POLITICIAN

Philip Dimitrov

1955 - Today

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Philip Dimitrov Dimitrov (Bulgarian: Филип Димитров Димитров [ˈfilip dimiˈtrɔf]; born 31 March 1955) is a Bulgarian politician, Prime Minister of Bulgaria 1991–2, MP in the 36th (1991–1994), 37th (1994–1997) and the 40th (2005–2007) National Assembly, and MEP from January 2007 to May 2007. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 22 different languages on Wikipedia (up from 21 in 2024). Philip Dimitrov is the 16,198th most popular politician (up from 16,666th in 2024), the 246th most popular biography from Bulgaria (up from 259th in 2019) and the 102nd most popular Bulgarian Politician.

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Among POLITICIANS

Among politicians, Philip Dimitrov ranks 16,196 out of 19,576Before him are Guido Knopp, Atef Sedky, Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa, and Eardwulf of Northumbria. After him are Reiner Haseloff, George J. Mitchell, Faustin Twagiramungu, Daniel Akaka, Nikolaos Morakis, Walther Schreiber, Cathal Brugha, and Josep Pintat Solans.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1955, Philip Dimitrov ranks 414Before him are Mihovil Nakić, Jean Lassalle, Toshio Hosokawa, Reinhold Mitterlehner, Egidio Miragoli, and King Kong Bundy. After him are José Montilla, Klaus Siebert, Nestor Serrano, Abdelkrim Merry, Vasile Andrei, and Roberto Maroni.

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In Bulgaria

Among people born in Bulgaria, Philip Dimitrov ranks 246 out of 415Before him are Dimitar Dimov (1909), Vidin Apostolov (1941), Katya Paskaleva (1945), Valentin Yordanov (1960), Reneta Indzhova (1953), and Aleksandar Kostov (1938). After him are Asparuh Nikodimov (1945), Dimitar Glavchev (1963), Martin Petrov (1979), Nasko Sirakov (1962), Kliment of Tarnovo (1841), and Georgi Naydenov (1931).

Among POLITICIANS In Bulgaria

Among politicians born in Bulgaria, Philip Dimitrov ranks 102Before him are Stefan Yanev (1960), Konstantin Stoilov (1853), Volen Siderov (1956), Plamen Oresharski (1960), Dimitar Stanchov (1863), and Reneta Indzhova (1953). After him are Dimitar Glavchev (1963), Kliment of Tarnovo (1841), Tsetska Tsacheva (1958), Stefan Sofiyanski (1951), Meglena Kuneva (1957), and Georgi Bliznashki (1956).