His most notable work, Voshopolea ("Moscopole"), started the trend in Aromanian literature of an ideal and utopian Moscopole, today a village in Albania which was a major metropolis with an important Aromanian population during the times of the Ottoman Empire.
[2] After World War I, Boga was appointed teacher in Chișinău, in Romanian Bessarabia (now in Moldova).
[3] Romanian literary critic Constantin Sorescu regarded Boga's works as so important to Aromanian literature that he considered him a potential recipient of the Nobel Prize, just like French writer Frédéric Mistral was awarded it for his Occitan-language works.
[1] It is an epic poem of 150 sonnets which gave birth to the Aromanian literary trend of the utopian Moscopole.
Feeling ill, he sensed his death was imminent and wrote what would be his last poem, a soliloquy titled Cîntic mănăstiresc ("Monastic Song").