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Construction Corps (Bulgaria)

The Construction Corps (Bulgarian: Строителни войски) in Bulgaria was a military construction organisation subordinated to the Ministry of Defence or directly to the government, which existed from 1920 to 2000.

The central Construction Troops building in Sofia (126 Tsar Boris III Blvd.), now used by the Sofia District Court

The organisation started as national compulsory labour service (trudova povinnost) in 1920 which drafted all able-bodied Bulgarians in place of national military service. It was militarised and incorporated into the armed forces as the Labour Corps (Trudovi Voiski) during the period 1935–1946. During the Communist era it was re-organised a number of times, taking its final form and name in 1969.

History edit

National compulsory labour service 1920–1935 edit

In the last months of World War I, the Ministry of War announced the idea of a conscription-based national labour service. For this purpose a commission was appointed consisting of: Chairman Major General Konstantin Kirkov; members: Colonel Ivan Bozhkov, Lieutenant Colonel Kosta Nikolov, Lieutenant Colonel Dimitar Nachev, Lieutenant General Stilian Kovachev, Lieutenant Colonel Todor Georgiev, Hristo Chakalov – Manager of the BNB, two agronomists and a representative of the Bulgarian Agricultural Bank. The original law drafted by the commission was not approved by the Council of Ministers but the draft did become the basis for all subsequent legislation on the subject.

Defeat in World War 1 brought to power in October 1919 the radical anti-war Agrarian party leader Aleksandar Stamboliyski. Faced with the ruinous consequences of the war Stamboliyski adopted compulsory labour service as one of two key reforms aimed at rebuilding the country (the other being land reform). The Bill provoked vehement opposition on the ground that it revived the Ottoman feudal labour obligation and exploited young people, but Stamboliyski's overwhelming election victory in 1920 meant it was voted into law on 23 May 1920.

Stamboliyski's official reasons were to enable post-war reconstruction at a time when the impoverished country was faced with enormous war reparations; and to provide modern vocational education for young men and women. However, an underlying reason was to circumvent the limitations of the Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine on the size of the Bulgarian Armed Forces,[1] [2][3] which limited the army to 20,000. The new labour service de facto maintained the organisational structure of the former national military service, prompting protests from the neighbouring Yugoslavia and Greece that all the Bulgarians had to do was replace the spades with rifles and they'd have a trained army. The Inter-Allied Commission required the bill to be suspended until changes were agreed.

Compulsory labour service came into force on 14 June 1920 with the establishment of the Main Directorate "Compulsory Labour Service" within the Ministry of Public Works.[4] All able-bodied Bulgarians, except those exempted for legitimate reasons (for example muslim females were exempted) and those who had served the state for more than three consecutive months, were required to serve either in the Regular service (eight months maximum for men between 20 and 40 years, four months for women between 16 and 30 years) or in the Temporary service up to 21 days a year. Exemptions could also be purchased at a set daily rate.

Labour service proved very effective in carrying out post-war reconstruction. The vast majority of the work was road and railway construction, although there were also manufacturing, agriculture and reforestation projects. An International Labour Report calculated that just in the Regular service from 1921 to 1936 a total of 313,669 "trudovaks" (labourers) were recorded as completing their compulsory service; that the work done for the State entailed 22,591,068 eight-hour days and reached a value of 1,680,088,675 leva; and that the annual balance-sheets showed aggregate receipts of 3,330,466,451 leva and expenditure of 2,449,101,898 leva, or a profit of 881,364,553 leva.[5] The Bulgarian example was widely studied and copied abroad, for instance by Germany in the formation of the Reich Labour Service.

Labour corps 1935–1944 edit

In the 1930s, as Bulgaria followed Germany in repudiating the military limitations imposed by the WW1 Paris peace treaties the labour service openly emerged as a military organisation. On 1 January 1935 jurisdiction was transferred to the Ministry of Defence, with the establishment of military ranks in 1936.[6] Military age conscripts served in the regular armed forces or did labour service – one example being future Communist leader Todor Zhivkov who completed service in 1935, partially through work and partially through exemption purchase.[7] In 1938 with the signing of the Salonika Agreement limits on the armed forces were officially removed and Bulgaria was able to fully reinstate compulsory military service. In 1940 the new Law of the Armed Forces officially incorporated "trudovaks" in the armed forces as the labour corps (trudovi voiski). By 1942 the fully mobilised wartime labour corps exceeded 80,000 men building roads and military installations, draining the Svishtov wetlands, increasing agricultural production and restoring communications in the newly recovered Southern Dobruja, Western Thrace and Vardar Macedonia.[6]

During the war as Bulgaria allied with Nazi Germany Jewish men were drafted en-masse in the labour corps. In January 1941, the anti-semitic Law for Protection of the Nation came into effect, one of whose stipulations was that Jews must fulfill their military service in labour battalions.[8] By order of the Bulgarian chief of the general staff, effective 27 January 1941, Jews were removed from the regular armed forces and were drafted in the labour corps, while retaining their military rank and privileges. Jewish reservists were allocated as labour corps reservists.[9] After Bulgaria joined the Tripartite Pact on 1 March 1941 and became a base for German military operations against Yugoslavia and Greece repressive measures increased. From August 1941 Jewish men aged 20–44 were drafted (including all reservists), rising to 50 in 1943.[10] Following diplomatic protests from German ambassador Adolf-Heinz Beckerle about the German Labour Front working alongside Bulgarian Jews in a military capacity[11] from Jan 1942 Jews were transferred to labour units under the Ministry of Public Works, depriving them of their military ranks and privileges.[12] Those units (usually 100-300 strong) were based in remote camps with poor conditions and typically did heavy labour completing specific stretches of roads. Approximately 12,000 Jews were mobilised in such units in addition to 2,000 communists and left wing agrarians.[13] There were a number of reports of abusive behaviour by camp commandants,[11] although it should be stressed that despite latter Communist governments' terming them "fascist concentration camps" these were in no way such - for instance labourers still had family leave and correspondence, and heads of family were paid a wage.[13]

Greeks from Bulgarian occupation zone in Macedonia and Thrace were also forcibly conscripted into Labour Battalions.[14][15] The measure did not exclude Greek Muslims.[16]

Post War edit

From 1946 given the need to downsize the armed forces the labour corps were again detached from the army and re-organised as national compulsory labour service. All Bulgarian citizens of conscription age not accepted in the regular armed forces were subject to 18 months labour service, but de facto it was done mostly by men from minorities and those deemed unreliable for service ("considered unfit") in the armed forces.[1]

A high point in the history of the Construction Troops was the design and building of the Alfred Beit Road Bridge in 1994–95. The Construction Troops won a commercial tender in competition with international companies. The metal works of the bridge were manufactured in Bulgaria and transported via ship from Burgas to the South African port of Durban and then on a 1,000 km stretch over land. The bridge is the only road border crossing on the South Africa–Zimbabwe border. The commander of the Construction Troops, Major General Radoslav Peshleevski (bg:Радослав Пешлеевски) attended the official opening ceremony (seen in uniform behind Nelson Mandela.[17])

Structure edit

They were organized in seven Construction Divisions: three based in Sofia and one each in Plovdiv, Stara Zagora, Varna and Pleven.

Main Directorate of the Construction Troops (Главно управление на Строителните Войски)[18]

  • Command (Командване)
    • Chief of the Main Directorate of the Construction Troops (Началник на Главно управление на СВ)
    • First Deputy-Chief and Chief of the Political Department (Зам.-началник на СВ, той е и началник на Политическо управление на СВ)
    • Deputy-Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Construction Troops (Зам.-началник на СВ по строителството)
    • Deputy-Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Rear (logistics) (Зам.-началник на СВ, той е и началник тил на СВ)
    • Deputy-Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Economical Matters (Зам.-началник на СВ по икономическите въпроси)
  • Staff (Щаб)
  • Independent Departments and Branches of the MDCT (Самостоятелни управления и отдели в ГУСВ)
  • Operational Formations:
    • 1st Construction Mechanized Division (1ва Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (1. СМД)) (Sukhodol, Sofia)
    • 5th Construction Mechanized Division (5та Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (5. СМД)) (Pleven)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company and Training Battalion (Pleven)
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Roman) (5 battalions and a company in Roman)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Yasen) (battalion in Yasen, companies in Pleven, Lovech, Yasen and Zlatna Panega)
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк) (Vratsa) (companies and Vratsa, Vidin, Kozloduy and Slatina, platoon in Boychinovtsi)
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Veliko Tarnovo) (two battalions in Veliko Tarnovo, platoon in Svishtov)
      • 5th Construction Regiment (5. Строителен Полк) (Gabrovo) (two battalions and three companies in Gabrovo and the nearby villages)
      • Automobile Machinery Regiment - Pleven (Автомашинен Полк - Плевен) (Yasen) (cadred battalions in Yasen, Roman and Veliko Tarnovo, cadred companies in Yasen and Vratsa)
    • 6th Construction Mechanized Division (6та Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (6. СМД)) (Plovdiv)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company and Training Battalion in Plovdiv, a platoon in Koprivshtitsa
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Sopot) (battalions in Sopot, Kalofer and Karnare, platoon in Klisura)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Panagyurishte) (battalion and company in Panagyurishte, battalion in Elshitsa and a platoon at the Copper Refinery Complex "Medet")
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк) (Smolyan) (battalions in Smolyan and Kardzhali, companies in Pamporovo, Madan and Smilyan)
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Plovdiv) (battalion in Plovdiv, companies in Svilengrad, Peshtera and Hisar, platoons in Parvomai and Laki)
      • Independent Construction Battalion (Velingrad) (7 platoons in Velingrad, platoon in Tsvetino and platoon in Yadenitsa)
      • Automobile Machinery Regiment - Plovdiv (5. Автомашинен Полк - Пловдив) (Plovdiv) (companies in Plovdiv, Smolyan, Sopot and Panagyurishte, platoons in Plovdiv and Velingrad)
      • Divisionary Special Company (blacksmith workshop) (Plovdiv)
    • 13th Construction Mechanized Division (13та Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (13. СМД)) (Varna)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company and Training Battalion (Varna)
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Devnya) (two battalions in Devnya, battalion in Kipra)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Varna) (battalion and two companies in Varna, battalion in Novi Pazar)
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк) (Shumen) (battalion in Shumen, battalion and two companies in Matnitsa)
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Devnya)
      • 5th Construction Regiment (5. Строителен Полк) (Smyadovo)
      • Independent Service Regiment - Varna (Отделен Полк – Услуга – Варна) (Varna)
      • Independent Service Regiment - Devnya (Батальон – Услуга – Девня) (Devnya)
      • Independent Service Battalion - Ruse (Батальон – Услуга – Русе) (Ruse)
      • Automobile Machinery Regiment - Varna (Автомашинен Полк - Варна) (Varna) (battalions in Varna, Shumen and Devnya, companies in Varna and Smyadovo)
      • Disciplinary Rehabilitation Battalion (Дисциплинарен изправителен батальон) (Chernevo)
    • 18th Construction Mechanized Division (18та Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (18. СМД)) (Stara Zagora)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company and Training Battalion (Stara Zagora)
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Sliven) (two battalions in Sliven, battalion in Bratya Kunchevi)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Burgas) (battalion in Burgas, companies in Primorsko and Malko Tarnovo, platoons in Sarafovo, Grudovo and Vlas)
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк) (Kazanlak) (battalion in Kazanlak, battalion in Sheynovo and a battalion at the Buzludzha)
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Yambol) (battalion and company in Yambol, battalion in Elhovo)
      • 5th Construction Regiment (5. Строителен Полк) (Radnevo) (battalion in Mednikarevo, companies in Radnevo, Stara Zagora and Yabalkovo and a service company in Troyanovo)
      • Divisionary Service Company - Stara Zagora (Дивизионна Рота – Услуга – Стара Загора) (Stara Zagora)
      • Special Battalion - Stara Zagora (Специален батальон – Стара Загора) (Stara Zagora)
      • Automobile Machinery Regiment - Stara Zagora (Автомашинен Полк - Стара Загора) (Stara Zagora) (battalions in Sliven, Kazanlak and Radnevo, companies in Burgas and Yambol)
      • Disciplinary Rehabilitation Battalion (Дисциплинарен изправителен батальон) (Mednikarevo)
    • 20th Construction Mechanized Division (20та Строителна Механизирана Дивизия (20. СМД)) (Gorublyane, Sofia)(see bg:20-а общостроителна дивизия)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company (Gorublyane, Sofia) and Training Battalion (Chelopechene)
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Busmantsi) (battalion and company in Busmantsi, battalion in Bukhovo, platoon in Zhivkovo)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Darvenitsa, Sofia) (three battalions and a company in Darvenitsa)
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк МОК "Елаците") (Ravna Reka) (3 battalions at the Mining Refining Complex "Elatsite")
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Chelopech) (two battalions in Chelopech, company in Mirkovo)
      • Special Regiment (Специален полк) (Busmantsi) (two battalions and a company in Busmantsi)
      • Special Regiment (Специален полк) (Chelopechene) (company and platoon in Chelopechene, company in Chelopech)
      • 1st Service Regiment (1. Полк – Услуга) (Bukhovo)
      • 2nd Service Regiment (2. Полк – Услуга) (Sofia)
      • Automobile Machinery Company (Автомашинна Рота) (Chelopechene)
    • 25th Construction Mechanized Division (25. Строителна Механизирана Дивизия) (Sofia) (housing construction)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Company; Training Battalion (Sofia)
      • 1st Construction Regiment (1. Строителен Полк) (Zemlyane, Sofia)
      • 2nd Construction Regiment (2. Строителен Полк) (Obelya, Sofia)
      • 3rd Construction Regiment (3. Строителен Полк) (Boyana - the National Cinema Center, Sofia)
      • 4th Construction Regiment (4. Строителен Полк) (Obelya, Sofia)
      • Special High Construction Battalion (Специален Батальон Батальон за Работа по Високи Обекти) (Zemlyane, Sofia)
      • Automobile Machinery Regiment - Obelya (Автомашинен Полк - Обеля) (Obelya, Sofia)
      • Service Company (Осигурителна Рота) (Lagera, Sofia)
    • Electrical Machinery and Installation Brigade (Електромашинна и монтажна бригада) (Sofia)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Platoon; Heavy Transportation and Mechanization Company (Sofia)
      • 1st Installation Regiment (1. Монтажен Полк) (Sofia)
        • Independent Installation Platoon (Самостоятелен Монтажен Взвод) (Chelopech)
        • 1st Installation Battalion (1. Монтажен Батальон) (Sofia)
        • 2nd Installation Battalion (2. Монтажен Батальон) (Blagoevgrad)
      • 2nd Installation Regiment (2. Монтажен Полк) (Plovdiv)
        • 1st Installation Battalion (1. Монтажен Батальон) (Smolyan)
        • 2nd Installation Battalion (2. Монтажен Батальон) (Sopot)
        • 3rd Installation Battalion (2. Монтажен Батальон) (Sliven)
      • 3rd Installation Regiment (3. Монтажен Полк) (Varna)
        • 1st Installation Battalion (1. Монтажен Батальон) (Devnya)
        • 2nd Installation Battalion (2. Монтажен Батальон) (Shumen)
    • 9th Construction Mechanization Brigade (9. Бригада за строителна механизация) (Chelopechene, Sofia)
      • Command; Staff; Supply Platoon; Construction Platoon (Chelopechene, Sofia)
      • Lift Transport Battalion (Самостоятелен Подемно-транспортен Батальон) (Chelopechene, Sofia)
      • Automobile Machinery Battalion (Самостоятелен Автомашинен Батальон) (Iskar Railway Station)
      • Automobile Machinery Battalion (Самостоятелен Автомашинен Батальон) (Chelopech)
      • Building Materials Mixtures Regiment (Полк за строителни разтвори) (Chelopechene) (concrete mixing trucks)
      • Combined Repair Workshop (Обединена ремонтна работилница) (Chelopechene)
  • Support Institutions:
    • Complex Institute for Scientific Research, Development, Project and Implementation Activities of the Construction Troops (Комплексен Институт за Научноизследователска, Развойна, Проектантска и Внедрителска Дейност на Строителни Войски (КИНИРПВД – СВ)) (Sofia)
      • Direction (Направление Научно-изследователска и Развойна Дейност)
      • Direction Laboratories, Experimentation and Implementation (Направление Лаборатории, Експериментиране и Внедряване)
      • Direction Projects (Направление Проектиране)
    • Higher People's Military School for Construction "General Blagoi Ivanov" (Висше Народно Военно Строително Училище (ВНВСУ) "Ген. Благой Иванов") (Sofia)[19][1] – trained career Construction Troops officers
      • Intermediate Military Construction Sergeant School (Средно сержантско военно строително училище (ССВСУ))
    • School for Installation Cadres (Школа за монтажни кадри) (Burgas)

See also edit

  • ru:Строительные войска – Soviet and Russian Construction Troops

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Lewis 1982, p. 135.
  2. ^ "Изложба показва цялата история на Трудовата повинност в България". www.dnesbg.com. 16 June 2020.
  3. ^ "Днес се навършват 100 години от създаването на трудовата повинност". Radio Veliko Turnovo. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  4. ^ International Labour Office (1920). "Bulgarian Law on Compulsory Labour" (PDF). International Labour Office Geneva: Studies and Reports Series C No.3.: 2. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  5. ^ International Labour Office (1938). "Reports and Inquires: The results of compulsory labour service in Bulgaria from 1933 to 1936–37 p.7" (PDF). International Labour Review. 38 (4): 510–521. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  6. ^ a b Белчева, Екатерина (2014). Пътеводител по фондовете на Строителни войски в Държавен военноисторически архив-Велико Търново, 1920 – 2000 (PDF). p. 12. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  7. ^ "Най-известния трудовак в строителни войски е бил Тодор Живков". BG Spomen. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  8. ^ Sage, Steven F. (2018). "Bulgaria". In Megargee, Geoffrey P.; White, Joseph R.; Hecker, Mel (eds.). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Volume III: Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-253-02386-5.
  9. ^ Недялков, Димитър Илиев. "Българската войска – държавният "инструмент" за спасяване на българските евреи". fakel.bg. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  10. ^ Hoppe, Jens (2007). "Juden als Feinde Bulgarians? Zur Politik gengenüber den bulgarischen Juden in der Zwischenkriegszeit". In Dahlmann, Dittmar; Hilbrenner, Anke (eds.). Zwischen grossen Erwartungen und bösem Erwachen: Juden, Politik und Antisemitismus in Ost- und Südosteuropa 1918-1945. Paderborn: Schöningh. pp. 217–252. ISBN 978-3-506-75746-3., cited in Ragaru, Nadège (2017-03-19). "Contrasting Destinies: The Plight of Bulgarian Jews and the Jews in Bulgarian-occupied Greek and Yugoslav Territories during World War Two". Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence. Retrieved 2020-03-08.
  11. ^ a b Cohen, David (27 January 2020). The Jewish labour camps in Bulgaria. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  12. ^ "12-та служба временна трудова повинност". ИНФОРМАЦИОННА СИСТЕМА НА ДЪРЖАВНИТЕ АРХИВИ. Retrieved 19 February 2022.
  13. ^ a b "The Bulgarian Gulag (in Bulgarian)". Deutsche Welle BG. Retrieved 22 February 2022.
  14. ^ Κώστας, Πινέλης. "Τα Ντουρντουβάκια της Θράκης και της Αν. Μακεδονίας". Eidisis.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  15. ^ ""Τα Ντουρντουβάκια: Αποστολές στα Βουλγάρικα τάγματα εργασίας από τη Θράκη και την Ανατολική Μακεδονία (1941-1944)" του Πέτρου Μαρκόπουλου". www.mcnews.gr (in Greek). Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  16. ^ Αυγέρη, Σοφία (2011). (PDF) (in Greek). Archived from the original (PDF) on June 8, 2012.
  17. ^ "Нелсън Мандела благослови мост, построен от българи".
  18. ^ ПЪТЕВОДИТЕЛ ПО ФОНДОВЕТЕ НА СТРОИТЕЛНИ ВОЙСКИ В ДЪРЖАВЕН ВОЕННОИСТОРИЧЕСКИ АРХИВ – ВЕЛИКО ТЪРНОВО 1920–2000 г. (Guide to the Archive Funds of the Construction Troops at the State Military Historical Archive – Veliko Tarnovo 1920–2000). Sofia, Bulgaria: Central Military Archive / "Archives" State Agency. 2014. pp. archives.government.bg/guides/9_P_SV.pdf.
  19. ^ "VSU - Lyuben Karavelov".
  • Curtis, Glenn Eldon, ed. (1992). Bulgaria: a country study. Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. (Library of Congress Country Studies) Construction Troops "[T]hese units were controlled by the Ministry of Construction, Architecture, and Public Services.."
  • William J. Lewis (1982). The Warsaw Pact: Arms, Doctrine, and Strategy. Cambridge, Mass.: Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis/McGraw Hill.

construction, corps, bulgaria, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, bulgarian, december, 2020, click, show, important, translation, instructions, view, machine, translated, version, bulgarian, article, machine, tra. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Bulgarian December 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Bulgarian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 278 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Bulgarian Wikipedia article at bg Stroitelni vojski see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated bg Stroitelni vojski to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Construction Corps Bulgarian Stroitelni vojski in Bulgaria was a military construction organisation subordinated to the Ministry of Defence or directly to the government which existed from 1920 to 2000 The central Construction Troops building in Sofia 126 Tsar Boris III Blvd now used by the Sofia District Court The organisation started as national compulsory labour service trudova povinnost in 1920 which drafted all able bodied Bulgarians in place of national military service It was militarised and incorporated into the armed forces as the Labour Corps Trudovi Voiski during the period 1935 1946 During the Communist era it was re organised a number of times taking its final form and name in 1969 Contents 1 History 1 1 National compulsory labour service 1920 1935 1 2 Labour corps 1935 1944 1 3 Post War 2 Structure 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory editNational compulsory labour service 1920 1935 edit In the last months of World War I the Ministry of War announced the idea of a conscription based national labour service For this purpose a commission was appointed consisting of Chairman Major General Konstantin Kirkov members Colonel Ivan Bozhkov Lieutenant Colonel Kosta Nikolov Lieutenant Colonel Dimitar Nachev Lieutenant General Stilian Kovachev Lieutenant Colonel Todor Georgiev Hristo Chakalov Manager of the BNB two agronomists and a representative of the Bulgarian Agricultural Bank The original law drafted by the commission was not approved by the Council of Ministers but the draft did become the basis for all subsequent legislation on the subject Defeat in World War 1 brought to power in October 1919 the radical anti war Agrarian party leader Aleksandar Stamboliyski Faced with the ruinous consequences of the war Stamboliyski adopted compulsory labour service as one of two key reforms aimed at rebuilding the country the other being land reform The Bill provoked vehement opposition on the ground that it revived the Ottoman feudal labour obligation and exploited young people but Stamboliyski s overwhelming election victory in 1920 meant it was voted into law on 23 May 1920 Stamboliyski s official reasons were to enable post war reconstruction at a time when the impoverished country was faced with enormous war reparations and to provide modern vocational education for young men and women However an underlying reason was to circumvent the limitations of the Treaty of Neuilly sur Seine on the size of the Bulgarian Armed Forces 1 2 3 which limited the army to 20 000 The new labour service de facto maintained the organisational structure of the former national military service prompting protests from the neighbouring Yugoslavia and Greece that all the Bulgarians had to do was replace the spades with rifles and they d have a trained army The Inter Allied Commission required the bill to be suspended until changes were agreed Compulsory labour service came into force on 14 June 1920 with the establishment of the Main Directorate Compulsory Labour Service within the Ministry of Public Works 4 All able bodied Bulgarians except those exempted for legitimate reasons for example muslim females were exempted and those who had served the state for more than three consecutive months were required to serve either in the Regular service eight months maximum for men between 20 and 40 years four months for women between 16 and 30 years or in the Temporary service up to 21 days a year Exemptions could also be purchased at a set daily rate Labour service proved very effective in carrying out post war reconstruction The vast majority of the work was road and railway construction although there were also manufacturing agriculture and reforestation projects An International Labour Report calculated that just in the Regular service from 1921 to 1936 a total of 313 669 trudovaks labourers were recorded as completing their compulsory service that the work done for the State entailed 22 591 068 eight hour days and reached a value of 1 680 088 675 leva and that the annual balance sheets showed aggregate receipts of 3 330 466 451 leva and expenditure of 2 449 101 898 leva or a profit of 881 364 553 leva 5 The Bulgarian example was widely studied and copied abroad for instance by Germany in the formation of the Reich Labour Service Labour corps 1935 1944 edit In the 1930s as Bulgaria followed Germany in repudiating the military limitations imposed by the WW1 Paris peace treaties the labour service openly emerged as a military organisation On 1 January 1935 jurisdiction was transferred to the Ministry of Defence with the establishment of military ranks in 1936 6 Military age conscripts served in the regular armed forces or did labour service one example being future Communist leader Todor Zhivkov who completed service in 1935 partially through work and partially through exemption purchase 7 In 1938 with the signing of the Salonika Agreement limits on the armed forces were officially removed and Bulgaria was able to fully reinstate compulsory military service In 1940 the new Law of the Armed Forces officially incorporated trudovaks in the armed forces as the labour corps trudovi voiski By 1942 the fully mobilised wartime labour corps exceeded 80 000 men building roads and military installations draining the Svishtov wetlands increasing agricultural production and restoring communications in the newly recovered Southern Dobruja Western Thrace and Vardar Macedonia 6 During the war as Bulgaria allied with Nazi Germany Jewish men were drafted en masse in the labour corps In January 1941 the anti semitic Law for Protection of the Nation came into effect one of whose stipulations was that Jews must fulfill their military service in labour battalions 8 By order of the Bulgarian chief of the general staff effective 27 January 1941 Jews were removed from the regular armed forces and were drafted in the labour corps while retaining their military rank and privileges Jewish reservists were allocated as labour corps reservists 9 After Bulgaria joined the Tripartite Pact on 1 March 1941 and became a base for German military operations against Yugoslavia and Greece repressive measures increased From August 1941 Jewish men aged 20 44 were drafted including all reservists rising to 50 in 1943 10 Following diplomatic protests from German ambassador Adolf Heinz Beckerle about the German Labour Front working alongside Bulgarian Jews in a military capacity 11 from Jan 1942 Jews were transferred to labour units under the Ministry of Public Works depriving them of their military ranks and privileges 12 Those units usually 100 300 strong were based in remote camps with poor conditions and typically did heavy labour completing specific stretches of roads Approximately 12 000 Jews were mobilised in such units in addition to 2 000 communists and left wing agrarians 13 There were a number of reports of abusive behaviour by camp commandants 11 although it should be stressed that despite latter Communist governments terming them fascist concentration camps these were in no way such for instance labourers still had family leave and correspondence and heads of family were paid a wage 13 Greeks from Bulgarian occupation zone in Macedonia and Thrace were also forcibly conscripted into Labour Battalions 14 15 The measure did not exclude Greek Muslims 16 Post War edit From 1946 given the need to downsize the armed forces the labour corps were again detached from the army and re organised as national compulsory labour service All Bulgarian citizens of conscription age not accepted in the regular armed forces were subject to 18 months labour service but de facto it was done mostly by men from minorities and those deemed unreliable for service considered unfit in the armed forces 1 A high point in the history of the Construction Troops was the design and building of the Alfred Beit Road Bridge in 1994 95 The Construction Troops won a commercial tender in competition with international companies The metal works of the bridge were manufactured in Bulgaria and transported via ship from Burgas to the South African port of Durban and then on a 1 000 km stretch over land The bridge is the only road border crossing on the South Africa Zimbabwe border The commander of the Construction Troops Major General Radoslav Peshleevski bg Radoslav Peshleevski attended the official opening ceremony seen in uniform behind Nelson Mandela 17 Structure editThey were organized in seven Construction Divisions three based in Sofia and one each in Plovdiv Stara Zagora Varna and Pleven Main Directorate of the Construction Troops Glavno upravlenie na Stroitelnite Vojski 18 Command Komandvane Chief of the Main Directorate of the Construction Troops Nachalnik na Glavno upravlenie na SV First Deputy Chief and Chief of the Political Department Zam nachalnik na SV toj e i nachalnik na Politichesko upravlenie na SV Deputy Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Construction Troops Zam nachalnik na SV po stroitelstvoto Deputy Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Rear logistics Zam nachalnik na SV toj e i nachalnik til na SV Deputy Chief of the Construction Troops in Charge of the Economical Matters Zam nachalnik na SV po ikonomicheskite vprosi Staff Shab Independent Departments and Branches of the MDCT Samostoyatelni upravleniya i otdeli v GUSV Operational Formations 1st Construction Mechanized Division 1va Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 1 SMD Sukhodol Sofia Command Staff Supply Company Sukhodol Sofia Training Battalion Ucheben Batalon Golemo Buchino Pernik Province Special Battalion Specialen Batalon for pre production of building elements Sukhodol Sofia Pernik and Stanke Dimitrov 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Botevgrad battalion and platoon in Botevgrad battalion in Pravets 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Kyustendil battalion in Kyustendil cadred battalions in Bobov Dol and Stanke Dimitrov cadred platoon in Tran 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Pernik companies and platoons in Pernik Samokov and the villages around them cadred battalion in Bornaevo 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Blagoevgrad battalions in Blagoevgrad Sukhodol Sofia Petrich Ilindentsi cadred companies in Gotse Delchev and at the Belmeken Sestrimo water supply cascade and a platoon at the Rila Monastery Automobile Machinery Regiment Sofia Avtomashinen Polk Sofiya Sukhodol Sofia Blagoevgrad Pernik Kyustendil Samokov and Botevgrad 5th Construction Mechanized Division 5ta Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 5 SMD Pleven Command Staff Supply Company and Training Battalion Pleven 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Roman 5 battalions and a company in Roman 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Yasen battalion in Yasen companies in Pleven Lovech Yasen and Zlatna Panega 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Vratsa companies and Vratsa Vidin Kozloduy and Slatina platoon in Boychinovtsi 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Veliko Tarnovo two battalions in Veliko Tarnovo platoon in Svishtov 5th Construction Regiment 5 Stroitelen Polk Gabrovo two battalions and three companies in Gabrovo and the nearby villages Automobile Machinery Regiment Pleven Avtomashinen Polk Pleven Yasen cadred battalions in Yasen Roman and Veliko Tarnovo cadred companies in Yasen and Vratsa 6th Construction Mechanized Division 6ta Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 6 SMD Plovdiv Command Staff Supply Company and Training Battalion in Plovdiv a platoon in Koprivshtitsa 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Sopot battalions in Sopot Kalofer and Karnare platoon in Klisura 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Panagyurishte battalion and company in Panagyurishte battalion in Elshitsa and a platoon at the Copper Refinery Complex Medet 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Smolyan battalions in Smolyan and Kardzhali companies in Pamporovo Madan and Smilyan 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Plovdiv battalion in Plovdiv companies in Svilengrad Peshtera and Hisar platoons in Parvomai and Laki Independent Construction Battalion Velingrad 7 platoons in Velingrad platoon in Tsvetino and platoon in Yadenitsa Automobile Machinery Regiment Plovdiv 5 Avtomashinen Polk Plovdiv Plovdiv companies in Plovdiv Smolyan Sopot and Panagyurishte platoons in Plovdiv and Velingrad Divisionary Special Company blacksmith workshop Plovdiv 13th Construction Mechanized Division 13ta Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 13 SMD Varna Command Staff Supply Company and Training Battalion Varna 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Devnya two battalions in Devnya battalion in Kipra 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Varna battalion and two companies in Varna battalion in Novi Pazar 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Shumen battalion in Shumen battalion and two companies in Matnitsa 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Devnya 5th Construction Regiment 5 Stroitelen Polk Smyadovo Independent Service Regiment Varna Otdelen Polk Usluga Varna Varna Independent Service Regiment Devnya Batalon Usluga Devnya Devnya Independent Service Battalion Ruse Batalon Usluga Ruse Ruse Automobile Machinery Regiment Varna Avtomashinen Polk Varna Varna battalions in Varna Shumen and Devnya companies in Varna and Smyadovo Disciplinary Rehabilitation Battalion Disciplinaren izpravitelen batalon Chernevo 18th Construction Mechanized Division 18ta Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 18 SMD Stara Zagora Command Staff Supply Company and Training Battalion Stara Zagora 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Sliven two battalions in Sliven battalion in Bratya Kunchevi 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Burgas battalion in Burgas companies in Primorsko and Malko Tarnovo platoons in Sarafovo Grudovo and Vlas 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Kazanlak battalion in Kazanlak battalion in Sheynovo and a battalion at the Buzludzha 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Yambol battalion and company in Yambol battalion in Elhovo 5th Construction Regiment 5 Stroitelen Polk Radnevo battalion in Mednikarevo companies in Radnevo Stara Zagora and Yabalkovo and a service company in Troyanovo Divisionary Service Company Stara Zagora Divizionna Rota Usluga Stara Zagora Stara Zagora Special Battalion Stara Zagora Specialen batalon Stara Zagora Stara Zagora Automobile Machinery Regiment Stara Zagora Avtomashinen Polk Stara Zagora Stara Zagora battalions in Sliven Kazanlak and Radnevo companies in Burgas and Yambol Disciplinary Rehabilitation Battalion Disciplinaren izpravitelen batalon Mednikarevo 20th Construction Mechanized Division 20ta Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya 20 SMD Gorublyane Sofia see bg 20 a obshostroitelna diviziya Command Staff Supply Company Gorublyane Sofia and Training Battalion Chelopechene 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Busmantsi battalion and company in Busmantsi battalion in Bukhovo platoon in Zhivkovo 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Darvenitsa Sofia three battalions and a company in Darvenitsa 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk MOK Elacite Ravna Reka 3 battalions at the Mining Refining Complex Elatsite 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Chelopech two battalions in Chelopech company in Mirkovo Special Regiment Specialen polk Busmantsi two battalions and a company in Busmantsi Special Regiment Specialen polk Chelopechene company and platoon in Chelopechene company in Chelopech 1st Service Regiment 1 Polk Usluga Bukhovo 2nd Service Regiment 2 Polk Usluga Sofia Automobile Machinery Company Avtomashinna Rota Chelopechene 25th Construction Mechanized Division 25 Stroitelna Mehanizirana Diviziya Sofia housing construction Command Staff Supply Company Training Battalion Sofia 1st Construction Regiment 1 Stroitelen Polk Zemlyane Sofia 2nd Construction Regiment 2 Stroitelen Polk Obelya Sofia 3rd Construction Regiment 3 Stroitelen Polk Boyana the National Cinema Center Sofia 4th Construction Regiment 4 Stroitelen Polk Obelya Sofia Special High Construction Battalion Specialen Batalon Batalon za Rabota po Visoki Obekti Zemlyane Sofia Automobile Machinery Regiment Obelya Avtomashinen Polk Obelya Obelya Sofia Service Company Osiguritelna Rota Lagera Sofia Electrical Machinery and Installation Brigade Elektromashinna i montazhna brigada Sofia Command Staff Supply Platoon Heavy Transportation and Mechanization Company Sofia 1st Installation Regiment 1 Montazhen Polk Sofia Independent Installation Platoon Samostoyatelen Montazhen Vzvod Chelopech 1st Installation Battalion 1 Montazhen Batalon Sofia 2nd Installation Battalion 2 Montazhen Batalon Blagoevgrad 2nd Installation Regiment 2 Montazhen Polk Plovdiv 1st Installation Battalion 1 Montazhen Batalon Smolyan 2nd Installation Battalion 2 Montazhen Batalon Sopot 3rd Installation Battalion 2 Montazhen Batalon Sliven 3rd Installation Regiment 3 Montazhen Polk Varna 1st Installation Battalion 1 Montazhen Batalon Devnya 2nd Installation Battalion 2 Montazhen Batalon Shumen 9th Construction Mechanization Brigade 9 Brigada za stroitelna mehanizaciya Chelopechene Sofia Command Staff Supply Platoon Construction Platoon Chelopechene Sofia Lift Transport Battalion Samostoyatelen Podemno transporten Batalon Chelopechene Sofia Automobile Machinery Battalion Samostoyatelen Avtomashinen Batalon Iskar Railway Station Automobile Machinery Battalion Samostoyatelen Avtomashinen Batalon Chelopech Building Materials Mixtures Regiment Polk za stroitelni raztvori Chelopechene concrete mixing trucks Combined Repair Workshop Obedinena remontna rabotilnica Chelopechene Support Institutions Complex Institute for Scientific Research Development Project and Implementation Activities of the Construction Troops Kompleksen Institut za Nauchnoizsledovatelska Razvojna Proektantska i Vnedritelska Dejnost na Stroitelni Vojski KINIRPVD SV Sofia Direction Napravlenie Nauchno izsledovatelska i Razvojna Dejnost Direction Laboratories Experimentation and Implementation Napravlenie Laboratorii Eksperimentirane i Vnedryavane Direction Projects Napravlenie Proektirane Higher People s Military School for Construction General Blagoi Ivanov Visshe Narodno Voenno Stroitelno Uchilishe VNVSU Gen Blagoj Ivanov Sofia 19 1 trained career Construction Troops officers Intermediate Military Construction Sergeant School Sredno serzhantsko voenno stroitelno uchilishe SSVSU School for Installation Cadres Shkola za montazhni kadri Burgas See also editru Stroitelnye vojska Soviet and Russian Construction TroopsReferences edit a b c Lewis 1982 p 135 Izlozhba pokazva cyalata istoriya na Trudovata povinnost v Blgariya www dnesbg com 16 June 2020 Dnes se navrshvat 100 godini ot szdavaneto na trudovata povinnost Radio Veliko Turnovo Retrieved 21 February 2022 International Labour Office 1920 Bulgarian Law on Compulsory Labour PDF International Labour Office Geneva Studies and Reports Series C No 3 2 Retrieved 21 February 2022 International Labour Office 1938 Reports and Inquires The results of compulsory labour service in Bulgaria from 1933 to 1936 37 p 7 PDF International Labour Review 38 4 510 521 Retrieved 19 February 2022 a b Belcheva Ekaterina 2014 Ptevoditel po fondovete na Stroitelni vojski v Drzhaven voennoistoricheski arhiv Veliko Trnovo 1920 2000 PDF p 12 Retrieved 22 February 2022 Naj izvestniya trudovak v stroitelni vojski e bil Todor Zhivkov BG Spomen Retrieved 21 February 2022 Sage Steven F 2018 Bulgaria In Megargee Geoffrey P White Joseph R Hecker Mel eds The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933 1945 Volume III Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany Bloomington Indiana University Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 253 02386 5 Nedyalkov Dimitr Iliev Blgarskata vojska drzhavniyat instrument za spasyavane na blgarskite evrei fakel bg Retrieved 19 February 2022 Hoppe Jens 2007 Juden als Feinde Bulgarians Zur Politik gengenuber den bulgarischen Juden in der Zwischenkriegszeit In Dahlmann Dittmar Hilbrenner Anke eds Zwischen grossen Erwartungen und bosem Erwachen Juden Politik und Antisemitismus in Ost und Sudosteuropa 1918 1945 Paderborn Schoningh pp 217 252 ISBN 978 3 506 75746 3 cited in Ragaru Nadege 2017 03 19 Contrasting Destinies The Plight of Bulgarian Jews and the Jews in Bulgarian occupied Greek and Yugoslav Territories during World War Two Online Encyclopedia of Mass Violence Retrieved 2020 03 08 a b Cohen David 27 January 2020 The Jewish labour camps in Bulgaria Retrieved 22 February 2022 12 ta sluzhba vremenna trudova povinnost INFORMACIONNA SISTEMA NA DRZhAVNITE ARHIVI Retrieved 19 February 2022 a b The Bulgarian Gulag in Bulgarian Deutsche Welle BG Retrieved 22 February 2022 Kwstas Pinelhs Ta Ntoyrntoybakia ths 8rakhs kai ths An Makedonias Eidisis gr in Greek Retrieved 2024 03 01 Ta Ntoyrntoybakia Apostoles sta Boylgarika tagmata ergasias apo th 8rakh kai thn Anatolikh Makedonia 1941 1944 toy Petroy Markopoyloy www mcnews gr in Greek Retrieved 2024 03 01 Aygerh Sofia 2011 Ntoyrntoybakia Ellhnes se Boylgarika Tagmata Ergasias PDF in Greek Archived from the original PDF on June 8 2012 Nelsn Mandela blagoslovi most postroen ot blgari PTEVODITEL PO FONDOVETE NA STROITELNI VOJSKI V DRZhAVEN VOENNOISTORIChESKI ARHIV VELIKO TRNOVO 1920 2000 g Guide to the Archive Funds of the Construction Troops at the State Military Historical Archive Veliko Tarnovo 1920 2000 Sofia Bulgaria Central Military Archive Archives State Agency 2014 pp archives government bg guides 9 P SV pdf VSU Lyuben Karavelov Curtis Glenn Eldon ed 1992 Bulgaria a country study Federal Research Division Library of Congress Library of Congress Country Studies Construction Troops T hese units were controlled by the Ministry of Construction Architecture and Public Services William J Lewis 1982 The Warsaw Pact Arms Doctrine and Strategy Cambridge Mass Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis McGraw Hill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Construction Corps Bulgaria amp oldid 1211350229, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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