Background
Dimitar Ganchev was born in 1875 in the town of Ruse, Northern Bulgaria.
Dimitar Ganchev was born in 1875 in the town of Ruse, Northern Bulgaria.
After he graduated from the high-school in Ruse, he studied natural sciences at the University of Geneva, Switzerland.
Furthermore, in the beginning 1903 he was a delegate to the Solun congress, where a decision was made for an armed uprising. Dimitar Ganchev was against precipitate actions, but in the end he too signed the decision. During the Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising, Dimitar Ganchev was in Skopie.
In September 1903, after the Solun affair, he was arrested and sentenced to jail for 101 years.
However, in 1904 he was released from prison, as he came under an amnesty procured by the Bulgarian government. After his extradition to Bulgaria, he became a teacher in Razgrad, Bulgaria.
With the outbreak of the first Balkan War, Dimitar Ganchev enlisted in the Bulgarian Army as a volunteer. On October 17, 1912 he died on the battlefield by Bunarhisar.
In 1897 he became a member of the so-called Geneva group – an anarchistic revolutionary circle led by Mihail Gerdzhikov and Petar Mandzhukov. In this city, he became a member of the IMARO and in 1902 he was chosen a member of the Skopie district revolutionary committee.