After Skobelev's death, in
Moscow a monument was raised in his honour on a major square on
Tverskaya Street (across from the city hall, where today stands the statue of
Yuri Dolgorukiy, the founder of Moscow), which was given his name, and the town of
Fergana in
Uzbekistan was renamed Skobelev. Today, his name still lives, even beyond the
Russian Federation: shortly after the end of the Turkish War of 1877, the Bulgarians constructed a park in
Pleven,
Skobelev Park, on one of the hills where the major battles for the city took place. The park is also a location of the Panorama
Pleven's Epopee 1877 memorial, where in one of the scenes of the gigantic 360 degree
panoramic painting the White General is displayed charging with his horse and bare sword, leading the infantry Russian attack on the Turkish positions. A central boulevard in
Sofia, the capital city of
Bulgaria, also bears Mikhail Dmitriyevich Skobelev's name. Shortly after the entrance of the park, the bust of the famous general can be seen, watching over the city. The park contains memorials with the names of the Russian and Romanian soldiers that died for the liberation of
Pleven, and is decorated with non-functional arms donated by Russia: cannons, cannonballs, gatling guns, rifles, and bayonets. In the 1955 Soviet-Bulgarian war epic
Heroes of Shipka Skobelev, played by
Yevgeny Samoylov, is portrayed as one of the films main heroes. ==Honours and awards==