A war memorial to a Soviet Soldier in Strezimirovtsi
The village was first mentioned in Ottoman registers of 1451 as Stryazimirovtsi and in 1453 as İstrazumirofca. Its name is derived from the personal name Strezimir (Стрезимир).[1] From the Liberation of Bulgaria in 1878 until the post-World War ITreaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine of 1919, Strezimirovci was located in Bulgaria and was administratively part of the Tran district of Sofia Province. As Bulgaria participated in the war on the side of the Central Powers, it was obliged to cede a Bulgarian-populated area of 1,545 km2 to Serbia,[2] a region afterwards known in Bulgaria as the "Western Outlands".[3] The new border did not take the location of extant communities, property, roads and rivers into account, it was drawn so as to give Serbia a strategic importance in future wars.[4] Strezimirovci was among 25 villages more or less divided into two by the new Serbian-Bulgarian border.[5] Reputedly, four locals even tricked the international commission sent to mark the border by moving the temporary border stones overnight in order to include more of the village in Bulgaria.[6]
As a consequence of this bisection, the village's population has declined significantly on either side of the border. For example, the Serbian part had a population of 485 in 1948; by 2002, it had decreased to 53, of whom 47 Serbs (88.67%), 4 Yugoslavs (7.54%) and 2 Bulgarians (3.77%).[7] The Bulgarian part of Strezimirovci is only inhabited by 25 people as of June 2008.[8]
^Чолева-Димитрова, Анна М. (2002). Селищни имена от Югозападна България: Изследване. Речник (in Bulgarian). София: Пенсофт. p. 172. ISBN954-642-168-5. OCLC57603720.
^Колев, Йордан (2005). Българите извън България (in Bulgarian). София: Тангра ТанНакРа. p. 127. ISBN954-9942-73-2.
^@Republika Srbija. Republički zavod za statistiku. (February 2003). Књига 1, Становништво, национална или етничка припадност, подаци по насељима. Београд: Републички завод за статистику. ISBN86-84433-00-9. {{cite book}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
^The article name spelling is according to which part of the village has a larger population; the other spelling is also given. Only villages that are populated on both sides are listed: in some cases, only uninhabited or afterwards abandoned village areas are left in Bulgaria or Serbia.