Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

April 12 - International Day of Aviation and Cosmonautics

In search of the lost carpets with the face of the world’s first astronaut Yuri Gagarin

Photo: Facebook/RetroPanagyurishte

The year is 1961. Only a month after his space flight, Yuri Gagarin arrived in Bulgaria, where he visited a number of cities. In two of them - Panagyurishte and Plovdiv, the astronaut received gifts of exquisite beauty - hand-woven carpets with his image.

In the 1960s, two enterprises operated in Bulgaria’s town of Panagyurishte. One of them, the so-called labour production cooperative "Persian Carpet" manufactured, for the distinguished guest, a large carpet sized 2x3 metres.

"Our director gathered us and said, 'Let's make a carpet for Yuri Gagarin,'" recalls Vasilka Petkova-Bairova, then a member of the cooperative's management board. “We had yarn, we had designs, we also had workers and we agreed to do it. People came from all over Bulgaria to see how we make this carpet. It turned out quite beautiful.

The colour paper scheme which is used for the weaving was developed by draftswoman Lushka Nemigencheva. Only one black-and-white photo of the finished carpet is preserved to this day. In the centre of the composition we can see Yuri Gagarin in a military uniform, with a raised hand in greeting, embracing a bouquet of fragrant Bulgarian roses. On one side stands a girl in a pioneer uniform, and on the other - a smiling woman in a Bulgarian national costume.

The carpet was completed in about a month, and the best workers in the company were involved in its production. Among them is Patsa Stoyanova-Yakimova.

4-year old Patsa Stoyanova in the carpet workshop and later, as a young girl with friends (right)

"My grandmother was then 38 years old," says granddaughter Diana Georgieva. “At least 15 women have worked on this carpet. Because all the work was manual, very tiring for the eyes and hands, they took turns from early in the morning until very late in the evening”.

For the production of the carpet, all the workers received an award personally from the owner of the Persian carpet enterprise.

"They were awarded a wristwatch for completing the work on time. My grandmother remembered that this was the greatest gift she had ever received in her life,” said Diana Georgieva.

The further fate of this carpet is unknown.

The Panagyurishte carpet workshop in the 1960s

However, it turns out that the Panagyurishte craftswomen made another carpet with the face of the astronaut. Probably this happened in the workshops in one of the villages near Panagyurishte. On it Yuri Gagarin is depicted with a spacesuit, and the carpet itself was sent to Washington. What exactly it looked like remains a mystery because in 1992-93 the enterprise’s archives were destroyed.

The traces of the third carpet, time out the work of the Plovdiv-based carpet masters, have also been lost. Learning that Yuri Gagarin will visit the city, the leadership of Persian Carpet manufacturing enterprise in Plovdiv decided to make a small Persian rug with the image of Gagarin for the solemn day. The best weavers were involved the task as they worked in 3-4 shifts of 4 hours each, without interruption. The old, now deceased master weavers were also helped by the skilful then 19-year-old Ivanka Kocheva.

Ivanka Kocheva (left, front) at work and with colleagues from the carpet factory in Plovdiv

"My mother does not remember exactly how long the carpet took to make, but they had to react very quickly. That is why they hired the most agile workers to do it in the shortest possible time, because it was a difficult job," said Plamen Kochev, Ivanka's son, tells Radio Bulgaria.

So the beautiful rug was ready in just about 24 hours. The pattern was designed by the company's chief artist Ivan Kolarov, who worked on the astronaut's photography.

"The carpet was approximately 80 by 80 cm large, of the finest wool. Gagarin was depicted on some background, without ornaments around his face, dressed in the usual military uniform, with the service cap, not with his cosmonaut spacesuit”, says Plamen Kochev, retelling his mother’s recollections. "It is said that Yuri Gagarin was most impressed by this gift."

From that moment on, any further information about the carpet remains in the realm of conjecture. A photo of the Plovdiv work of art has not survived to this day.

English version Rositsa Petkova

Photos: Facebook/RetroPanagyurishte


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Harman kaya

The ancient structures of Harman Kaya and Asara in Eastern Rhodopes reveal their secrets thanks to Lidar

For the first time, two of the most mysterious archaeological sites in the Eastern Rhodopes have been studied in detail from air. Bulgarian archaeologists scanned the Harman Kaya rock complex near the village of Bivolyane and the ancient Asara fortress..

published on 4/25/24 2:25 PM

Dr. Stayko Staykov lays the foundations of climatology in Bulgaria

After the Liberation in 1878, Bulgaria began to develop at a pace that would make up for the centuries-long absence from the world history map. Young Bulgarians graduated from prestigious European universities and took their knowledge to their homeland..

published on 4/24/24 9:05 AM

Jewish Pesach begins on 22 April

One of the three biggest Hebrew holidays, Pesach (Passover) starts at sundown (5 PM) on 22 April and ends on 30 April. It is a movable feast, falling after the 14 th day of the spring month of Nisan which starts after the spring equinox with the..

published on 4/22/24 8:47 AM