- Filip Totyu
Todor Todorov Topalov (or Topalski) ( _bg. Тодор Тодоров Топалов or Топалски; 1830-
23 March 1907 ), better known under the pseudonym Filip Totyu (Филип Тотю), was aBulgaria n revolutionary of theBulgarian National Revival period and the "voivode " of an armed band of volunteers.Totyu was born in the hamlet of Gartsite, today part of the village of
Voneshta Voda , nearKilifarevo ,Veliko Tarnovo Province , to the family of a cattle dealer. He studied in Tarnovo in 1840 and engaged in trade after 1842. Around 1850, he had a conflict with the Ottoman authorities which forced him to flee into theBalkan Mountains with a group of friends and become a "hajduk ". His band's area of operation were the regions of Tarnovo, Elena and later alsoNova Zagora . Although he was captured and interned in the Tarnovo andSliven prisons several times, he managed to escape and return to his hajduk activities, leading to the Ottomans announcing a big reward for his head. After escaping the Sliven prison in 1863, Totyu moved toWallachia , where he actually adopted that name to cover his tracks.In Wallachia, he got to know
Georgi Rakovski and came to realize the need for an organized struggle against the Ottoman rule. On17 May 1867 he crossed theDanube atSvishtov with a band of 35, with the intention reach the Balkan Mountains and join forces withPanayot Hitov 's band which had moved into Bulgaria on29 April . In Svishtov, the band was joined by several other volunteers and proceeded to move southward. In a forest atVarbovka , nearSevlievo , however, Totyu's detachment was surrounded by Ottoman military units andbashi-bazouk s, with one volunteer reportedly facing 60 Turks. During the night, the survivors fled into the mountains, where, near what is todayBotev Peak , Totyu and four of his men managed to meet Hitov's remaining forces and head toSerbia , where they participated in the SecondBulgarian Legion . Afterwards Totyu lived in Romania, constantly persecuted and arrested and forced to move toRussia , where he lived for longer and received a state pension. In 1875, at the time of theHerzegovinian rebellion ,Hristo Botev was sent to Southern Russia by theBulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee to collect funds and recruit Bulgarian emigres and Filip Totyu in particular. He agreed to participate in a Bulgarian uprising and left for Romania, but the suppression of theStara Zagora Uprising meant his idea to aid the revolutionaries with a band was thwarted. In 1876 he aided theSerbs in the Serbo-Turkish conflict and invaded northwestern Bulgaria with his detachment, but he was repulsed and returned to Russia, only to participate in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78, which led to theLiberation of Bulgaria .After the Liberation, Totyu lived in the village of
Dve Mogili ,Rousse Province , where he engaged in agriculture and received a small military pension. He died on23 March 1907 .References
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