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1944 Bulgarian coup d'état

The 1944 Bulgarian coup d'état, also known as the 9 September coup d'état (Bulgarian: Деветосептемврийски преврат, romanizedDevetoseptemvriyski prevrat), was a coup that overthrew the government of Kingdom of Bulgaria carried out on the eve of 9 September 1944. During the People's Republic of Bulgaria it was called using the propaganda term People's Uprising of 9 September – on the grounds of the broad unrest and Socialist Revolution – as it was a turning point politically and the beginning of radical reforms towards Soviet-style socialism.[1]

1944 Bulgarian coup d'état
Деветосептемврийски преврат
Part of World War II

NOVA partisans entering Plovdiv, 9 September 1944
Date9 September 1944
Location
Result Fatherland Front victory
Belligerents

 Bulgaria

Supported by:
 Germany

Fatherland Front

Supported by:
 Soviet Union
Commanders and leaders
Prince Kiril  
Bogdan Filov  
Nikola Mihov 
Konstantin Muraviev
Georgi Dimitrov
Vasil Kolarov
Kimon Georgiev
Ivan Marinov [bg]
Damyan Velchev

In brief edit

Bulgaria was in a precarious situation, still in the sphere of Nazi Germany's influence (as a former member of the Axis powers, with German troops in the country despite the declared Bulgarian neutrality 15 days earlier), but under threat of war with the leading military power of that time, the Soviet Union (the USSR had declared war on the Kingdom of Bulgaria 4 days earlier and units of its Third Ukrainian Front of the Red Army had entered Bulgaria 3 days after), and with demonstrations, strikes, revolts in many cities and villages (6 – 7 September) and local government power taken by Bulgarian Fatherland Front (FF) forces (without Red Army help) in Varna, Burgas, etc.

The coup d'état was organized by the Fatherland Front political coalition (led by the Bulgarian Communists) and performed by pro-FF units of the Bulgarian Army and the Bulgarian partisan forces of the People's Liberation Insurgent Army (Народоосвободителна въстаническа армия, НОВА; Narodoosvoboditelna vastanicheska armiya, NOVA).

As a direct result the legal government of Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev was overthrown and replaced with a government of the FF led by Kimon Georgiev. Bulgaria immediately joined the anti-Nazi coalition of the Allies of World War II and took part in World War II. The Kingdom of Bulgaria became a republic after the Bulgarian republic referendum in 1946. Large-scale political, economic and social changes were introduced to the country. The coup resulted in Bulgaria entering into the Soviet sphere of influence and the beginning of Bulgaria's 45-year-long People's Republic.

Background edit

On 26 August 1944, the government of Ivan Bagryanov had verbally declared Bulgaria's neutrality in the war under the threat of the Red Army's offensive in neighbouring Romania. At the same time, in Egypt the government had entered separate peace talks with the United Kingdom and the United States, hoping to secure the dispatch of British and American troops in Bulgaria. On the same day, the Central Committee of the Bulgarian Workers' Party (BWP) proclaimed the assumption of power by means of a popular uprising to be its official task.

A government of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union (BANU) "Vrabcha 1", until then in opposition, was formed on 2 September 1944, headed by Konstantin Muraviev. It continued the peace talks, declared its support for democratic reforms and ordered the withdrawal of German Army troops from Bulgaria. At the same time, the guerrilla actions of the partisans did not cease, the alliance with Nazi Germany was not disbanded and no attempts were made to normalize the relations with Moscow, forcing the Soviet Union to treat the new government with suspicion. On 5 September 1944, the Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria.

The Central Committee of the BWP and the general staff of the People's Liberation Revolt Army commenced, on 5 September, planning of a coup d'état. The plan was further detailed on 8 September. According to the plan, the coordinated actions of the partisans, the BWP combat groups and the pro-Fatherland Front army detachments would assume power and effective control of government during the night of 9 September. The stated goal of the coup d'état was the "overthrowing of the fascist authorities and the establishment of popular-democratic power of the Fatherland Front".

Unrest began all around Bulgaria on 6 September and 7 September, with the strikes of the Pernik miners and the Sofia tram employees, as well as the general strikes in Plovdiv and Gabrovo. The prisons in Pleven, Varna and Sliven had their political prisoners released; 170 localities were entered by partisan detachments between 6 September and 8 September. In many cities and villages, the strikes and meetings grew into armed clashes with the police, with victims on both sides. On 8 September,[2] the Red Army entered Bulgaria meeting with no opposition on the order of the new Bulgarian government.

Coup d'état edit

On the eve of 9 September, army units together with Fatherland Front detachments captured key locations in Sofia, such as the Ministry of War, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the post, the telegraph, the radio, the railway station, etc. Early in the morning, the new Prime Minister Kimon Georgiev informed the people on the radio of the shuffle:

With the complete awareness that it is a true and full voice of the popular will, the Fatherland Front assumes in that fateful hour and difficult conditions the government of the country in order to save it from destruction.

On 9 September, on the order of the NOVA commander-in-chief Dobri Terpeshev, all partisan units descended from the mountains and took over villages and cities' governments. In most places, this was not met with much resistance, but in other cases army and police units loyal to the old government put up violent resistance to the Fatherland Front forces. In Sofia, Plovdiv, the region of Pernik, Shumen and Haskovo the old regime's supporters were defeated by military action with the army coming under the effective control of the Fatherland Front. The establishment of the new leadership happened at the latest in Haskovo, where partisans and other antifascists seized the artillery barracks on 12 September, but suffered many casualties, as the negotiations with the commanding officers failed to reach a compromise.

As of 9 September, the Red Army had not reached Sofia but remained in northeastern Bulgaria, as the Bulgarian communists were capable of assuming power without any aid.

New government edit

The Fatherland Front government included representatives of the BWP, BANU "Pladne", the Bulgarian Workers' Social Democratic Party (Wide Socialists) and Zveno. The former Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev was arrested, as were Tsar Simeon II's regents, members of the former government, and some army detachment heads. On 10 September, the police was abolished and replaced with a popular militia consisting mainly of recent partisans; 8,130 political prisoners were released from the prisons, and the concentration camps of the former regime (e.g. Gonda voda, Krasto pole, Lebane) were closed down. The fascist organizations were banned, as were their publications. The former regents, Prince Kiril, Bogdan Filov, and Nikola Mihov, were executed in February. On 8 September 1946, a referendum about the further destiny of the monarchy was held. Based on the results of the referendum, Bulgaria was declared People's Republic on 15 September 1946.

Aftermath edit

 
Soviet troops entering Sofia after the coup, September

After 9 September 1944, the Bulgarian Army joined the Third Ukrainian Front and contributed to the defeat of Nazism in Europe, helping drive out the Germans from much of Yugoslavia and Hungary, reaching as far as Klagenfurt in Austria by April 1945. Although Bulgaria was not recognized as a true member of the Allies, it still managed to retain Southern Dobruja which it had acquired in 1940 per the Treaty of Craiova.

The government of Kimon Georgiev established in December 1944 the People's Court according to the international obligation of Bulgaria to condemn the persons (ministers, etc.) guilty for World War II. It became one of the main propellers of the wave of terror in the country. Between 10,000 and 40,000 people were killed or missing in just the first four months after the communist regime overtook Bulgaria.

Bulgarian communists (their Workers' Party renamed to Communist Party) consolidated their leading role in the Fatherland Front coalition, reduced its members from 5 to 2 political parties (together with the Agrarian Union) and led the country consecutively and gradually on the pathway to socialism (after the Soviet model).

The Tarnovo Constitution was overthrown and replaced in 1947 by the new pro-communist republican Dimitrov Constitution[3] after the successful republic referendum in 1946.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Voskresenski, Valentin (25 June 2020). "The Goryani Movement against the Communist Regime in Bulgaria (1944–1956): Prerequisites, Resistance, Consequences". Brill Schöningh. Retrieved 7 May 2023 – via brill.com.
  2. ^ History of Bulgaria, Petar Delev et al., 2001, p. 364
  3. ^ Konstantinov, Emil. Constitutional Foundation of Bulgaria (Historical Parallels) Archived 2016-04-01 at the Wayback Machine. Rigas Network, 2002.
  • Делев, Петър; et al. (2006). "51. България в годините на Втората световна война, 52. Преходният период на "народната демокрация" – 1944–1947 г.". История и цивилизация за 11 клас (in Bulgarian). Труд, Сирма.
  • "Социализъм. Натрапените мечти за "идеален строй"". Българите и България (in Bulgarian). Министерство на външните работи, Труд, Сирма. 2005.

1944, bulgarian, coup, état, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources 1944 Bulgarian coup d etat news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The 1944 Bulgarian coup d etat also known as the 9 September coup d etat Bulgarian Devetoseptemvrijski prevrat romanized Devetoseptemvriyski prevrat was a coup that overthrew the government of Kingdom of Bulgaria carried out on the eve of 9 September 1944 During the People s Republic of Bulgaria it was called using the propaganda term People s Uprising of 9 September on the grounds of the broad unrest and Socialist Revolution as it was a turning point politically and the beginning of radical reforms towards Soviet style socialism 1 1944 Bulgarian coup d etatDevetoseptemvrijski prevratPart of World War IINOVA partisans entering Plovdiv 9 September 1944Date9 September 1944LocationKingdom of BulgariaResultFatherland Front victoryBelligerents Bulgaria Royal ArmySupported by GermanyFatherland Front NOVA BCP BZNS ZvenoSupported by Soviet UnionCommanders and leadersPrince Kiril Bogdan Filov Nikola Mihov Konstantin MuravievGeorgi Dimitrov Vasil Kolarov Kimon Georgiev Ivan Marinov bg Damyan Velchev Contents 1 In brief 2 Background 3 Coup d etat 4 New government 5 Aftermath 6 See also 7 ReferencesIn brief editBulgaria was in a precarious situation still in the sphere of Nazi Germany s influence as a former member of the Axis powers with German troops in the country despite the declared Bulgarian neutrality 15 days earlier but under threat of war with the leading military power of that time the Soviet Union the USSR had declared war on the Kingdom of Bulgaria 4 days earlier and units of its Third Ukrainian Front of the Red Army had entered Bulgaria 3 days after and with demonstrations strikes revolts in many cities and villages 6 7 September and local government power taken by Bulgarian Fatherland Front FF forces without Red Army help in Varna Burgas etc The coup d etat was organized by the Fatherland Front political coalition led by the Bulgarian Communists and performed by pro FF units of the Bulgarian Army and the Bulgarian partisan forces of the People s Liberation Insurgent Army Narodoosvoboditelna vstanicheska armiya NOVA Narodoosvoboditelna vastanicheska armiya NOVA As a direct result the legal government of Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev was overthrown and replaced with a government of the FF led by Kimon Georgiev Bulgaria immediately joined the anti Nazi coalition of the Allies of World War II and took part in World War II The Kingdom of Bulgaria became a republic after the Bulgarian republic referendum in 1946 Large scale political economic and social changes were introduced to the country The coup resulted in Bulgaria entering into the Soviet sphere of influence and the beginning of Bulgaria s 45 year long People s Republic Background editOn 26 August 1944 the government of Ivan Bagryanov had verbally declared Bulgaria s neutrality in the war under the threat of the Red Army s offensive in neighbouring Romania At the same time in Egypt the government had entered separate peace talks with the United Kingdom and the United States hoping to secure the dispatch of British and American troops in Bulgaria On the same day the Central Committee of the Bulgarian Workers Party BWP proclaimed the assumption of power by means of a popular uprising to be its official task A government of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union BANU Vrabcha 1 until then in opposition was formed on 2 September 1944 headed by Konstantin Muraviev It continued the peace talks declared its support for democratic reforms and ordered the withdrawal of German Army troops from Bulgaria At the same time the guerrilla actions of the partisans did not cease the alliance with Nazi Germany was not disbanded and no attempts were made to normalize the relations with Moscow forcing the Soviet Union to treat the new government with suspicion On 5 September 1944 the Soviet Union declared war on Bulgaria The Central Committee of the BWP and the general staff of the People s Liberation Revolt Army commenced on 5 September planning of a coup d etat The plan was further detailed on 8 September According to the plan the coordinated actions of the partisans the BWP combat groups and the pro Fatherland Front army detachments would assume power and effective control of government during the night of 9 September The stated goal of the coup d etat was the overthrowing of the fascist authorities and the establishment of popular democratic power of the Fatherland Front Unrest began all around Bulgaria on 6 September and 7 September with the strikes of the Pernik miners and the Sofia tram employees as well as the general strikes in Plovdiv and Gabrovo The prisons in Pleven Varna and Sliven had their political prisoners released 170 localities were entered by partisan detachments between 6 September and 8 September In many cities and villages the strikes and meetings grew into armed clashes with the police with victims on both sides On 8 September 2 the Red Army entered Bulgaria meeting with no opposition on the order of the new Bulgarian government Coup d etat editOn the eve of 9 September army units together with Fatherland Front detachments captured key locations in Sofia such as the Ministry of War the Ministry of Internal Affairs the post the telegraph the radio the railway station etc Early in the morning the new Prime Minister Kimon Georgiev informed the people on the radio of the shuffle With the complete awareness that it is a true and full voice of the popular will the Fatherland Front assumes in that fateful hour and difficult conditions the government of the country in order to save it from destruction On 9 September on the order of the NOVA commander in chief Dobri Terpeshev all partisan units descended from the mountains and took over villages and cities governments In most places this was not met with much resistance but in other cases army and police units loyal to the old government put up violent resistance to the Fatherland Front forces In Sofia Plovdiv the region of Pernik Shumen and Haskovo the old regime s supporters were defeated by military action with the army coming under the effective control of the Fatherland Front The establishment of the new leadership happened at the latest in Haskovo where partisans and other antifascists seized the artillery barracks on 12 September but suffered many casualties as the negotiations with the commanding officers failed to reach a compromise As of 9 September the Red Army had not reached Sofia but remained in northeastern Bulgaria as the Bulgarian communists were capable of assuming power without any aid New government editThe Fatherland Front government included representatives of the BWP BANU Pladne the Bulgarian Workers Social Democratic Party Wide Socialists and Zveno The former Prime Minister Konstantin Muraviev was arrested as were Tsar Simeon II s regents members of the former government and some army detachment heads On 10 September the police was abolished and replaced with a popular militia consisting mainly of recent partisans 8 130 political prisoners were released from the prisons and the concentration camps of the former regime e g Gonda voda Krasto pole Lebane were closed down The fascist organizations were banned as were their publications The former regents Prince Kiril Bogdan Filov and Nikola Mihov were executed in February On 8 September 1946 a referendum about the further destiny of the monarchy was held Based on the results of the referendum Bulgaria was declared People s Republic on 15 September 1946 Aftermath edit nbsp Soviet troops entering Sofia after the coup SeptemberMain articles Operation Fruhlingserwachen Battle of the Transdanubian Hills Nagykanizsa Kermend Offensive and Vienna Offensive After 9 September 1944 the Bulgarian Army joined the Third Ukrainian Front and contributed to the defeat of Nazism in Europe helping drive out the Germans from much of Yugoslavia and Hungary reaching as far as Klagenfurt in Austria by April 1945 Although Bulgaria was not recognized as a true member of the Allies it still managed to retain Southern Dobruja which it had acquired in 1940 per the Treaty of Craiova The government of Kimon Georgiev established in December 1944 the People s Court according to the international obligation of Bulgaria to condemn the persons ministers etc guilty for World War II It became one of the main propellers of the wave of terror in the country Between 10 000 and 40 000 people were killed or missing in just the first four months after the communist regime overtook Bulgaria Bulgarian communists their Workers Party renamed to Communist Party consolidated their leading role in the Fatherland Front coalition reduced its members from 5 to 2 political parties together with the Agrarian Union and led the country consecutively and gradually on the pathway to socialism after the Soviet model The Tarnovo Constitution was overthrown and replaced in 1947 by the new pro communist republican Dimitrov Constitution 3 after the successful republic referendum in 1946 See also editPeople s Republic of Bulgaria 1923 Bulgarian coup d etat 1934 Bulgarian coup d etat Military history of Bulgaria during World War II Bulgarian government in exile Armistice between Italy and Allied armed forces King Michael s Coup Moscow Armistice and Lapland WarReferences edit Voskresenski Valentin 25 June 2020 The Goryani Movement against the Communist Regime in Bulgaria 1944 1956 Prerequisites Resistance Consequences Brill Schoningh Retrieved 7 May 2023 via brill com History of Bulgaria Petar Delev et al 2001 p 364 Konstantinov Emil Constitutional Foundation of Bulgaria Historical Parallels Archived 2016 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Rigas Network 2002 Delev Petr et al 2006 51 Blgariya v godinite na Vtorata svetovna vojna 52 Prehodniyat period na narodnata demokraciya 1944 1947 g Istoriya i civilizaciya za 11 klas in Bulgarian Trud Sirma Socializm Natrapenite mechti za idealen stroj Blgarite i Blgariya in Bulgarian Ministerstvo na vnshnite raboti Trud Sirma 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1944 Bulgarian coup d 27etat amp oldid 1180233490, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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