
Biography
Peter Vitchev, also known as Kamen Vitchev, was a Bulgarian Eastern Catholic and an Assumptionist priest who was martyred by the Bulgarian communist regime. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 2002. Vitchev was born on May 23, 1893, near Topolovgrad, Bulgaria and came from a peasant Eastern Orthodox family. In 1903 he was accepted into the grammar school of Kara-Agatch in Adrianopoli. In 1910, he joined the Congregation of the Augustinians of the Assumption, beginning his novitiate in Gempe, Belgium, and taking the religious name Kamen. He made his final profession in 1912 in Limperzberg. He then commenced his studies of philosophy and theology in Louvain, Belgium, where he remained until 1918. He was ordained a priest of the Eastern Rite in Constantinople on 22 December 1921. After a brief period teaching at St. Augustine College in Plovdiv, Bulgaria and at a high school seminary in Kumkapı, Turkey, he returned to Strasbourg and Rome, to complete his studies and obtained a doctorate in theology in 1929. Very knowledgeable in the history of the Bulgarian church, Vitchev published several articles in the review known as Échos d'Orient. In 1930 he was appointed professor of philosophy and dean of studies at St. Augustine College in Plovdiv and maintained this position until the school was closed by the Communist regime on August 2, 1948. After this prestigious institution founded and maintained by the Assumptionists was closed, Vitchev became superior of the Assumptionist seminary in Plovdiv which housed a small number of students. That same year all foreign members of religious orders were expelled and Vitchev was named Vicar-Provincial of the remaining Bulgarian Assumptionists. They numbered 20 and staffed 5 Eastern Catholic and 4 Latin Church parishes. As a Soviet satellite, Bulgaria suffered from the wave of anti-Catholic legislation that swept the bloc in the years after World War II (e.g.
Patronages
No patronages on file. (See the documentation/patronage-data-plan.md for the gap-fill plan.)