thumb|right|Nikola Gulev (born Lakia Guli), an Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization|IMRO revolutionary of Aromanian descent and son of [[Pitu Guli]] Bulgarophiles (; Serbian and ; ; ) or Bugaraši (Serbian and ), is a pejorative term used for Slavic people from the regions of Macedonia and Pomoravlje who identify as ethnic Bulgarians. In Bulgaria, the term Bulgaromans; (; ) refers to non-Slavic people such as Aromanians with a Bulgarian self-awareness.
thumb|right|Nikola Gulev (born Lakia Guli), an Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization|IMRO revolutionary of Aromanian descent and son of [[Pitu Guli]] Bulgarophiles (; Serbian and ; ; ) or Bugaraši (Serbian and ), is a pejorative term used for Slavic people from the regions of Macedonia and Pomoravlje who identify as ethnic Bulgarians. In Bulgaria, the term Bulgaromans; (; ) refers to non-Slavic people such as Aromanians with a Bulgarian self-awareness.
It was only after the Serbian revolution and subsequent Serbian independence when the Serbian national idea gained finally momentum in what is today Southern and Eastern Serbia. According to different authors ca. 1850 the delineation between Serbs and Bulgarians ran north of Niš. On the other hand, according to historian Apostolos Vacalopoulos, from the beginning of the 18th century, the Bulgarians in Macedonia formed the largest Slavic community and had gradually absorbed the sparse Serbs in the area. As a result, after the rise of nationalism in the Ottoman Empire, the Slavic-speakers there, already Bulgarian by name, began to acquire mainly a Bulgarian national identity. During the 19th and early 20th century the Bulgarian national identification arose as a result of an educational campaign and the affiliation with the Bulgarian millet and Bulgarian Exarchate. In the 20th century, Bulgarophiles in neighboring Yugoslavia and Greece were considered enemies of the state harboring irredentist tendencies.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).