Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 83. Chapters: Bulgarians, Slavic-speakers of Greek Macedonia, Banat Bulgarians, Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Bulgarians in Romania, Music of Bulgaria, Bulgarians in Albania, List of Bulgarians, Ivan Kolev, Shopi, Christianization of Bulgaria, Bulgarians in Turkey, Bulgarian Muslims, Macedonians, Bessarabian Bulgarians, Bulgarian dances, Stefan Nerezov, Bulgarian name, Bulgarians in the Republic of Macedonia, Bulgarian Canadians, Bulgarian literature, Bulgarian Americans, Roman Catholicism in Bulgaria, Bulgarians in Italy, Bulgarians in Germany, Bulgarians in Hungary, Bulgarians in South America, Bulgarians in Serbia, Bulgarian cuisine, Konstantin Zhostov, Bulgarian migration to the United Kingdom, Velikite Balgari, Protestantism in Bulgaria, Ivan Slavkov, Anatolian Bulgarians, Vasil Glavinov, List of Macedonians, Bulgarians in France, Sergei Antonov, Little Sofia, Peter Petroff, Bulgarians in Spain, Ilia Beshkov, Cinema of Bulgaria, Vasil Slavov, Hristo Stambolski, Tinko Simov, Iliya Zhelev, Nikola Marinov, Tonislav Hristov, Andrey, Metropolitan of New York, Dessi Espana, Iassen Ghiuselev, Lyudmila Radkova, Vasil Kanchov, Klara Dobrev, Daniela Radkova, Ivanko of Bulgaria, Dimitar Zhelyazkov, Nedelya Petkova, Traycho Belopopski, Rayna Kasabova, Ivan Zvezdev, Ivailo Petrov, Bulgarophiles, Asen Gavrilov, Filip Kutev. Excerpt: Slavic-speakers are a linguistic minority population in Macedonia, Greece who are mostly concentrated in certain parts of the peripheries of West and Central Macedonia, adjacent to the territory of the Republic of Macedonia. A smaller group exists in East Macedonia adjacent to the territory of Bulgaria. They have also formed their own emigrant communities in the neighbouring countries, as well as further abroad. Members of this group have had a number of conflicting ethnic identifications. Predominantly identifie...