Background
Petko was born in the Bulgarian village of Dogan Hisar, today Aisymi (Evros regional unit, Greece).
Petko was born in the Bulgarian village of Dogan Hisar, today Aisymi (Evros regional unit, Greece).
Beginning in 1861 Petko began fighting against the Ottomans in the surrounding areas of Maroneia, Aisymi, Enos et cetera Petko lived in Garibaldi"s home for a few months. Garibaldi helped Petko organize the well-known "Garibaldi Battalion" in the Cretan Revolution of 1866–1869, consisting of 220 Italians and 67 Bulgarians, who fought the Ottomans on Crete under Petko"s command.
Foreign his service, Petko was assigned the military title of Kapetan (Captain).
Petko Voyvoda"s detachment, established in 1869, took part in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878. His unit liberated Maroneia from the Turkish rule in December 1877, establishing a Christian government there.
He fought against the Turks for three months and saved the local population from Turkish oppression. After that, he took part in the liberation of the Rhodopes together with Kraycho Voyvoda.
He founded the revolutionary committee called Strandzha (organization) there in 1896.
His revolutionary work has been commemorated with numerous monuments all around Bulgaria, as well as in his native village in modern Greece and on the hill of Gianicolo in Rome, where a monument of Garibaldi also stands. The television series Captain Petko Voivode written by Nikolay Haytov and first aired in 1981 also popularized him as a national hero. There are several Bulgarian patriotic songs dedicated to Petko and his comrades.
Petko Voyvoda Peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is also named in his honor.
Monuments dedicated to Petko Voyvoda can be found in Aisymi (Greece), his place of birth, as well as in Rome (Italy), Kyiv (Ukraine) and in Varna, Sofia, Burgas, Plovdiv and other places in Bulgaria.