
The ''
de jure'' independence of Bulgaria ( bg|Независимост на България, ''Nezavisimost na Balgaria'') from the
Ottoman Empire was
proclaimed on in the old capital of
Tarnovo by Prince
Ferdinand of Bulgaria, who afterwards took the title "
Tsar".
Background
Bulgaria had been a widely autonomous
principality since , when it was
liberated from Ottoman rule in the wake of the
Russo-Turkish War (1877–78). Although it was still technically under the
suzerainty of the
Sublime Porte, this was a
legal fiction that Bulgaria only acknowledged in a formal way. It acted largely as a ''
de facto'' independent state. On , it had
unified with the
Bulgarian-majority Ottoman autonomous province of
Eastern Rumelia.
After the liberation, Bulgaria's main external goal was the unification of all Bulgarian-inhabited areas under foreign rule into a single Bulgarian state: the main targets of Bulgarian
irredentism were
Macedonia and southern
Thrace, which continued to be part of the Ottoman realm. In order to join an anti-Ottoman alliance and claim those territories by war, however, Bulgaria had to proclaim its independence first. This would constitute a violation of the
Treaty of Berlin's terms, an act unlikely to be approved by the
Great Powers.
The chaos that ensued in the Ottoman Empire following the
Young Turk Revolution of 1908 provided suitable conditions for the Bulgarian proclamation of independence. Many of the Great Powers had also abandoned their support for the Ottomans, looking for territorial gains instead:
Austria-Hungary was
hoping to annex the
Bosnia Vilayet, the
United Kingdom was looking to seize the empire's
Arab territories in the east, and the
Russian Empire's main target was control over the
Turkish Straits. In September 1908 at a meeting in
Buchlov (german: Buchlau, contemporary
Czech Republic), envoys of Austria-Hungary and Russia supported each other's plans and agreed not to hinder Bulgaria's proclamation of independence which was likely to take place.
Towards the middle of September, the democratic government of
Aleksandar Malinov had decided that the suitable moment was near. ,
Ferdinand arrived at
Rousse from a break in his Hungarian mansion. He was awaited there by the government to discuss the final decision on board the ''Krum'' ship. The delegation then took the train to Tarnovo, where the official proclamation would take place. According to recent research, it was at the
Dve Mogili railway station that the
manifesto of independence was completed on .
Independence
The independence of Bulgaria was formally proclaimed at the
Holy Forty Martyrs Church in Tarnovo. As part of the proclamation, Ferdinand raised Bulgaria from a principality to a
kingdom, increasing its international prestige. Ferdinand changed his title from knyaz (prince) to tsar (king), and the country would be ready to join the
Balkan League and fight the Ottoman Empire in what would become the
First Balkan War of 1912–1913.
Bulgaria's declaration of independence was followed by Austria-Hungary's annexation of Bosnia the following day and
Greece's union with the
Cretan State (unrecognized until 1913). With the two countries' joint violation of the Treaty of Berlin and the dominant support among European countries, the independence of Bulgaria was internationally recognized by the spring of 1909. The Ottoman Empire did not demand any financial compensation from Bulgaria, which took over the railways run by the
Oriental Railway Company and the taxes in Eastern Rumelia. Russia cancelled forty years of payments the Ottomans owed on the indemnity for the war of 1877–78. This amounted to 125,000,000
francs (out of a total indemnity of 802,000,000 francs). In turn Bulgaria agreed to transfer its tribute payments—85,000,000 francs over 85 years—to Russia.
[Alan Bodger, "Russia and the End of the Ottoman Empire", in Marian Kent (ed.), ''Great Powers and the End of the Ottoman Empire'' (London: Frank Cass, 1996), 81.]
Bulgaria's
Independence Day is subsequently celebrated annually on 22 September.
Notes
References
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
{{Authority control
Category:1908 in Bulgaria
Category:Declarations of independence
Category:October 1908 events
Category:1908 in politics
Category:1908 documents
Category:Bulgaria–Ottoman Empire relations