The
St Nedelya Church assault, a terrorist attack on St. Nedelya Church in
Bulgaria, carried out on 16 April 1925, has garnered the most votes in
the crime category of a poll for the country's top event during the
past century.
The on-line and text messaging campaign is organized by the
Bulgarian National Television and aims to elect Bulgaria's most
important political, cultural and scientific achievements over the 20th
century.
The St Nedelya Church assault was a terrorist attack on St. Nedelya
Church in Bulgaria. It was carried out on 16 April 1925, when a group
of the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP) blew up the roof of the St
Nedelya Church in the capital Sofia.
This occurred during the funeral service of General Konstantin
Georgiev, who had been killed in a previous Communist assault on 14
April. 150 people, mainly from the country's political and military
elite, were killed in the attack and around 500 were injured.
The list of nominations in the crime category also featured the
murder of Alexander Stamboliyski (1923), Geo Milev (1925), Georgi
Markov, a Bulgarian émigré broadcaster and a dissident writer (1978),
and Andrey Lukanov, Bulgaria's former prime minister (1995).
Bulgarians recently named the emblematic date September 9, marking
Bulgaria's anti-fascist uprising in 1944, the most important political
event in the country for the past century.
An appliance for roasting peppers, called "chushkopek“, was voted the most revolutionary household device.