in 1901. In the period 1892–1893, Toshev worked as a
Bulgarian Exarchate teacher together with
Dame Gruev in
Macedonia. After joining the
Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO), he became an activist. In 1900, Toshev conducted the ceremony inducting the members of the Central Committee of the
Bulgarian Secret Revolutionary Brotherhood, including
Ivan Garvanov into the IMARO. In 1901, Pere was exiled by the
Ottoman authorities in
Asia Minor. During the
Ilinden Uprising in 1903, he led a detachment in the region of
Mariovo. He was a delegate at the Prilep Congress of IMARO in 1904. At the Rila Congress of IMARO in 1905 he was elected as a member of the Central Committee of the Organization. During the increase of the Serbian propaganda in Macedonia, Pere Toshev attempted to neutralize peacefully the
Serbian bands in the area. After the capture of
Dame Gruev by the Serbs he personally met
Gligor Sokolović, and subsequently Dame Gruev was released. After
Ivan Garvanov and
Boris Sarafov's murder, he was briefly arrested as a suspected. After the
Young Turk Revolution, Pere Toshev opposed the legalization of the Organization. Toshev and
Dimo Hadzhidimov, published the newspaper "Konstitutsionna zarya", close to the
Serres group of
Yane Sandanski, from 1908 until 1909. During this period Toshev with
Anton Strashimirov and
Gyorche Petrov, also issued the newspaper "Kulturno Edinstvo" in
Solun. During 1910–1911, Toshev was a school inspector of the
Bulgarian schools in the
Salonica revolutionary district. Toshev was killed by the
Turks in Drenovo, near
Kavadarci in 1912.
Anastas Lozanchev wrote about him in his account of IMARO's founding in 1894: „
Pere had clearly defined ideas, with defined views on the revolutionary struggles, which no one else at that time had. He was an old revolutionary; he had participated together with other Macedonian Bulgarians... in the unification of Northern and Southern Bulgaria.“ == References ==