​​​​creating a Bulgarian-Yugoslav federation, which, after J.V. Stalin’s break with I.Bros Tito, caused great discontent among the Soviet leadership. After condemning the position of Tito, the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) Dimitrov came out in support of the Yugoslav leader. However, Tito and Dimitrov had serious differences on the Macedonian issue. Tito insisted on recognizing the Macedonians as an independent nation, and Dimitrov considered them a branch of the Bulgarian people.

In April 1949, Dimitrov came to Moscow for treatment. He suffered from liver cirrhosis, diabetes, and chronic prostatitis. Just two weeks after his arrival, Dimitrov’s health condition deteriorated sharply. On July 2, 1949, Georgy Dimitrov died in Barvikha near Moscow, where he was undergoing treatment. Prominent Soviet doctors diagnosed heart failure of the second degree. Dimitrov's body was returned to Sofia, opened and embalmed.

The mummified body of Georgiy Dimitrov in the sarcophagus was placed in a specially built mausoleum. After the fall of the communist regime in Bulgaria, in 1990, the BSP party (formerly the Bulgarian Communist Party), at the request of relatives (according to the official version), decided to rebury the body. Georgiy Mikhailovich Dimitrov was buried at the Central Cemetery of Sofia.

During the reburial, an employee of the Bulgarian mausoleum group, Peter Gylybov, managed to take samples of Dimitrov’s hair and, together with his colleagues, conduct an examination of the available remains. Studies showed that the hair samples had elevated levels of mercury. However, the version of poisoning was not confirmed.

In 1999, Dimitrov's mausoleum was blown up (on the fourth attempt). According to public opinion polls, about two-thirds of Bulgarians were then against the demolition of the mausoleum.

Five cities (in Bulgaria, the USSR and Yugoslavia) and many streets were named in memory of Dimitrov. Thirteen monuments to Dimitrov have been erected in Russian cities.

In 1985, a bust monument to Dimitrov was unveiled in Yaroslavl at the intersection of October Avenue and Pobeda Street.

Dimitrov Georgy Dimitrov Career: Party worker
Birth: Bulgaria, 18.6.1882
Dimitrov Georgiy Mikhailovich (18.6.1882, village of Kovachevtsi, Pernik district, 2.7.1949, Barvikha, near Moscow), leader of the Bulgarian and international labor movement. Born into a family of artisans. From the age of 12 he worked as a typesetter's apprentice. In 1901 he was elected secretary of the printers' trade union in Sofia.

In 1902 he joined the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party (BRSDP), joining its revolutionary Marxist wing, which, when the party split in 1903, became an independent party of the BRSDP (close socialists) [since 1919 the Bulgarian Communist Party (t.s.) BKP (t.s.)]. In 1909 he was elected a member of the party's Central Committee and since then has always been a member of its leadership. In 1905-23, as a member of the leadership (from 1909 secretary) of the General Workers' Trade Union, Dimitrov took an active part in organizing major actions of the Bulgarian proletariat (miners' strike in Pernik in 1906 and 1911, match factory workers in Kostenets in 1909, railway workers in 1919-20, etc. ). During the period of the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913 he exposed the chauvinistic, aggressive policy of the Bulgarian bourgeoisie, using the platform of parliament (of which he was a deputy in 191323). He was repeatedly persecuted for his active anti-war activities. Dimitrov participated in the 1st (1909) and 2nd (1915) Balkan Social Democratic Conferences, fought for strengthening the international ties of the organizations of the Bulgarian proletariat, and opposed opportunism in the international labor movement. On the eve of and during the first important war of 191418, Bulgarian nationalism was exposed, as the people's representative of parliament voted against war loans, spoke out against Bulgaria's participation in the imperialist war. After the Great October Socialist Revolution, he popularized its slogans and activities, and fought in defense of the Soviet Republic. In 1921 he participated in the 3rd Congress of the Comintern, where he met with V.I. Lenin. In the same year he was elected a member of the Central Council of the Profintern. In September 1923, together with V.P. Kolarov, he led an anti-fascist armed uprising, which was then suppressed and he emigrated. The fascist authorities of Bulgaria sentenced Dimitrov to death in absentia. In exile he was a member of the Foreign Bureau of the BCP (t.s.), worked in the ECCI and the Central Council of the Profintern, and was secretary of the Balkan Communist Federation. In 1933 he was arrested in Berlin on the provocative charge of setting fire to the German Reichstag. At the Leipzig Trial, organized by the German fascists (September 21–December 23, 1933), Dimitrov exposed Hitler’s provocateurs, raised the banner of proletarian internationalism and inflicted a crushing moral and political shock on fascism. The failure of the prosecution and the widespread protest movement around the world forced the fascist court to acquit Dimitrov and others. accused communists. The Soviet Union gave Dimitrov Soviet citizenship. In 193445 Dimitrov in the USSR. In 1934 he was elected as a deputy of the Leningrad City Council. From 1935 (and until the self-dissolution of the Comintern in 1943) General Secretary of the ECCI. In 193745 people's choice of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. During the 2nd important war of 1939-45, Dimitrov initiated the creation (1942) and leader of the Fatherland Front of Bulgaria, which played an important role in mobilizing the masses of Bulgaria to fight against the fascist occupiers and in the victory of the revolution on September 9, 1944. For outstanding services in the fight against fascism Presidium The Supreme Soviet of the USSR awarded Dimitrov the Order of Lenin in 1945. On November 6, 1945 Dimitrov returned to his homeland. As General Secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP (from December 1948) and Chairman of the Council of Ministers (from November 1946), Dimitrov led the construction of a people's democratic Bulgaria, skillfully applying the general principles of Marxism-Leninism to the specific historical and national conditions of Bulgaria. The name of Dimitrov is associated with the proclamation of Bulgaria as a People's Republic (September 15, 1946), the adoption of a people's democratic constitution (December 4, 1947) and the implementation of fundamental socialist reforms. In the political report of the Central Committee of the Bulgarian Workers' Party (Communists) to the 5th Party Congress (December 1948), Dimitrov formulated the general line for building the foundations of socialism in Bulgaria and gave a Marxist-Leninist description of people's democracy as one of the historical forms of the dictatorship of the proletariat. Dimitrov was an ardent fighter for strengthening Bulgarian-Soviet friendship. He spoke out against revisionism and left-wing doctrinaireism in the IU.

the people's labor movement, for strengthening the anti-imperialist camp, for the coordination of actions of the communist and workers' parties on the basis of Marxism-Leninism.

The coffin with the body of Dimitrov was installed in the Mausoleum deliberately built in Sofia. The Bulgarian population honors the memory of Dimitrov. The Order of Georgiy Dimitrov was established in the NRB. The new city of Dimitrovgrad, the construction of the largest new buildings, is named after him. The Communist Youth League of Bulgaria bears the name Dimitrov. Dimitrov Prizes were established for achievements in the fields of science, technology, literature and art. The Dimitrov House Museum was created in Sofia.

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From the family of a plant manager and industrial engineer. Students of the real school participated in the events of the Revolution of 1905-07 in Kyiv; joined the anarchists.

Son of a craftsman. From 1894 he worked as a typesetter. From 1901 secretary of the trade union of printers (Sofia). In 1902 he joined the Bulgarian Labor Social Democratic Party (BRSD), and in 1903 he joined its Bolshevik part of the “close socialists”. Since 1909, he was a member of the Central Committee of the BRSD (Close Socialists), which in 1919 was transformed into the Bulgarian Communist Party (BKP). In 1909-23, secretary of the General Workers' Trade Union, organizer of strikes. In 1913-23 he was a member of the Bulgarian Parliament. On Sept. 1923 one of the leaders of the communist armed uprising in Bulgaria. After the failure of the attempt to seize power, he was sentenced to death in absentia and went abroad. He actively participated in the work of the Comintern and conducted communist propaganda.

He was arrested by the Nazis on charges of involvement in the Reichstag fire on February 27, 1933, but was acquitted at the Leipzig trial (September-December 1933). His speeches were widely used by Bolshevik propaganda, and Dimitrov himself was granted Soviet citizenship, and the USSR demanded his extradition. 27.2.1934 arrived in the USSR. In 1935 he was elected General Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Comintern (ECCI). The main conductor of Stalin's policy in the international arena, the creator of the "fifth columns" in European countries.

Name Dimitrova. which gained international fame thanks to the Leipzig process, was used to create the illusion of independence of the Comintern from the decisions of J.V. Stalin. In 1937-45, deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. On June 22, 1941, he was placed at the head of the “leading troika” of the ECCI, heading all its current activities. In 1942 he was placed at the head of the Bulgarian Fatherland Front, created under the control of Moscow. On May 15, 1943, when Stalin decided to establish tighter control over the “fraternal” communist parties, Dimitrov dissolved the Comintern and in June 1943 he was appointed head. Department of International Information of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks.

After Soviet troops established a “people's democratic regime” in Bulgaria, Dimitrov arrived home in November 1945. From November 6, 1946 - prev. Council of Ministers. From December 1947 until his death - General Secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP. Returning from the USSR to his homeland, he established a communist regime in the country, based on Soviet troops stationed here. Following the example of Stalin, he launched a campaign of terror, executed the leader of the peasant party N. Petkov and others. Under his leadership, Bulgaria came under the complete control of Moscow, practically losing its independence, and began to turn, as they later said, into the “sixteenth republic of the USSR.”

He actively supported the idea of ​​a Bulgarian-Yugoslav federation, which, after J.V. Stalin’s break with I.B. Tito, caused great displeasure in the USSR (especially since Dimitrov expressed doubts about Stalin’s infallibility). After the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks condemned Tito’s position, Dimitrov, however, came out in support of the Yugoslav leader. However, Dimitrov’s fame made his arrest unthinkable, and “No. 2” in the Communist Party T. Postov was chosen as the main accused. In January 1949 Dimitrov was isolated from society, and only in April 1949 was it reported that he had fallen ill and was being treated in the USSR. He died in Barvikha near Moscow from diabetes.

The body of the deceased Dimitrov was mummified and placed in a specially built mausoleum. After the fall of the communist regime in Bulgaria, in 1990, his ashes were reburied. On February 25, 1992, the Public Council of Sofia decided to demolish the mausoleum, as a structure ideologically and architecturally alien to the city center. In August 1999, the building was blown up on the fifth attempt, the rubble was removed by truck and disassembled for souvenirs. Today nothing reminds us of the mausoleum in Sofia. Where he stood was a concreted area.

Cities in Bulgaria, Serbia and Russia are named after G. M. Dimitrov.

In Moscow, in honor of Dimitrov, after his death, one of the central streets was renamed - Bolshaya Yakimanka, which was returned to its original name after the collapse of the USSR. In St. Petersburg, a new street in the Kupchino microdistrict was named after G. M. Dimitrov in 1974, and later a monument was erected in the park opposite the Chaika hotel. In Samara (formerly Kuibyshev), a street in the Promyshlenny and Kirovsky districts, stretching for more than 3 kilometers, was named after G. M. Dimitrov, and a memorial plaque was installed on the facade of the house in which he lived and worked in 1941 (the current address is the street Shostakovich b. Rabochaya 5; Chapaev sq.

He was called the “Bulgarian Lenin”; after his death during the era of socialism in Bulgaria, a mausoleum was built for him in Sofia similar to Lenin’s and he was called the “leader” of the Bulgarian people.

Biography

Son of a craftsman. Since 1894 he worked as a typesetter. Since 1901 - secretary of the printers' trade union (Sofia).

Bulgarian revolutionary, parliamentarian and rebel

In 1902 he joined the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party (BRSD), and in 1903 he joined its Bolshevik part - the “close socialists”. Since 1909 - member of the Central Committee of the BRSD (Close Socialists), which in 1919 was transformed into the Bulgarian Communist Party (BKP). In 1909-1923, secretary of the General Workers' Trade Union, organizer of strikes. In 1913-1923 - deputy of the Bulgarian Parliament. In 1921 he participated in the work of the Third Congress of the Comintern and in the same year was elected a member of the Central Council of the Profintern. In September 1923 - one of the leaders of the armed uprising against the Tsankov government in Bulgaria. After the failure of the attempt to seize power, he fled with V. Kolarov and other agents of the Comintern to Yugoslavia, then lived in the USSR. For participation in an armed rebellion he was sentenced to death in absentia.

Agent of the Comintern in Germany

In the fall of 1929 he moved to Germany. Lived incognito in Berlin. He actively participated in the activities of the Comintern and conducted communist propaganda.
He was arrested by the Nazis on charges of involvement in the Reichstag fire on February 27, 1933, but was acquitted at the Leipzig trial (September-December 1933) because he had an alibi. Dimitrov was fluent in German and his speeches at the trial were widely used in anti-fascist propaganda, and Dimitrov himself was granted Soviet citizenship, and the USSR demanded his extradition.

Leader of the Comintern

On February 27, 1934 he arrived in the USSR. In the 1930s, along with Ernst Thälmann and Dolores Ibarruri, he was one of the charismatic leaders of the international communist movement. In 1935 he was elected General Secretary of the Executive Committee of the Comintern (ECCI).

After the VII Congress, the Comintern proclaimed a course towards a broad anti-fascist coalition. However, due to the repressions of 1937-1938, the influence of the Comintern noticeably decreased. Dimitrov was not repressed, unlike most leaders of the communist parties in Eastern Europe.

In 1937-1945 - deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR. On June 22, 1941, he was placed at the head of the “leading troika” of the ECCI and headed all its current activities. In 1942, he was placed at the head of the Bulgarian Fatherland Front, created under the control of Moscow. On May 15, 1943, the Comintern was dissolved, and Dimitrov in June 1943 was appointed head of the department of international (foreign) policy of the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks, which, thanks to Dimitrov, became the de facto successor to the Executive Committee of the Comintern.

Leader of Bulgaria

After the Soviet regime was established in Bulgaria, Dimitrov arrived home in November 1945. Since November 6, 1946 - Chairman of the Council of Ministers. From December 1947 until his death - General Secretary of the Central Committee of the BCP.
During the Dimitrov era, Bulgaria became heavily dependent on the USSR and was even sometimes called the “seventeenth republic of the Soviet Union” (from 1940 to 1956 there were 16 republics in the USSR, including the Karelo-Finnish republic, which was transformed into the Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic within the RSFSR in 1956).

Plan for the creation of the Bulgarian-Yugoslav Federation

Dimitrov actively supported the idea of ​​​​creating a Bulgarian-Yugoslav federation, which, after J.V. Stalin’s break with I.Bros Tito, caused great discontent among the Soviet leadership. After the Central Committee of the All-Union Communist Party of Bolsheviks condemned Tito’s position, Dimitrov, however, came out in support of the Yugoslav leader.

Death

Shortly before his death, in April 1949, Dimitrov came to Moscow with L.P. Beria, at the urgent request of Beria himself, who persuaded the Bulgarian leader to come for treatment. Dimitrov had cirrhosis of the liver, diabetes mellitus, and chronic prostatitis. Already two weeks after his arrival, Dimitrov’s health condition deteriorated sharply. On July 2, 1949, Georgiy Dimitrov dies in Barvikha near Moscow, where he was treated for four months. Prominent Soviet doctors diagnosed heart failure of the second degree.

Dimitrov's body is delivered to Sofia already opened and embalmed.
Bulgarian doctors did not have access to the body for more than five years.

Peter Gylybov, who holds Dimitrov's brain, was an employee of the Bulgarian mausoleum group from 1949 to 1990, until the burial of Georgi Dimitrov. During the reburial, Gylybov managed to take samples of Dimitrov’s hair and, together with his colleagues, conduct an examination of the existing remains. The examination showed that the hair samples contained increased mercury content. However, the version of poisoning never became official. At the same time, sublimate containing mercury is used in embalming in the form of a 1% solution.

Mausoleum

The mummified body of Georgiy Dimitrov, in a sarcophagus, was placed in a specially built mausoleum. After the fall of the communist regime in Bulgaria, in 1990, the BSP party (formerly the Bulgarian Communist Party), at the request of relatives (according to the official version), decided to rebury the body. The body of the former leader was taken out of the mausoleum secretly, late at night. On February 25, 1992, the Sofia Community Council decided to demolish the mausoleum as a structure ideologically and architecturally alien to the city center.

In August 1999, the building was blown up on the fifth attempt; the rubble was removed by truck and disassembled for souvenirs. Today nothing reminds us of the mausoleum in Sofia. Where he stood 42.695833, 23.326389 is a concreted area.

Nowadays, documentary footage of the mausoleum can be seen in the video room of the Museum of Socialist Art in Sofia.

In secret Soviet correspondence, the code name “Diamond” was used for G. Dimitrov.

Memory

Cities renamed in honor of Georgiy Dimitrov

  • Four cities are named in honor of Georgiy Dimitrov: the city of Dimitrov (Donetsk region, Ukraine), as well as three with the same name Dimitrovgrad: in Bulgaria (newly built city), Serbia (former Tsaribrod) and Russia (former Melekess). All three Dimitrovgrads still bear these names.

Streets, avenues and avenues renamed in honor of Georgiy Dimitrov

  • In Kyiv, during his lifetime in 1938, the former Business Street was named after Dimitrov. In 1977, an annotation board was installed on the facade of house No. 7 (bronze, granite, bas-relief; sculptor A. N. Skoblikov, architect A. F. Ignashchenko).
  • In Moscow, in honor of Dimitrov, after his death in 1956, one of the central streets was renamed - Bolshaya Yakimanka, which was returned to its original name in 1990.
  • In St. Petersburg, a new street in the Kupchino district was named after Dimitrov in 1974, and later a monument was erected in the park opposite the Chaika cinema.
  • In Ulyanovsk. Street in the Upper Terrace District
  • In Samara, a street in the Promyshlenny and Kirovsky districts, stretching for more than 3 kilometers, is named after Dimitrov, and a memorial plaque was installed on the facade of the house in which he lived and worked in 1941 (the current address is Shostakovich Street b. Rabochaya, 5; Chapaev square).
  • In the village of Stepnoye, Saratov region, a street is named in his honor, more than three kilometers long and running from the entrance to the village along the park, near which the monument to G. Dimitrov is located, as a sign of the eternal friendship of the two peoples and gratitude to the Bulgarian builders.
  • In Novosibirsk, an avenue in the Zheleznodorozhny district of the city and one of the road bridges across the Ob are named after Dimitrov.
  • In Bryansk there is a street named after. Dimitrova, located in the Volodarsky district of the city.
  • In Izhevsk there is a street named after. Dimitrova, located in the Industrial district of the city. Renamed in 1957 from Voroshilov Street.
  • In Kaluga, on the right bank of the Oka River, Georgiy Dimitrov Street is named.
  • In the city of Kaliningrad, one of the central streets is named after Dimitrov.
  • In Kostroma there is Dimitrova Street.
  • In the city of Krasnogorsk a street is named in honor of Georgy Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Kursk, one of the streets is named after him.
  • In the city of Mogilev (Republic of Belarus) one of the avenues is named in honor of Georgiy Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Gomel (Republic of Belarus) one of the streets is named after Georgy Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Saransk, one of the streets is named after him.
  • In the city of Odessa, one of the avenues was named after him.
  • In Voronezh, one of the major streets in the Left Bank district of the city is named after G. Dimitrov.
  • In Lugansk (Ukraine) there is a street and quarter named after G. Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, one of the central highways (Avenue #114) bears the name of G. Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Kherson (Ukraine), which is a twin city of the Bulgarian city of Shumen, the central street of the Shumensky microdistrict is named after G. Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Ulan-Ude, Republic of Buryatia, a street is named after Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Dimitrovgrad, Ulyanovsk region, an avenue in the western part of the city is named after Dimitrov.
  • In Zheleznogorsk (Kursk region) a street is named after Georgy Dimitrov.
  • In Abakan, Khakassia, one of the streets is named after Georgy Dimitrov.
  • In the city of Rybinsk (Yaroslavl region), one of the streets is named after Dimitrov.
  • In the village of Tvarditsa, Republic of Moldova, one of the streets is named after Dimitrov
  • In Novodvinsk, Arkhangelsk region, one of the first streets was named after Dimitrov, since the city was built through the efforts of Bulgarian workers. Also in the city a bust of Georgy Mikhailovich was erected.
  • In Barnaul, one of the streets in the central part of the city bears the name of Georgy Dimitrov (it crosses the main street of the city - Lenin Avenue). The Altai Territory Administration building is located on a section of Lenin Avenue between Dimitrova Street and Molodezhnaya Street. Also on the street named after. Dimitrov there is one of the buildings of Altai State University and building “B” of Altai State Technical University.
  • In the town of Chernomorskoe (Crimea), one of the microdistricts is called Bulgarian and bears the name of Dimitrov. The microdistrict was built by Bulgarian builders under an interstate program for establishing cooperation with Bulgaria. There is a memorial plaque on house number 6.
  • In the city of Temirtau, Republic of Kazakhstan, one of the streets is named after Dimitrov.

Miscellaneous

  • In honor of Dimitrov, the Order of Georgi Dimitrov of the People's Republic of Bulgaria was established. This order was awarded to L. I. Brezhnev in Sofia.
  • There is a village called Dimitrova in Magnitogorsk.
  • In Taganrog, the aircraft manufacturing plant was called the Dimitrov Plant.

Monuments

  • In Moscow, on B. Yakimanka Street, a monument to G. Dimitrov was erected.
  • In Yaroslavl, opposite the Balkan Star tobacco factory, at the intersection of Pobeda Street and Oktyabrya Avenue, a monument was erected in 1985.
  • In Vladikavkaz, on Lenin Street, a monument to Georgy Dimitrov was erected.
  • In the city of Cotonou, Benin, a giant statue of G. Dimitrov still stands on one of the main streets.
  • In the village
The city of Dimitrov is located on the territory of the state (country) Ukraine, which in turn is located on the territory of the continent Europe.

In what region (region) is the city of Dimitrov located?

The city of Dimitrov is part of the region (region) Donetsk region.

A characteristic of a region (region) or a subject of a country is the integrity and interconnection of its constituent elements, including cities and other settlements that are part of the region (region).

Region (oblast) Donetsk region is an administrative unit of the state of Ukraine.

Population of the city of Dimitrov.

The population of the city of Dimitrov is 55,677 people.

Year of foundation of the city of Dimitrov.

Year of foundation of the city of Dimitrov: 1911.

Dimitrov city telephone code

The telephone code of the city of Dimitrov: +380 6239. In order to call the city of Dimitrov from a mobile phone, you need to dial the code: +380 6239 and then the subscriber’s number directly.