Bulgaria /
The evolution of Bulgaria is a fascinating journey from a backward and troubled Balkan state to a modern European nation. Richard Crampton's unique study traces the development of the Bulgarian people and their state, from the beginning of a national revival in the middle of the nineteenth cent...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Oxford ; New York :
Oxford University Press,
2007.
|
Colección: | Oxford history of modern Europe.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of maps
- List of tables
- Abbreviations
- Transliteration scheme
- Prologue
- [pt]. 1. Origins
- 1. Bulgaria and the Bulgarians
- 2. Bulgaria before the Ottoman conquest
- 3. The Bulgarians under Ottoman rule
- [pt]. 2. The Bulgarian national resistance, 1 : Introduction
- 1. The pre-renaissance
- 2. The kŭrdjaliĭstvo
- 3. Population movements
- [pt]. 3. The Bulgarian national resistance, 2 : The cultural revival and the creation of the modern Bulgarian state
- 1. The Tanzimat and the modernization of the Ottoman system
- 2. The education movement
- 3. Language and the press
- 4. The campaign for a Bulgarian Church
- 5. The revolutionary and political movements
- [pt]. 4. The Turnovo Constitution and the reign of Prince Alexander, 1878-1886
- 1. The Tŭrnovo constitution and political instability, 1879-1881
- 2. Prince Alexander's attempted authoritarian rule, 1881-1883
- 3. The restoration of the Tŭrnovo constitution and the rule of the liberals, 1883-1885
- 4. The national question, and the unification of Bulgaria and Eastern Rumelia, 1878-1885
- 5. War with Serbia and the deposition of Prince Alexander, 1885-1886
- 6. The election of Prince Ferdinand.
- [pt]. 5. Stefan Stambolov, Prince Ferdinand, and the quest for recognition, 1887-1896
- 1. Stambolov ascendant, 1887-1890
- 2. The decline and fall of Stambolov, 1890-1894
- 3. The recognition of Prince Ferdinand, 1894-1896
- 4. Parties, partizanstvo, and the political system
- [pt]. 6. Prince Ferdinand's personal rule, 1896-1912
- 1. The Macedonian question, 1894-1898
- 2. The ORC fiasco, 1894-1899
- 3. The agrarian crisis and the birth of BANU, 1899-1901
- 4. Money and Macedonia, 1900-1903
- 5. The Ilinden rising and the second stambolovist government, 1903-1908
- 6. The government of Malinov and the declaration of independence, 1907-1911
- 7. The growth of political radicalism
- [pt]. 7. Bulgaria at war, 1912-1918
- 1. Constitutional change and the formation of the Balkan league
- 2. The first Balkan war
- 3. The second Balkan war : the first 'national catastrophe'
- 4. From Balkan to European war
- 5. Bulgaria and the first world war : the commitment to the central powers
- 6. Bulgaria in the first world war : the second 'national catastrophe'
- [pt]. 8. Between two wars, 1919-1941
- 1. The treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine
- 2. The agrarians versus the communists, 1919-1920
- 3. BANU in power, 1920-1923
- 4. The tsankovist terror, 1923-1926
- 5. The government of the Democratic Alliance, 1926-1931
- 6. The People's Bloc and the great depression, 1931-1934
- 7. The zvenari government, 19 May 1934-January 1935
- 8. The personal regime of King Boris, 1935-1941
- [pt]. 9. Bulgaria and the Second World War, 1941-1944
- 1. The occupied territories
- 2. Domestic politics during the war
- 3. Bulgaria's military participation in the war
- 4. The regency and the end of the 'symbolic' war
- 5. Internal opposition : the Fatherland Front, and the partisan movement
- 6. Bulgaria's exit from the war
- [pt]. 10. Social and economic factors, 1878-1944
- 1. Demography
- 2. Stability and change
- 3. The persistence and dominance of the small peasant proprietor
- 4. Standards of living in rural areas
- 5. Agricultural backwardness
- 6. Urban growth
- 7. Industrial development
- 8. The state and industry
- 9. Public health
- 10. The position of women in Bulgarian society.
- [pt]. 11. The Communist acquisition of power, 1944-1948
- 1. The first purges, September 1944-May 1945
- 2. The communists versus the agrarians, May-November 1945
- 3. The communist offensive, December 1945-October 1946
- 4. The communists embattled, October 1946-February 1947
- 5. The peace treaty and the elimination of Perkov, February-September 1947
- 6. The Communists assume total control September-December 1947
- [pt]. 12. The Communists in power, 1 : The rule of terror, the reign of Vulko Chervenkov, and the rise of Todor Zhivkov, 1948-1965
- 1. The transformation of the social and economic order
- 2. The terror and the Stalinist purges
- 3. Vŭlko Chervenkov and the sovietization of Bulgaria, 1949-1953
- 4. The 'new course' in Bulgaria, 1953-1956
- 5. The April plenum 1956
- 6. Zhivkov versus Yugov, 1956-1962
- [pt]. 13. The Communists in power, II : The rule of Todor Zhivkov, 1965-1989
- 1. Todor Zhivkov
- 2. Building socialism
- 4. Zhivkov ascendant, 1965-1975
- 5. Zhivkov's external policies
- 6. The amazing career of Lyudmila Zhivkova
- 7. The decline of communist power : the collapse of the economic strategy
- 8. The decline of communist power : the 'regenerative process'
- 9. The decline of party authority, 1975-1985
- 10. The collapse of the Zhivkov regime, 1985-1989.
- [pt]. 14. Post-Communist Bulgaria, 1989-2005
- 1. Devising a new constitution, December 1989-July 1991
- 2. Treading water, October 1991-January 1995
- 3. The BSP government, January 1995-April 1997
- 4. The Kostov government and movement towards the EU and NATO, April 1997-June 2001
- 5. Government by 'the king' and entry into NATO and the EU, June 2001-June 2005
- 6. Postscript : the elections of 2005
- [pt]. 15. The minority and demographic questions
- 1. The Muslims : Turks and Pomaks, 1878-1989
- 2. The other minorities, 1878-1944
- 3. The minorities under communist rule, 1944-1989
- 4. The minorities since 1989
- 5. Recent demographic decline
- Epilogue : Bulgaria between East and West
- Appendix : Bulgarian political parties, 1878-1934
- Bibliographical notes
- General histories
- The Bulgarian national revival
- From the liberation to the end of the first world war
- From the end of the first to the end of the second world war
- Social and economic development from 1878 to 1944
- The years of communist domination, 1944-1989
- Bulgaria since 1989
- Minorities and ethnic questions
- Index.