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Louis Eyer's Three Lives

Louis Eyer's Three Lives

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Product Code:
1792-01
ISBN
978-619-152-895-0
SKU
19.0072
Year
25-08-2016
Pages
160
Size
140/215 мм
Weight
0.35 kg
Cover Type
Hardcover
Genre
Bulgarian History, Historical Figures, Memoirs & Documents, Biographies & Autobiographies, Bulgarian Authors

Zoya Apostolova, Marc Lettau, Svetoslav Stefanov

Zoya Apostolova, Marc Lettau, Svetoslav Stefanov

Zoya Apostolova is from Lom - historian, researcher, author of books, chairman of the Bulgarian-Swiss company "Louis Ayer" in the Danube town. Marc Lettau has been part of the editorial team of “Swiss Review” since June 2011. He lives in Berne and has spent many years working part-time as an editor on the daily newspaper “Bund”. Marc Lettau has family roots in Bulgaria and close ties with the Swis…

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This new book is dedicated to the life and work of the Swiss sports pedagogue Louis-Emil Ayer (1865-1916), who devoted his entire life to Bulgaria. There is information about the development of the cultural and economic relations between Bulgaria and Switzerland in the German edition of this book.

Louis-Emil Eyer was a Swiss-Bulgarian sports pedagogue and public figure regarded as the founder of the sports movement in Bulgaria.

Born in Bex in the Canton of Vaud, Eyer studied in Lausanne, Geneva and Neuchâtel and taught sport disciplines in Vevey. In 1894, Eyer and nine other Swiss pedagogues, including Georges de Regibus and Charles Champaud, were invited to Bulgaria by the Minister of Education Georgi Zhivkov to lay the foundations of sports education in the country. Eyer taught physical education in Lom (1894), Silistra (1903) and Rousse (1909) and was the main coach of the Yunak sports associations around the country. He introduced the sports of track-and-field, boxing, weightlifting, wrestling to Bulgarian physical education.

When the Balkan Wars broke out, Eyer, despite being a foreign citizen, regarded the protection of his second homeland as his duty and enlisted in the Bulgarian Army as a volunteer. He was a commander of a company of the Macedonian-Adrianopolitan Volunteer Corps' 12th Lozengrad Battalion. For his valour, he was twice awarded a Cross for Honour and was promoted to the rank of Second Lieutenant. Following Bulgaria's defeat in the Second Balkan War, he published the French-language book Pro Bulgaria (For Bulgaria") in 1913, defending the Bulgarian position.

After Bulgaria joined World War I, Eyer again enlisted as a volunteer as an officer in the 38th Infantry Regiment. He died on 2 September 1916 during the Battle of Doiran, and was buried in the village of Čaušli, today in the Republic of Macedonia.

In 1991, the Louis Eyer Bulgarian-Swiss Association was founded in Rousse. The stadium in Silistra is named after him, as are streets around the country.

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