Constantin Belimace (July 1848 â 1932) was an Aromanian poet.
He was born into an Aromanian family in Malovià ¡ta (), a village that formed part of the Ottoman Empire's Rumelia Eyalet and is now in North Macedonia. His father was TaÃÂcu Belimace. He attended school in his native village and at a Serbian school in Belgrade. In 1873, he moved to Bucharest, capital of the Romanian Old Kingdom. There, he opened a restaurant favored by students, particularly from south of the Danube, and by writers. In the enthusiastically patriotic atmosphere that followed the Romanian War of Independence, Belimace began composing poems, thus becoming among the first writers in the Aromanian language: "Cucotul" (Romanian: "CocoÃÂul"; "The Rooster") and "Dimãndarea pãrinteascã" ("Porunca pÃÂrinteascÃÂ"; "The Parents' Command"). These appeared, respectively, in România and VoinÃÂa naÃÂionalÃÂ. Later, together with others, they were published in Andrei Bagav's 1887 Cartea de alegere (Cartea de citire; Reader).
Belimace helped found the Macedo-Romanian Cultural Society and the Lumina association, and took part in editing periodicals such as FraÃÂil'ea într'u dreptate and Macedonia. His contributions appeared in FraÃÂil'ea, Grai bun, Lumina, Peninsula Balcanicàand Românul de la Pind, as well as in various calendars and almanacs. After returning to Macedonia, he worked as a supervisor at the Romanian boarding high school in Bitola. During World War I, he was held hostage in Bulgaria for two years. He died in Bitola in 1932, when the city was in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Belimace belonged to the Farsherot subgroup of the Aromanians.