Serbomans (Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian: ััะฑะพะผะฐะฝะธ, romanized: srbomani; Bulgarian: ัััะฑะพะผะฐะฝะธ, romanized:ย sฤrbomani; Romanian: sรขrbomani) is a Bulgarian pejorative term used by Bulgarian nationalists for inhabitants in the region of Macedonia that claimed Serbian ethnicity (declared as Serbs) and supported Serbian national ideals until the middle of the 20th century.[1] They explained it as being imposed by Serbian propaganda promulgating a secondary identity, which resulted in a Bulgarian population that had lost its real nationality.[2] The term first appeared during the time of the Serbian-Bulgarian rivalry for present-day North Macedonia during the second half of the 19th and the beginning of 20th century.[3]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Yugoslav communism and the Macedonian question, Stephen E. Palmer, Robert R. King, Archon Books, 1971,ISBNย 0-208-00821-7, p. 12.
- ^ Report of the Interallied Commission on the Violation of the Hague Convention and of the Principles of the International Law committed in 1915-1918 by the Bulgarians in occupied Serbia, Imprimerie "Yugoslavia", 1919, p. 27.
- ^ Christina Koulouri as ed. Clio in the Balkans. The Politics of History Education.ISBNย 9789608685710, 2002, p. 127.