Bulgaria is present with 50 Guinness records, reported “Telegraph“, quoted by dariknews.bg. The achievements are in different disciplines, and the most important thing is that they are indisputable, accurate and proven.
Ivanka Ivanova holds the record for the most hairstyles - 330, styled in eight hours. The achievement was set on December 4, 2016 in the city of Pazardzhik.
Among the sought-after accolades is this for the largest unpublished crossword puzzle. It contains 93,769 terms and was created by Hristo Yonitsov, it was verified in Sofia on June 3, 2014.
Among the native achievements included in the “Guinness”, there is also a whole series of Varna ones, which are still unsurpassed. One of them is from 2017, when in April 4,000 Varna students from the city's Medical University made the largest human DNA helix.
A 12-meter Bulgarian martenitsa takes a proper place among the total of 50 native unique achievements in the Guinness Book of Records. Lena Dincheva from Stara Zagora is its author.
With golden letters, the oldest record is the work of our athlete Stefka Kostadinova for the highest high jump for women - 2.09 meters. This happens at the 1987 World Championships in Athletics on August 30 in Rome, Italy.
Next to her is Radostin Krastev, who managed to swim 500 m in ice water in 5 minutes and 36 seconds and 49 hundredths during the Fifth World Ice Swimming Championships in Samoyen, France on January 13, 2023.Ivanka Ivanova holds the record for the most hairstyles - 330, styled in eight hours. The achievement was set on December 4, 2016 in the city of Pazardzhik.
Among the sought-after accolades is this for the largest unpublished crossword puzzle. It contains 93,769 terms and was created by Hristo Yonitsov, it was verified in Sofia on June 3, 2014.
Among the native achievements included in the “Guinness”, there is also a whole series of Varna ones, which are still unsurpassed. One of them is from 2017, when in April 4,000 Varna students from the city's Medical University made the largest human DNA helix.
A 12-meter Bulgarian martenitsa takes a proper place among the total of 50 native unique achievements in the Guinness Book of Records. Lena Dincheva from Stara Zagora is its author.