Dobrujan Bulgarians

Today, the larger part of this population is concentrated in Southern Dobruja, but much is spread across the whole of Bulgaria and the diaspora.Until the early 1940s, the Dobrujan Bulgarians lived also in the whole of Dobruja, part of the Ottoman Empire at the past and part of the Kingdom of Romania then.[citation needed] In September 1940, the governments of Bulgaria and Kingdom of Romania agreed to a population exchange according to the Treaty of Craiova.The Bulgarian population in Northern Dobruja was expelled into Bulgaria-controlled Southern Dobruja, today Dobrich Province and Silistra Province.[1][2] Nevertheless, some Bulgarian minorities still exist in Northern Dobruja in Ceamurlia de Jos, Tulcea, Ovidiu, Lumina, Cernavodă, Constanța, Cumpăna, Valu lui Traian, Mangalia.
Dobrujans in Kaynardzha , 1941
KaynardzhaBulgariansCultureLiteratureCinemaCuisineDancesCostumePublic holidays in BulgariaAlbaniaAustraliaCanadaCroatiaCzechoslovakiaFranceGermanyGreeceHungaryKazakhstanLebanonNorth MacedoniaRomaniaSerbiaSouth AmericaBrazilTurkeyUkraineCrimeaUnited KingdomUnited StatesAnatolian BulgariansBanat BulgariansBessarabian BulgariansMacedonian BulgariansPomaksȘcheiThracian BulgariansReligionBulgarian Orthodox ChurchCatholic ChurchGreek-CatholicsProtestant denominationsBulgarianDialectsBalkanRuptsiTorlakianList of BulgariansethnographicDobrujaSouthern DobrujaBulgariaOttoman EmpireKingdom of Romaniapopulation exchangeTreaty of CraiovaNorthern DobrujaDobrich ProvinceSilistra ProvinceCeamurlia de JosTulceaOvidiuLuminaCernavodăConstanțaCumpănaValu lui TraianMangaliaDora GabeAdriana BudevskaIvailo PetrovMiroslav KostadinovKhristo IvanovPanait CernaDimitar SpisarevskiPreslavaBulgarians in RomaniaDobrujan GermansInternal Dobrujan Revolutionary OrganisationDeletant, DennisPalgrave Macmillan