How Russia Lost Bulgaria, 18781886: Empire Unguided
By (Author) Mikhail S. Rekun
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
23rd November 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
History
European history
327.470499
Hardback
240
Width 162mm, Height 229mm, Spine 21mm
562g
How Russia Lost Bulgaria looks at the rapid breakdown in Russo-Bulgarian relations in the years following the Russian liberation of Bulgaria in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878. Initially, the Russian Empire and the Principality of Bulgaria were close allies, bound together by sentiment, by geopolitical reality, and by strong administrative links the Bulgarian Minister of War was a Russian general on detached duty from the Imperial Army, to pick just one example. Yet by 1886, only eight years later, relations degenerated to such a point that a Russian-backed coup overthrew the Bulgarian monarch. The two countries would cut diplomatic relations for years. How Russia Lost Bulgaria argues that the behavior of Russian military and diplomatic agents in Bulgaria caused this rapid turnabout. These agents acted in a tactless, obnoxious fashion that offended the pride and sensibilities of both local Bulgarian politicians and of the German-born, Russian-appointed Prince Alexander von Battenberg. Having a Russian Consul-General refer to the leader of Bulgarias majority party as an unwashed, uncombed, country bumpkin did not improve relations, certainly. But to write off Russias agents in Bulgaria as bunglers and imbeciles is neither accurate nor intellectually satisfying. Underlying their actions is the fact that the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs was a weak and disorganized institution, and it failed to either develop a coherent policy approach to relations with Bulgaria, or to force its agents to carry out an approach once it was developed. Left to their own devices, Russian agents in Bulgaria fell back on their own ideas of how to advance the Russian Empires position, and in so doing they drove Russias relationship with a vital client state straight into the ground.
"Rekun gives us a close study of the deteriorating relationship between the first ruler of post-Congress Bulgaria, Prince Alexander of Battenburg, and the new countrys Russian patrons, the removal of Alexander through a Russian-inspired coup, and the subsequent failure of a rather ham-fisted Russian diplomacy to reconcile its imperial objectives with Bulgarian populist nationalism. This book offers a careful narrative of the decade following the creation of modern Bulgaria in 1878 that is well-informed by both Russian and Bulgarian archival research and a detailed understanding of the personalities and politics of the timein the Balkans and in the larger European sphereas well as a fresh, on the ground, perspective on the familiar contradictions of late-nineteenth-century nationalism and pan-Slavism. A finely polished work, it will be both of interest to historians and scholars of International Relations and accessible to undergraduate students." -- Howard Malchow, Tufts University
Mikhail Sergeyevich Rekun, PhD, works for the Yungon Education Group of Zhengzhou, China.