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Yovkov (Éîâêîâ) Yordan
(1880—1937)

Yovkov (Éîâêîâ) Yordan (1880—1937)

Yordan Yovkov was a Bulgarian writer, considered one of the best in the country during the period between the two world wars. Born in the village of Zheravna, Yovkov studied at First Sofia Men’s High School, from which he graduated in 1900 with honours, and became a teacher. After teaching for one year in a village in central Bulgaria he entered into the School for Reserve Officers in Knyazhevo as a cadet, before moving to Sofia University to study law in 1904.

When the First Balkan War began in 1912, he received was enlisted and, along with his brother Kosta, joined the 41st division at Bourgas. He was wounded by a bullet in his leg fighting in the Second Balkan War in 1913, during a battle near Doyran. Following this he settled in Sofia and became an editor of the People’s Army (Narodna Armiya) magazine, and then librarian for the Minister of Interior Affairs and editor of a state publication.

During World War I he was sent to work as a border officer at the Greek border near the Mesta River. Whilst there he received summons to work as a correspondent for the paper Military News.

He spent trying years teaching in Varna until the autumn of 1920, after which he served as a press secretary in the Bulgarian legislation in Bucharest. He was demoted in 1927 for unspecified reasons, which caused him to resign and return to Sofia.

Yovkov’s war experiences greatly influenced his mentality and style of writing. Whereas his first literary effort was a short story about village life and patriarchal customs, published in 1910, his post-war pieces were more harsh and militaristic. Eventually he moved away from melancholic, depressive themes towards authentic descriptions of villagers and country life. In his short story Shibil, he used turkisms to give a sense of realism to the work. His story Legends of Stara Planina (1927, Staroplaninski legendi, alternately known as the Balkan Legends ) and play Inn at Antimovo (1927) established him as a major writer. In 1929, he received the Cyril and Methodius Prize for Literature from the Bulgarian Academy of Science.

His other works include the dramas Albena (1930) and Boryana (1932); a comedy The Millionaire (1930, Milionerut); and a book, The Family by the Frontier (1934, Chiflikut krai granitsata).

A number of his stories were made into films, including Nai-vyarnata ctrazha (The Most Loyal Guard, film in 1929); Shibil (1968); Nona (1973, from the novel Chiflikut krai granitsata); and 24 Chasa duzhd (1982, based on the novel Chastinyat uchitel).


Bulgaria, 1980, Yordan Yovkov

Bulgaria, 1997, Konstantin Kisimov in different roles

Bulgaria, 2007, Scenes from film «Shibil»

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