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gusle and Bulgarian
String instrument: arfa lyra ; Bulgarian tambura, name is Bulgaria България known as tambura ; fiddle ; mandolin ; guitar and gusle.

gusle and is
The gusle music is played on this traditional string instrument.
As for contemporary gusle players in Croatia, one person that particularly stands out is Mile Krajina.
Krajina is a prolific folk poet and gusle player who gained cult status among some conservative groups.
The gusle, an instrument found throughout the Balkans, is also used to accompany ancient slavic epic poems.
Old Montenegro traditional music is based around the traditional instrument, the gusle.
The term gusle / gusli / husli / husla is common term to all Slavic languages and denotes a musical instrument with strings.
The gusle should, however, not be confused with the Russian gusli, which is a psaltery-like instrument ; nor with the Czech term for violin, housle.
The instrument itself is identical, only the design of the neck and head changes ; the Serbian gusle has Serbian motif etc.
The gusle consists of a wooden sound box, the maple being considered as the best material ( therefore often the instrument is referred to as " gusle javorove "-maple gusle ), covered with an animal skin and a neck with an intricately carved head.
The equivalent of the Slavic gusle is the lahuta, which is used by Gheg Albanians of northernmost Albania ( Malësia ) for the singing of epic songs.
The gusle however, is not a part of Croatian mainstream music and rarely receive airtime in the Croatian media.
The Serbian gusle ( pluralia tantum ) has one or two strings and is usually made of maple wood.
There are records of an instrument named gusle ( гоусли ) being played at the court of the 13th-century Serbian King Stefan Nemanjić, but it is not certain whether the term was used in its present-day meaning or it denoted some other kind of string instrument.
A prominent feature of Montenegrin culture is the gusle, a one-stringed instrument played by a story-teller who sings or recites stories of heroes and battles in decasyllabic verse.
Mile Krajina ( born c. 1923 ) is a noted gusle player in Croatia, who sings traditional folk songs.

gusle and musical
Also, until the musical renaissance of the 20th century, Montenegrin music was mainly based on the simple traditional instrument, the gusle. The oldest singing society, named " Jedinstvo " ( Unity ) was formed in Kotor in 1839.
Next album Hoćemo gusle came out in 1989 and gave a small taste of much of Rambo's future musical direction-overt political activism.

gusle and instrument
In 1989, their performance in Zagreb started with the Serbian instrument the gusle and in Belgrade, the NSK philosopher Peter Malkar held a speech as a cynical parody of Slobodan Milošević's speeches in SAP Kosovo.
A traditional gusle instrument from Dalmatia
The gusle player ( guslar ) holds the instrument vertically between his knees, with the left hand fingers on the strings.
A gusle instrument from Zagora ( Croatia ) | Zagora
They sang the verses along with the traditional single stringed instrument called gusle.

gusle and used
In the idyll named Śpiewacy, published in 1663, Józef Bartłomiej Zimorowic used the phrase " to sing to the Serbian gusle " ( przy Serbskich gęślach śpiewać ).

gusle and ).
A Herzegovina | Herzegovinian sings to the gusle ( drawing from 1823 ).
A Herzegovina | Herzegovinian sings to the gusle ( drawing from 1823 ).
In a poem published in 1612, Kasper Miaskowski wrote that " the Serbian gusle and gaidas will overwhelm Shrove Tuesday " ( Serbskie skrzypki i dudy ostatek zagluszą ).
Pušić continued in the same manner on his later releases also making influence on the Serbian hip hop scene with the albums Hoćemo gusle ( 1989 ) and Psihološko propagandni komplet M-91 ( 1991 ).
A Herzegovina | Herzegovinian sings to the gusle ( drawing from 1823 ).
Filip Višnjić was a particularly notable guslar ( gusle player ).

(, and Bulgarian
Varna (, pronounced ) is the largest city and seaside resort on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and the third-largest city in Bulgaria after Sofia and Plovdiv with a population of 334, 870 inhabitants as of February, 2011.
He is known as Prince Marko (, Kraljević Marko, ) and King Marko ( Bulgarian and ) in South Slavic oral tradition, in which he has become a major character during the Ottoman occupation of the Balkans.
Eastern Rumelia or Eastern Roumelia (, Iztochna Rumeliya ;, Rumeli-i Şarkî ;, Anatoliki Romylia ) was an autonomous unit ( Oblast in Bulgarian, vilayet in Turkish ) in the Ottoman Empire, created in 1878 by the Treaty of Berlin and ended in 1885, when it willingly united with Bulgaria, from which state its territory is still part.
The Russian alphabet (, transliteration: rússkij alfavít ) is a form of the Cyrillic script, developed in the First Bulgarian Empire during the 10th century AD at the Preslav Literary School.
Simeon ( also Symeon ) I the Great (, transliterated Simeon I Veliki ) ruled over Bulgaria from 893 to 927, during the First Bulgarian Empire.
Nesebar (, pronounced, also transcribed as Nessebar or Nesebur ; ancient name: Menebria and Mesembria, Μεσημβρία in Greek ) is an ancient town and one of the major seaside resorts on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast, located in Burgas Province.
The Asen dynasty (, Asenevtsi ) ruled a medieval Bulgarian state, called in modern historiography the Second Bulgarian Empire, between 1187 and 1280.
In Slavic mythology and Norse mythology, vodyanoy (, literally " watery "), vodyanoi, Belarusian vadzianik (), Ukrainian vodianyk (), Polish wodnik, Czech and Slovak vodník, Bulgarian and Macedonian vodnik (), Slovene povodni mož or Serbian vodenjak ( Cyrillic: водењак ) and Norwegian havmannen is a male water spirit.
The Bulgarian Socialist Party (, БСП ; Bulgarska sotsialisticheska partiya, BSP ) is a social-democratic political party in Bulgaria and successor to the Bulgarian Communist Party.
The coat of arms of Bulgaria (, ) consists of a crowned golden lion rampant over a dark red shield ; above the shield is the Bulgarian historical crown.
Vasil Levski, (, originally spelled Василъ Лѣвскій, pronounced ) born Vasil Ivanov Kunchev, ( Васил Иванов Кунчев ; 18 July 1837 – 18 February 1873 ), was a Bulgarian revolutionary and a national hero of Bulgaria.
The Boyana Church (, Boyanska tsarkva ) is a medieval Bulgarian Orthodox church situated on the outskirts of Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria, in the Boyana quarter.
The Miladinov brothers (, Bratya Miladinovi,, Brakja Miladinovci ), Dimitar Miladinov ( 1810 – 1862 ) and Konstantin Miladinov ( 1830 – 1862 ), were Bulgarian poets and folklorists from Macedonia, authors of an important collection of folk songs, Bulgarian Folk Songs.
The Bulgarian National Bank (, Balgarska narodna banka, ) is the central bank of the Republic of Bulgaria with its headquarters in Sofia.
The Bulgarian Muslims or Muslim Bulgarians (, as of recently also българи-мюсюлмани ; locally called pomak, ahryan, poganets, marvak, poturnak ) are Bulgarians of the Islamic faith.
Saint Naum (, Sveti Naum ), also known as Naum of Ohrid or Naum of Preslav ( c. 830 – December 23, 910 ) was a medieval Bulgarian scholar and missionary among the Slavs.
Chernorizets Hrabar (, Črĭnorizĭcĭ Hrabrŭ ) was a Bulgarian monk, scholar and writer who worked at the Preslav Literary School at the end of the 9th and the beginning of the 10th century, developing Medieval Bulgarian literature and spreading Old Church Slavonic.
Besides Southern Bessarabia, other descriptive terms that have been applied to the region include Bulgarian Bessarabia (, translit.
The Bulgarian Orthodox Church-Bulgarian Patriarchate (, Balgarska pravoslavna tsarkva-Balgarska patriarshiya ) is an autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Church with some 6. 5 million members in the Republic of Bulgaria and between 1. 5 and 2. 0 million members in a number of European countries, the Americas and Australia.
The Western ( Bulgarian ) Outlands (, transliterated: Zapadni ( Balgarski ) pokraynini ) is a term used by Bulgarians to describe several territorially separate regions located in southeastern Serbia and eastern Macedonia which at one point passed directly from Bulgaria to Yugoslavia.

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