Bulgaria: Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Historical Setting
The history of the land now known as Bulgaria has been
determined by its location between Asia and Europe, by its
proximity to powerful states competing for land and
influence at the junction of trade routes and strategic
military positions, and by the strong national territorial
drive of various Bulgarian states. Before the Christian era,
Greece and Rome conquered the region and left substantial
imprints on the culture of the people they found there. The
Bulgar tribes, who arrived in the seventh century from west
of the Urals, have occupied the region continuously for
thirteen centuries. Over time Bulgarian culture merged with
that of the more numerous Slavs, who had preceded the
Bulgars by one century. After converting to Christianity and
adopting a Slavic language in the ninth century, the
Bulgarians consolidated a distinct Slavic culture that
subsequently passed through periods of both expansionist
independence and subordination to outside political
systems.
From the ninth until the fourteenth century, Bulgaria was
a dominant force in the Balkans because of its aggressive
military tradition and strong sense of national identity.
The chief rival and neighbor, the Byzantine Empire, left a
lasting political imprint on two Bulgarian empires as it
competed with them for regional domination. Marking the
deterioration of both the Byzantine and the Bulgarian
political structures, the fall of Constantinople to the
Ottoman Turks in 1453 began four centuries of Turkish
suppression of Bulgarian cultural and political
institutions.
By the eighteenth century, however, weakening Ottoman
control allowed a Bulgarian cultural revival. In the next
century, Western political ideas gradually combined with the
reborn Bulgarian national consciousness to form an
independence movement. The movement was complicated by
internal disagreement on aims and methods, the increasing
weakness of the Ottoman foothold in Europe, and the
conflicting attitudes of the major European powers toward
Bulgaria. Russia gained distinction as Bulgaria's protector
by driving out the Turks in 1877, but France and Britain
curbed Russian power in the Balkans by forcing establishment
of a limited autonomous Bulgarian state under Turkish rule.
The instrument of that limitation, the Treaty of Berlin,
revived longstanding Bulgarian territorial frustrations by
placing the critical regions of Macedonia and Thrace beyond
Bulgarian control. Both of those disputed regions had
substantial Bulgarian populations. During the next sixty
years, Bulgaria would fight unsuccessfully in four wars, in
a variety of alliances, to redress the grievance. None of
the four wars brought substantial new territory to
Bulgaria.
Beginning in 1878, Bulgaria was nominally ruled by
members of West European royal houses under a parliamentary
form of government. Prime Minister Stefan Stambolov unified
the country during its first decade, but extremist political
parties exerted substantial influence from the beginning.
Between 1878 and the declaration of full independence in
1908, Bulgaria passed through a period of peaceful
modernization with expansion in industry, science,
education, and the arts. Modernization and industrialization
sowed the seeds of class conflict, however, nurturing strong
socialist and agrarian opposition parties in the decades
that followed independence.
The period between 1912 and 1944 was full of irredentist
wars and internal political turmoil. By 1900 Serbia and
Greece were the major territorial rivals, but a World War I
alliance with Germany gained Bulgaria little advantage over
them. After the war, the agrarian reform government of
Aleksandur Stamboliiski had failed to unite the country by
1923. The series of unstable factions and forms of
government that followed Stamboliiski was broken only by
Bulgaria's participation as an Axis ally in World War II.
Again no territory was gained, but World War II brought
Soviet occupation, the end of the monarchy, and forty-one
years of unbroken communist rule beginning in 1948. During
that entire period, Bulgaria was the closest East European
imitator of Soviet internal and foreign policy. The years
1948 through 1989 were a time of collectivization, heavy
industrialization, drastic restriction of human rights, and
close adherence to Soviet Cold-War policy.
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Bulgaria: Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Contents
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Civilizations
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