Apostol Mărgărit

Apostol Mărgărit (Avdella, 5 August 1832 – Bitola, 19 October 1903) was an Aromanian school teacher and writer.

Life

Mărgărit was born in Macedonia, the Ottoman Empire. In 1862, Mărgărit became a school teacher in Vlaho-Clisura, near Grevena and taught the children in Aromanian, and Greek. Persecuted by the Patriarch of Constantinople, he had to leave the school, but stayed in Clisura, where he taught private lessons of Vlach.

Due to his activity, he was accused of treason by the Greeks, of being either an Austrian or a Catholic agent. There were several assassination attempts against him: he was stabbed with a dagger in Salonika, thrown twice in the Vardar River and shot while in the Ohrid Mountains. He was eventually sent to prison, but managed to escape and settled in Bucharest, where he obtained support from the Romanian king.

After the Russo-Turkish War, 1877–1878 and the independence of Romania, the Ottoman government accepted him as school inspector of the Romanian schools on Turkish territory. Under this position, Mărgărit founded many of the Vlach schools of Macedonia and Albania sometimes along with French priest Jean-Claude Faveyrial.[1] He was made a member of the Romanian Academy on 3 April 1889.

Apart from a number of petitions addressed to the Sublime Porte on behalf of the Aromanian people, he also wrote:

References

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