The breakthrough at dobro Polé in the first world war, the peace agreement of Nei and Bulgaria’s second national disaster

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7401185

Keywords:

Dobro Pole, Uprising, catastrophe, Bulgaria

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of the research is to reveal the humiliating and unfair nature of the Neue Peace Treaty for Bulgaria and the hypocritical and unscrupulous policy of the countries – winners of the First World War.

Design/Method/Approach: The research is empirical and is dedicated to the consequences of the First World War for Bulgaria. When collecting information for the article, I used the following research methods: analytical method, synthetic method, Comparative method and References.

Findings: The analysis of the topic in this way leads to the conclusion that in 2019 the term of the Neue Peace Treaty expires, and in this situation, a peaceful revision of its unfair clauses, which deprived Bulgaria of huge territories inhabited by a compact Bulgarian population, is possible.

Theoretical implications: The present development expands the research activity on the problems of the First World War and its consequences.

Originality/Value: The development is valuable in that it reveals some interesting and little-known moments of the participation of the Bulgarian Army in the First World War, the events related to the Neue Peace Treaty and their reflection on the fate of Bulgaria

Research limitations: This article adds to the work devoted to the First World War and opens avenues for new research on its lessons for future human development and peacekeeping policy.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Azmanov, D. (1935). The lesson from Dobro pole. Sofia.

Bilyarski, Tsocho. The fate of the Bulgarian prisoners of war dfterthe First world war. [online]. Available from : www.sitebulgarizaedno.com.

Grebenarov, A. (2009). The Neue Treaty of 1919 should be an earring for all Bulgarian politicians. Focus Agency, November 27, 2009.

Grebenarov, A. (May 31, 2019). A prominent lawyer calls for the return of the Western provinces of Bulgaria.

Hristov, A. (1925). Historical Review of the All-European War and Bulgaria's Participation in It. Sofia.

Kastelov, Boyan. (1988). Bulgaria - from war to uprising. Sofia, VI.

Mihaylovski, S. (1919). The Neue Treaty: The Pain, the Humiliation and the Unremembered Truths. – In: Forward, December 8, 1919.

Miletich, Lubomir. (1918). The Devastation of the Thracian Bulgarians in 1913. – In: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia.

Nedev, N. (2001). Bulgaria in the World War 1915-1918 – a cursory historical overview. Sofia.

Ognyanov, Lubomir. (1978). The Military Uprising of 1918. Sofia.

Rusev, Ivan. (1921). Dobro Pole and the 2nd Thracian Infantry Division. Sofia.

Tonchev, Tenyo. (1984). The World Fire and Bulgaria. Sofia, VI.

Toshev, St. (1924). Defeated without being beaten. Sofia.

Trifonov, Stayko. (1989). The Entente in Thrace 1919-1920. “Kliment Ohridski” University Publishing House, Sofia, p. 105.

Downloads

Published

05-12-2022

Issue

Section

NATIONAL SECURITY AND PUBLIC ORDER

How to Cite

The breakthrough at dobro Polé in the first world war, the peace agreement of Nei and Bulgaria’s second national disaster. (2022). Politics & Security, 6(4), 3-10. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7401185

Most read articles by the same author(s)