Dine Abduramanov

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Dine Abduramanov
A photo of Dine Abduramanov
Native name
Дине Клюсев Абдураманов
Bornc. 1872
Patele, Monastir Vilayet, Ottoman Empire (now Agios Panteleimonas, Greece)
Died13 June 1902
Patele, Monastir Vilayet, Ottoman Empire (now Agios Panteleimonas, Greece)
Allegiance IMRO
Years of service1896-1902
UnitCheta of Marko Lerinski
Battles/warsMacedonian Struggle 

Dine Klyusev Abduramanov (Bulgarian: Дине Клюсев Абдураманов; born c. 1872), known as Dine Abduramana, was a Bulgarian revolutionary, a worker of the Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization (IMARO).

Dine Abduramanov was born in the village of Patele, Ottoman Empire, today Agios Panteleimonas, Florina regional unit, Greece. He first entered the IMARO in 1896. He was a close friend of Marko Lerinski and a member of his revolutionary band. In June 1902 Marko Lerinski entered the village of Patele in order to punish the traitors of the organization. The band was betrayed and surrounded by Turkish military. Marko Lerinski died in the battle while all other fighters managed to escape. Dine Abduramanov refused to escape with his friends, barricaded himself in his own house and continued the battle with the Turkish military alone for a period of six hours. The Turks used his wife, daughter, sister and uncle, but Dine refused to surrender and he killed his relatives firing against the siege. When he ran out of ammunition, he went against the Turks with his yataghan and was killed. According to the historian and biographer Hristo Silyanov, who was also a revolutionary of IMARO:

Dine cleaned the shame of the village with one of the rarest heroisms in the Macedonian freedom fighting and in the history of revolutions as a whole.[1]

References[edit]

  • Енциклопедия „България“, том 1, Издателство на БАН, София, 1978.

Notes[edit]