The Razlovci uprising (Bulgarian: Разловско въстание, romanized: Razlovsko vastanie; Macedonian: Разловечко востание, romanized: Razlovečko vostanie) was a Bulgarian rebellion in the areas of Maleševo and Pijanec in Ottoman Macedonia, part of the April Uprising of 1876.
In March 1876, Father Gennady, a member of the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee, met with the conspirators in Thessaloniki.
[4] The preparations for the rebellion began in late 1875 in the village of Razlovci, guided by Dimitar Berovski and Stoyan Razlovski.
[5] It was planned that the rebellion would cover Maleševo, Radoviš, Strumica, Petrich, Melnik and later the Osogovo.
Two revolutionary bands of about 60 people got the village for a short time, and then the rebellion spread in Malеševo and Pijanec.