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・ Alexander Bliss
・ Alexander Blok
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・ Alexander Boddy
・ Alexander Boden
・ Alexander Bodon
・ Alexander Bodunov
・ Alexander Bogdanov
・ Alexander Bogdanovich Engelhardt
・ Alexander Bogen
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Alexander Bogoridi
・ Alexander Boichuk
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・ Alexander Boldizar
・ Alexander Bolonkin
・ Alexander Bolton
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・ Alexander Bondurant
・ Alexander Bone
・ Alexander Bonini
・ Alexander Bonnyman, Jr.
・ Alexander Bonsaksen
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Alexander Bogoridi : ウィキペディア英語版
Alexander Bogoridi

Prince (''Knyaz'') Alexander Stefanov Bogoridi ((ブルガリア語:княз Александър) (''Алеко'') ''Стефанов Богориди''; Turkish: ''Aleko Pasha''; (ギリシア語:Αλέξανδρος Βογορίδης)) (1822 – July 17, 1910) was an Ottoman statesman of Bulgarian origin.
Born in Istanbul, Alexander Bogoridi was the youngest son of one of the most influential persons in the Ottoman EmpireStefan Bogoridi – and brother of Nicolae Vogoride, who became a prominent Moldavian politician. Alexander Bogoridi studied in the Greek School in Phanar, in Istanbul and in France.
He received his higher education in State Law in Germany. He held high-ranking positions as a statesman in the Ottoman Empire – member of the State Council, Minister of Public Works, Posts and Telegraphs, diplomatic agent in Moldavia, member of the diplomatic mission in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and ambassador in Austria-Hungary (1876–1877).
After the 1877–1878 War with the Russian Empire and the subsequent Treaty of Berlin with the protection of the Russian Emperor Alexander II and with the consent of the Great Powers, Alexander Bogoridi was appointed Governor-General of Eastern Rumelia on March 13, 1879.〔 See 〕 He was connected to the Liberal Party leaders expelled from the Principality of BulgariaPetko Slaveykov and Petko Karavelov.
After the abdication of Prince Alexander I in 1886, Alexander Bogoridi was one of the candidates for the Bulgarian throne. He died in Paris.
== Notes ==




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