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Drama uprising

Drama uprising
Part of Axis occupation of Greece

Monument to the victims in Drama
Date28–29 September 1941
Location
Result Rebellion suppressed, massive reprisals by the Bulgarian Army
Belligerents
Communist Party of Greece (KKE)  Bulgaria
Commanders and leaders
Pantelis Chamalides
Apostolos Tzanis 
M. Michailov
Strength
1,200-1,300 (in Pangeo and Lekani Mountains) regular army, police and air force

The Drama uprising (Greek: Εξέγερση της Δράμας; Bulgarian: Драмско въстание, romanizedDramsko vastanie; Macedonian: Драмско востание) was an uprising of the population of the northern Greek city of Drama and the surrounding villages on 28–29 September 1941 against the Bulgarian occupation regime. The revolt lacked organization or military resources; the Bulgarian Army swiftly suppressed it, with massive reprisals. The revolt had guidance from the Communist Party of Greece (KKE).

Background edit

 
Map showing the Bulgarian-occupied areas of Greece (in green), and the location of Drama

The April 1941 German-led invasion of Greece was launched partly from Bulgaria, and on 20 April, just prior to the Greek surrender, I Corps of the Bulgarian Army crossed into Greece and occupied almost the whole of the northeastern part of the country east of the Strymon River. The Greek regions occupied by Bulgaria comprised: eastern Macedonia, including the provinces of Serres and Drama; and western Thrace, including the provinces of Kavala and Rhodope, and the island of Samothrace. While Samothrace was occupied by Bulgaria, the remainder of the Evros prefecture, at the land border with Turkey, was occupied by the Germans to avoid any potential confrontation between Bulgaria and Turkey. Unlike Germany and Italy in their respective occupation zones, Bulgaria officially annexed the occupied territories on 14 May 1941; they had long been a target of Bulgarian irredentism.[1][2][3][4]

The Bulgarian-occupied areas encompassed a population of about 590,000,[2][5] and between 14,168 km2 (5,470 sq mi)[6] and 16,682 km2 (6,441 sq mi) of Greek territory.[2] The occupied territories became part of Bulgaria from an administrative perspective, and were named the Province of Aegean (sometimes referred to as Belomorie).[6][7] However, the Germans considered the Bulgarian annexation "provisional" until a peace treaty was signed at the end of the war, retained control over mining and industrial concerns within the Bulgarian-occupied area, and also had extensive influence over military, political and economic matters within its boundaries. The uncertainty regarding the future of the Bulgarian-occupied territories exacerbated concerns among the population and between the Axis powers occupying parts of Greece regarding their future.[8]

For the first few months, the Bulgarian occupation authorities attempted to gain the support of the local population, deploying a substantial propaganda campaign, establishing Bulgarian schools, and giving food and milk to Greek children. They quickly realised that this approach would bear no fruit, and instead implemented drastic measures to Bulgarise the occupied territories.[5] In eastern Macedonia, the occupiers made efforts to gain the support of Slavic Macedonians, and encourage in them an identification with a Bulgarian national identity. This campaign was partly effective, and some of the Slavic Macedonians in the region welcomed the Bulgarians as liberators.[9] At the time of the Bulgarian occupation of eastern Macedonia, most of the Slavic Macedonians in the Macedonian region, which included parts of Greece, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Albania, had strong pro-Bulgarian sentiments.[10] The Bulgarisation campaign in the occupied territories saw all Greek public officials at almost every level deported. A ban was placed on the use of the Greek language, and the names of towns and places changed to the forms traditional in the Bulgarian language. In addition, the Bulgarian government tried to alter the ethnic composition of the region, by expropriating land and houses from Greeks in favor of Bulgarian settlers, and by the introduction of forced labor and of economic restrictions for the Greeks in an effort to force them to migrate.[1]

Tsar Boris III personally visited the annexed areas on 28–30 April, and gave speeches to reassure the local Greek and Slavic population.[11][need quotation to verify]

As of summer 1941 with the appearance of the first communist Partisans groups, they appealed towards the Macedonian Slavs to join the resistance.[12] With the capitulation of Italy in 1943 and the Soviet victories over Nazi Germany[13][14] more Slavic Macedonians, began to support the resistance forces led by Communist Party of Greece (KKE).[9][15][16][17]

Prelude edit

Immediately before the uprising, the activity of the teacher Thanasis Genios from the village of Irakleia was noticed, who later became known as the commissar of the 11th division of ELAS under the name "Lasanis". In August 1941, he appeared as the leader of the "Odysseus Andruzos" partisan detachment, in Mount Kerdilia. While in Kilkis, another group appeared under the name "Athanasios Diakos". The "Odysseus Andruzos" detachment carried out sabotage attacks on police stations in the villages of Efkarpia and Mavrothalassa. A second major operation was carried out on September 22 1941, when a German convoy was attacked near the town of Lachanas. This was followed by a strong response from the German forces, due to which the detachments almost disbanded.[18]

Their restoration took place almost in parallel with the occupation of this territory. Thus, at the initiative of Apostolos Tzanis, Paraskevas Drakos, Arampatzis and Lambros Mazarakis, the brothers Petros and Argyris Krokos, Petros Pastourmatzis, Gjorgji Bonchev, Nikolaidis, Atanas Karamurogi and others. The CPG Drama Committee soon started publishing and distributing the underground newspaper "Neos Dromos" in Greek, while leaflets were occasionally published in Macedonian Slavic as well.[18]

On August 20, 1941, the speech of Petros Pastourmatzis (nom de guerre: Kitsos[19]), was recorded at the first plenum of the Communist Party of Greece - District Committee for Drama region, where he informed that a headquarters was already formed which needed fighters who did not have families on their own. According to the testimony of one of the participants in this uprising, Gjorgji Bonchev, from the partisan headquarters on Mount Makros, an order was given to launch attacks on the municipality buildings, police stations and army objects in order to paralyze the occupier.[18][need quotation to verify] The date set for the start of these actions was the night between September 28 and 29, 1941 at 23:00.[18]

Uprising edit

In this situation, a revolt broke out on 28 September 1941 under the guidance of the Communist Party of Greece.[20] The uprising initially broke out in Doxato, where local Greeks attacked the police station and killed six or seven Bulgarian policemen. In another village, Choristi, a second group was recruited and moved to the mountains.[21]

Parallel to the events in Doxato, the group from Prosotsani attacked the municipality with 9 fighters, the police division with 20 fighters, and the army garrison with the rest 18 fighters. Next morning of September 29, in the town of Prosotsani, a people's government was declared. Gjorgji Bonchev addressed this rally in local Slavic,[18][22] while the proclamation for the uprising in Greek was read by Antonios Nikolaidis.

Reprisals edit

 
Bulgarian soldiers displaying their beheaded victims

The uprising was brutally suppressed by the Bulgarian occupation authorities. The following day, 29 September, all leaders were either killed in battle or in their attempt to escape to the German occupation zone.[21] However, Bulgarian retaliations were not limited to the rebels.[21] Bulgarian troops moved into Drama and the other rebellious cities to suppress the uprising and seized all men between 18 and 45. They were reported to have executed between 360 and 500 people in Drama alone.[23] According to the Bulgarian military reports, up to 1,600 Greeks were killed in the uprising and in the weeks that followed - but Greek sources claim thousands of civilian casualties.[24] Most of the members of the Communist Party of Greece were slaughtered by the Bulgarians, except for one member.[25] In the villages of Doxato and Choristi a total of 485 men were executed оn September 29.[21]

The main commanders and actors of these massacres are the Bulgarian police and military persons, Colonel Mihailov, Major Pecev, as well as the Commander of the Police, Stefan Magelanski.

The massacres precipitated an exodus of Greeks from the Bulgarian into the German occupation zone in Central Macedonia. Bulgarian reprisals continued after the suppression of the uprising, adding to the torrent of refugees. Villages were destroyed for sheltering “partisans” who were in fact only the survivors of villages previously destroyed. The terror and famine became so severe that the Athens government considered plans for evacuating the entire population to German-occupied Greece.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mazower (2000), p. 276.
  2. ^ a b c Lemkin (2008), p.187.
  3. ^ Hoppe (1986), p. 90.
  4. ^ Kennedy (1989)
  5. ^ a b Hoppe (1986), p. 91.
  6. ^ a b Bougarel, Grandits & Vulesica (2019), p. 156
  7. ^ Ĭonchev (1993), p. 63.
  8. ^ Hoppe (1986), pp. 89–90.
  9. ^ a b Danforth (1995), p. 73.
  10. ^ Woodhouse (2002), p. 67. "Most of the Slavophone inhabitants in all parts of divided Macedonia, perhaps a million and a half in all – had a Bulgarian national consciousness at the beginning of the Occupation; and most Bulgarians, whether they supported the Communists, VMRO, or the collaborating government, assumed that all Macedonia would fall to Bulgaria after the WWII."
  11. ^ Ĭonchev (1993), p. 47.
  12. ^ Apostolski & Stojanovski (1979), p. 332
  13. ^ Miller (1975), pp. 132–133.
  14. ^ Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia, Dimitar Bechev, Scarecrow Press, 2009, ISBN 0810862956 introduction.
  15. ^ Roudometof, Victor (2002). Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria and the Macedonian question. USA: Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 95–103. ISBN 0-275-97648-3.
  16. ^ Helenē Giannakakē, Peter Mackridge, Eleni Yannakakis (1997). Ourselves and Others: The Development of a Greek Macedonian Cultural Identity Since 1912. Berg Publishers. p. 52. ISBN 9781859731338.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Agnew, John (2009). Globalization and Sovereignty. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 74. ISBN 9780742566750.
  18. ^ a b c d e Андоновски, Христо (1995). Јужна Македонија од античките до денешните Македонци. Скопје: Македонска книга. pp. 164–172. ISBN 86-369-0282-7.
  19. ^ Kouzinopoulos, Spyros (2011). Δράμα 1941. Μια παρεξηγημένη εξέγερση (in Greek). Athens: Kastaniotis. p. 388. ISBN 978-960-03-5063-0.
  20. ^ Thanasis Hatzis, Η Νικηφόρα Επανάσταση που χάθηκε, Θανάσης, Dorikos, 1983, Vol. 1, p. 168
  21. ^ a b c d Mazower, Mark (2016). After the War Was Over: Reconstructing the Family, Nation, and State in Greece, 1943–1960. Princeton University Press. p. 292. ISBN 9781400884438.
  22. ^ Marolov, D-r. Dejan (2013). "Македонска Ризница". Македонска Ризница. 6: 34–38.
  23. ^ Κουζινόπουλος (2011). σελ. 152–156.
  24. ^ ЦДИА, ф. 176, оп. 3. а.е. 1063, л.341
  25. ^ Η Επανάσταση που χάθηκε. Α΄. Αθήνα: Εκδόσεις Δωρικός. p. 36
  26. ^ Miller (1975), p. 128.

Sources edit

  • Apostolski, Mihailo and Stojanovski, Aleksandar (1979). A History of the Macedonian People. Translated by Reid, Graham W. Skopje, Yugoslavia: Macedonian Review Editions (Institute of National History). OCLC 1179512380.
  • Bougarel, Xavier; Grandits, Hannes & Vulesica, Marija (2019). Local Dimensions of the Second World War in Southeastern Europe. Abingdon, UK: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-79877-1.
  • Hoppe, Hans‐Joachim (1986). "Bulgarian Nationalities Policy in Occupied Thrace and Aegean Macedonia". The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity. 14 (1–2): 89–100. doi:10.1080/00905998608408035. S2CID 129927316.
  • Human Rights Watch (1994). The Macedonians of Greece (PDF) (Report). New York: Human Rights Watch. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  • Ĭonchev, Dimitŭr (1993). Димитър Йончев, България и Беломорието (октомври 1940 – 9 септември 1944 г.) [Bulgaria and the Aegean (October 1940 – September 9, 1944] (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Military-Political Aspects, Dirum. OCLC 32465729.
  • Kennedy, Robert M. (1989) [1954]. "Chapter 4: The Occupation Zones and Forces". German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans, 1941–1944. 104–18. Washington, D.C.: Center of Military History, U.S. Army. OCLC 659474181.
  • Koliopulos, Iōannēs S.; Koliopoulos, Giannēs (1999). Plundered Loyalties: Axis Occupation and Civil Strife in Greek West Macedonia, 1941–1949. London: C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 978-1-85065-381-3.
  • Lemkin, Raphael (2008). Axis Rule in Occupied Europe. Clark, New Jersey: The Lawbook Exchange. ISBN 978-1-58477-901-8.
  • Mazower, Mark (1995). Inside Hitler's Greece: The Experience of Occupation, 1941–44. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-08923-6.
  • Mazower, Mark (2000). After the War was Over: Reconstructing the Family, Nation, and State in Greece, 1943–1960. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-05842-9.
  • Miller, Marshall Lee (1975). Bulgaria during the Second World War. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0870-8.
  • US Army (1986) [1953]. . Department of the Army Pamphlet No. 20–260. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. OCLC 16940402. CMH Pub 104-4. Archived from the original on 2009-06-19. Retrieved 2020-12-19.
  • Woodhouse, Christopher Montague (2002). The struggle for Greece, 1941–1949. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 1-85065-492-1.

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DramaDate28 29 September 1941LocationDrama Bulgarian annexed GreeceResultRebellion suppressed massive reprisals by the Bulgarian ArmyBelligerentsCommunist Party of Greece KKE BulgariaCommanders and leadersPantelis ChamalidesApostolos Tzanis M MichailovStrength1 200 1 300 in Pangeo and Lekani Mountains regular army police and air force The Drama uprising Greek E3egersh ths Dramas Bulgarian Dramsko vstanie romanized Dramsko vastanie Macedonian Dramsko vostanie was an uprising of the population of the northern Greek city of Drama and the surrounding villages on 28 29 September 1941 against the Bulgarian occupation regime The revolt lacked organization or military resources the Bulgarian Army swiftly suppressed it with massive reprisals The revolt had guidance from the Communist Party of Greece KKE Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Uprising 4 Reprisals 5 References 6 SourcesBackground edit nbsp Map showing the Bulgarian occupied areas of Greece in green and the location of DramaMain articles Balkans campaign World War II and Battle of Greece The April 1941 German led invasion of Greece was launched partly from Bulgaria and on 20 April just prior to the Greek surrender I Corps of the Bulgarian Army crossed into Greece and occupied almost the whole of the northeastern part of the country east of the Strymon River The Greek regions occupied by Bulgaria comprised eastern Macedonia including the provinces of Serres and Drama and western Thrace including the provinces of Kavala and Rhodope and the island of Samothrace While Samothrace was occupied by Bulgaria the remainder of the Evros prefecture at the land border with Turkey was occupied by the Germans to avoid any potential confrontation between Bulgaria and Turkey Unlike Germany and Italy in their respective occupation zones Bulgaria officially annexed the occupied territories on 14 May 1941 they had long been a target of Bulgarian irredentism 1 2 3 4 The Bulgarian occupied areas encompassed a population of about 590 000 2 5 and between 14 168 km2 5 470 sq mi 6 and 16 682 km2 6 441 sq mi of Greek territory 2 The occupied territories became part of Bulgaria from an administrative perspective and were named the Province of Aegean sometimes referred to as Belomorie 6 7 However the Germans considered the Bulgarian annexation provisional until a peace treaty was signed at the end of the war retained control over mining and industrial concerns within the Bulgarian occupied area and also had extensive influence over military political and economic matters within its boundaries The uncertainty regarding the future of the Bulgarian occupied territories exacerbated concerns among the population and between the Axis powers occupying parts of Greece regarding their future 8 For the first few months the Bulgarian occupation authorities attempted to gain the support of the local population deploying a substantial propaganda campaign establishing Bulgarian schools and giving food and milk to Greek children They quickly realised that this approach would bear no fruit and instead implemented drastic measures to Bulgarise the occupied territories 5 In eastern Macedonia the occupiers made efforts to gain the support of Slavic Macedonians and encourage in them an identification with a Bulgarian national identity This campaign was partly effective and some of the Slavic Macedonians in the region welcomed the Bulgarians as liberators 9 At the time of the Bulgarian occupation of eastern Macedonia most of the Slavic Macedonians in the Macedonian region which included parts of Greece Yugoslavia Bulgaria and Albania had strong pro Bulgarian sentiments 10 The Bulgarisation campaign in the occupied territories saw all Greek public officials at almost every level deported A ban was placed on the use of the Greek language and the names of towns and places changed to the forms traditional in the Bulgarian language In addition the Bulgarian government tried to alter the ethnic composition of the region by expropriating land and houses from Greeks in favor of Bulgarian settlers and by the introduction of forced labor and of economic restrictions for the Greeks in an effort to force them to migrate 1 Tsar Boris III personally visited the annexed areas on 28 30 April and gave speeches to reassure the local Greek and Slavic population 11 need quotation to verify As of summer 1941 with the appearance of the first communist Partisans groups they appealed towards the Macedonian Slavs to join the resistance 12 With the capitulation of Italy in 1943 and the Soviet victories over Nazi Germany 13 14 more Slavic Macedonians began to support the resistance forces led by Communist Party of Greece KKE 9 15 16 17 Prelude editImmediately before the uprising the activity of the teacher Thanasis Genios from the village of Irakleia was noticed who later became known as the commissar of the 11th division of ELAS under the name Lasanis In August 1941 he appeared as the leader of the Odysseus Andruzos partisan detachment in Mount Kerdilia While in Kilkis another group appeared under the name Athanasios Diakos The Odysseus Andruzos detachment carried out sabotage attacks on police stations in the villages of Efkarpia and Mavrothalassa A second major operation was carried out on September 22 1941 when a German convoy was attacked near the town of Lachanas This was followed by a strong response from the German forces due to which the detachments almost disbanded 18 Their restoration took place almost in parallel with the occupation of this territory Thus at the initiative of Apostolos Tzanis Paraskevas Drakos Arampatzis and Lambros Mazarakis the brothers Petros and Argyris Krokos Petros Pastourmatzis Gjorgji Bonchev Nikolaidis Atanas Karamurogi and others The CPG Drama Committee soon started publishing and distributing the underground newspaper Neos Dromos in Greek while leaflets were occasionally published in Macedonian Slavic as well 18 On August 20 1941 the speech of Petros Pastourmatzis nom de guerre Kitsos 19 was recorded at the first plenum of the Communist Party of Greece District Committee for Drama region where he informed that a headquarters was already formed which needed fighters who did not have families on their own According to the testimony of one of the participants in this uprising Gjorgji Bonchev from the partisan headquarters on Mount Makros an order was given to launch attacks on the municipality buildings police stations and army objects in order to paralyze the occupier 18 need quotation to verify The date set for the start of these actions was the night between September 28 and 29 1941 at 23 00 18 Uprising editIn this situation a revolt broke out on 28 September 1941 under the guidance of the Communist Party of Greece 20 The uprising initially broke out in Doxato where local Greeks attacked the police station and killed six or seven Bulgarian policemen In another village Choristi a second group was recruited and moved to the mountains 21 Parallel to the events in Doxato the group from Prosotsani attacked the municipality with 9 fighters the police division with 20 fighters and the army garrison with the rest 18 fighters Next morning of September 29 in the town of Prosotsani a people s government was declared Gjorgji Bonchev addressed this rally in local Slavic 18 22 while the proclamation for the uprising in Greek was read by Antonios Nikolaidis Reprisals edit nbsp Bulgarian soldiers displaying their beheaded victimsThe uprising was brutally suppressed by the Bulgarian occupation authorities The following day 29 September all leaders were either killed in battle or in their attempt to escape to the German occupation zone 21 However Bulgarian retaliations were not limited to the rebels 21 Bulgarian troops moved into Drama and the other rebellious cities to suppress the uprising and seized all men between 18 and 45 They were reported to have executed between 360 and 500 people in Drama alone 23 According to the Bulgarian military reports up to 1 600 Greeks were killed in the uprising and in the weeks that followed but Greek sources claim thousands of civilian casualties 24 Most of the members of the Communist Party of Greece were slaughtered by the Bulgarians except for one member 25 In the villages of Doxato and Choristi a total of 485 men were executed on September 29 21 The main commanders and actors of these massacres are the Bulgarian police and military persons Colonel Mihailov Major Pecev as well as the Commander of the Police Stefan Magelanski The massacres precipitated an exodus of Greeks from the Bulgarian into the German occupation zone in Central Macedonia Bulgarian reprisals continued after the suppression of the uprising adding to the torrent of refugees Villages were destroyed for sheltering partisans who were in fact only the survivors of villages previously destroyed The terror and famine became so severe that the Athens government considered plans for evacuating the entire population to German occupied Greece 26 References edit a b Mazower 2000 p 276 a b c Lemkin 2008 p 187 Hoppe 1986 p 90 Kennedy 1989 a b Hoppe 1986 p 91 a b Bougarel Grandits amp Vulesica 2019 p 156 Ĭonchev 1993 p 63 Hoppe 1986 pp 89 90 a b Danforth 1995 p 73 Woodhouse 2002 p 67 Most of the Slavophone inhabitants in all parts of divided Macedonia perhaps a million and a half in all had a Bulgarian national consciousness at the beginning of the Occupation and most Bulgarians whether they supported the Communists VMRO or the collaborating government assumed that all Macedonia would fall to Bulgaria after the WWII Ĭonchev 1993 p 47 Apostolski amp Stojanovski 1979 p 332 Miller 1975 pp 132 133 Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Macedonia Dimitar Bechev Scarecrow Press 2009 ISBN 0810862956 introduction Roudometof Victor 2002 Collective Memory National Identity and Ethnic Conflict Greece Bulgaria and the Macedonian question USA Greenwood Publishing Group pp 95 103 ISBN 0 275 97648 3 Helene Giannakake Peter Mackridge Eleni Yannakakis 1997 Ourselves and Others The Development of a Greek Macedonian Cultural Identity Since 1912 Berg Publishers p 52 ISBN 9781859731338 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Agnew John 2009 Globalization and Sovereignty Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers p 74 ISBN 9780742566750 a b c d e Andonovski Hristo 1995 Јuzhna Makedoniјa od antichkite do deneshnite Makedonci Skopјe Makedonska kniga pp 164 172 ISBN 86 369 0282 7 Kouzinopoulos Spyros 2011 Drama 1941 Mia pare3hghmenh e3egersh in Greek Athens Kastaniotis p 388 ISBN 978 960 03 5063 0 Thanasis Hatzis H Nikhfora Epanastash poy xa8hke 8anashs Dorikos 1983 Vol 1 p 168 a b c d Mazower Mark 2016 After the War Was Over Reconstructing the Family Nation and State in Greece 1943 1960 Princeton University Press p 292 ISBN 9781400884438 Marolov D r Dejan 2013 Makedonska Riznica Makedonska Riznica 6 34 38 Koyzinopoylos 2011 sel 152 156 CDIA f 176 op 3 a e 1063 l 341 H Epanastash poy xa8hke A A8hna Ekdoseis Dwrikos p 36 Miller 1975 p 128 Sources editApostolski Mihailo and Stojanovski Aleksandar 1979 A History of the Macedonian People Translated by Reid Graham W Skopje Yugoslavia Macedonian Review Editions Institute of National History OCLC 1179512380 Bougarel Xavier Grandits Hannes amp Vulesica Marija 2019 Local Dimensions of the Second World War in Southeastern Europe Abingdon UK Routledge ISBN 978 0 429 79877 1 Hoppe Hans Joachim 1986 Bulgarian Nationalities Policy in Occupied Thrace and Aegean Macedonia The Journal of Nationalism and Ethnicity 14 1 2 89 100 doi 10 1080 00905998608408035 S2CID 129927316 Human Rights Watch 1994 The Macedonians of Greece PDF Report New York Human Rights Watch Retrieved 22 December 2020 Ĭonchev Dimitŭr 1993 Dimitr Jonchev Blgariya i Belomorieto oktomvri 1940 9 septemvri 1944 g Bulgaria and the Aegean October 1940 September 9 1944 in Bulgarian Sofia Military Political Aspects Dirum OCLC 32465729 Kennedy Robert M 1989 1954 Chapter 4 The Occupation Zones and Forces German Antiguerrilla Operations in the Balkans 1941 1944 104 18 Washington D C Center of Military History U S Army OCLC 659474181 Koliopulos Iōannes S Koliopoulos Giannes 1999 Plundered Loyalties Axis Occupation and Civil Strife in Greek West Macedonia 1941 1949 London C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 978 1 85065 381 3 Lemkin Raphael 2008 Axis Rule in Occupied Europe Clark New Jersey The Lawbook Exchange ISBN 978 1 58477 901 8 Mazower Mark 1995 Inside Hitler s Greece The Experience of Occupation 1941 44 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08923 6 Mazower Mark 2000 After the War was Over Reconstructing the Family Nation and State in Greece 1943 1960 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05842 9 Miller Marshall Lee 1975 Bulgaria during the Second World War Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0870 8 US Army 1986 1953 The German Campaigns in the Balkans Spring 1941 A Model of Crisis Planning Department of the Army Pamphlet No 20 260 Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History OCLC 16940402 CMH Pub 104 4 Archived from the original on 2009 06 19 Retrieved 2020 12 19 Woodhouse Christopher Montague 2002 The struggle for Greece 1941 1949 C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 492 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Drama uprising amp oldid 1189740401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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