Following the
Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878 and its restoration as a
sovereign monarchy, all four Bulgarian monarchs were of German descent: Prince
Alexander I of Battenberg, as well as
Ferdinand,
Boris III and
Simeon II, all three of
Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. German intellectuals, such as architects
Friedrich Grünanger and
Viktor Rumpelmayer, arrived in Bulgaria to foster its cultural development. Until
World War II, there also existed a small but notable rural German population in several villages scattered in northern Bulgaria.
Banat Swabians (part of the larger group of the
Danube Swabians) from
Austria-Hungary began to settle in the village of
Bardarski Geran,
Vratsa Province, beginning with seven families in 1893, with their total number later exceeding 90 families. In 1936, they numbered 282. In Bardarski Geran, the Germans built a separate
Neo-Gothic Roman Catholic church around 1930 due to conflicts with the local
Banat Bulgarians, who had founded the village in 1887. In 1932, a German school was established in Bardarski Geran. In its peak year, 1935, it had a total of 82 students, of whom 50 Germans and 32 Bulgarians. Other Danube Swabian colonists from the Banat settled in another Banat Bulgarian village,
Gostilya,
Pleven Province, as well as in
Voyvodovo, Vratsa Province, which they shared with
Evangelist Czechs,
Slovaks and Banat Bulgarians. Another notable German colony was
Tsarev Brod (old name Endzhe),
Shumen Province, founded before 1899, where the Germans lived with many other nationalities and had a private German school. and Banat Swabians. On the eve of World War II, Germans in Tsarev Brod constituted the bulk of the village's 420 Catholic
parishioners. German sources list its population in 1939 as 285, of whom 129 Germans. Those colonists came from
Kherson and
Crimea (see Crimea Germans) in modern
Ukraine. They built a church described as a "magnificent Catholic place of worship unmatched in the district"; the church was inaugurated on 23 October 1911. The bulk of the German population in Bulgaria was resettled within the borders of the
Third Reich according to Hitler's
Heim ins Reich policy. As a result, 2,150 ethnic German Bulgarian citizens were deported from the country in 1943, including 164 from Bardarski Geran and 33 from Gostilya. Only a handful of Bulgaria's rural German population remained: for example, in 2003 there were only two elderly German women remaining in Bardarski Geran, Maria Dauerbach and Franziska Welsch; they had not been deported because they had married local Bulgarians. == Notable people ==