Blagovest Sendov | |
Office: | Bulgarian Ambassador to Japan |
Term Start: | 2004 |
Term End: | 2009 |
Office2: | Deputy Chairperson of the National Assembly of Bulgaria |
Term Start2: | 1997 |
Term End2: | 2002 |
Office3: | Chairperson of the National Assembly of Bulgaria |
Term Start3: | 1995 |
Term End3: | 1997 |
Predecessor3: | Aleksandar Yordanov |
Successor3: | Yordan Sokolov |
Birth Date: | 8 February 1932 |
Birth Place: | Asenovgrad, Bulgaria |
Occupation: | Diplomat Mathematician Politician |
Blagovest Hristov Sendov (bg|Благовест Сендов; 8 February 1932 – 19 January 2020) was a Bulgarian mathematician, diplomat and politician.[1] [2]
Sendov was born in Asenovgrad, Bulgaria.[2]
Sendov was the rector of Sofia University, located in Sofia, Bulgaria; and the Chairman of Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, also located in Sofia. He had more than 200 publications in fields related to mathematics and computer science.[3]
Sendov took part as an independent in the 1992 Bulgarian presidential election with Ognyan Saparev as his running mate, finishing in 4th place with 2.24% of the votes.
From 1995 to 1997, he was the chairperson of the National Assembly of Bulgaria; and from 1997 to 2002, he was its deputy chairperson. His candidacy for that position was supported by the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP), the successor to the Bulgarian Communist Party (BCP). Although never a member of the BCP, Sendov had close ties to former Bulgarian communist dictator Todor Zhivkov.
The rightist Union of the Democratic Forces removed him temporarily from that duty in 2000 when Sendov cosigned, together with four members of the BSP, a letter to the Israeli president asking that portraits of the Bulgarian royal family (from the 1940s) be removed from a memorial in Israel. This memorial commemorates that all Bulgarian Jews were saved from deportation to concentration camps during World War II.
Sendov was Bulgarian ambassador to Japan from 2004 to 2009.
Sendov's name is attached to one of the major unsolved problems in the study of polynomial zeros, Sendov's conjecture (sometimes incorrectly known as Ilieff's conjecture).
In 2000 he was elected as a member of Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, an academic institution located in Belgrade, Serbia.