
THE BULGARIAN REVIVAL
In the middle of the 17th century the feudal Ottoman empire plunged into
serious decline. Significantly behind Christian Europe in a technological
aspect, it gradually began losing the 'holy war against the unfaithful'. In 1571
the bells of the Holy league of Christian fleets tolled the beginning of the end
of its military might at Lepanto. By force of habit the Ottoman war machinery
kept pushing the imperial troops towards the heart of Europe, but their strength
was obviously no longer up to the task. In 1683, after a series of ups and downs
and at the expense of heavy bloodshed, the Ottoman armies were brought to utter
catastrophe at Vienna by the troops of the Holy league. The latter combined the
efforts of the European states to which Muslim aggression was a menace Venice,
Austria, Poland and Russia. Christian Europe was already on the offensive and
thereon the European possessions of the Ottoman empire were to be consistently
shrinking.
Incapable of reforming itself in the spirit of the new times, the decrepit
empire sank into a deep economic and social crisis which was never overcome. Dry
rot had long been growing into obvious corruption all over the Ottoman
government and economic administration. This created favorable conditions for
the preparation and the actual attainment of Bulgaria's national liberation. In
its essence this process had the features and the character of a bourgeois-
democratic revolution. As a result of the all-round economic, political and
cultural uplift of the Bulgarian society in the l7th-l9th centuries, there arose
a natural conflict between the new Bulgarian bourgeoisie and the Turkish feudal
state. The specific conditions of life, peculiar to Bulgaria and its people,
determined the character of this conflict. Unlike the other economic analogues
in Europe, it was not only of social but also of national bearing. The decline
of the Ottoman Turkish state, paradoxical as it may sound, was one of the
strongest incentives for the economic upsurge of the Bulgarian people. Exempted
from participation in the imperial armies, the Bulgarians did not suffer the
monstrous losses, incurred during the post-seventeenth century unsuccessful wars
which had reduced the number of the Turkish population in the Bulgarian lands
several times. Lacking in basic living culture and obssessed with the Muslim
fanatical prejudice that no disease cure could be better than the one from the
hands of Allah, the Turkish population had tangibly shrunken as a result of the
frequent plague epidemics. These did not affect the Bulgarians who had the
experience, the knowledge and the will to fight any illness. Despite its losses
in the previous centuries, the Bulgarian Christian population considerably
outnumbered the Muslim part of it through the whole of the 18th century. In some
towns and even in whole regions, the Turkish population was represented only by
the families of the local administration sent to work there.
In the new conditions the labour-devoted Bulgarians, quite unexpectedly,
turned out to be much better off than the sparse Muslim population lacking in
economic experience as a result of its centuries long sole responsibility - to
be part of the war machinery of the empire. Slowly but steadily craft
manufacture - the foundation of all manufacturing industry in the Bulgarian
lands, passed into the hands of the nascent Bulgarian bourgeois class. This
Bulgarian-manned crafts industry was reorganized on the basis of new bourgeois
manufacture principles. The incorporation of the Ottoman empire into the
European capitalist economic system gave further impetus to manufacture and
trade. International trade was chiefly carried out by Bulgarian merchants, who
had accumulated capital to invest it in the expansion and modernization of new
enterprises. Upon the official abolition of the feudal system of land ownership,
the bourgeois style of production penetrated in agriculture, too. The peasants
started buying their land back from the Ottoman authorities or from Muslims
nearly ruined and got down to organizing prosperous private farms. Big farms
called chifliks occupied themselves with wholesale food production. Towards the
end of the Ottoman rule in the Bulgarian lands the chifliks comprised about
twenty five percent of all land and of the total agricultural produce.
The economic development of the Bulgarians was impeded by the Ottoman
political reality. As late as the middle of the 19th century, a number of
historical factors made the Turkish government 127 unable to abolish the
medieval feudal pattern of statecraft and management of its economy Heavy tax,
absence of state protection, corrupt administration, lack of legal guarantees
and national discrimination - these were some of the hindrances to substantial
industry. A scrutinizing look at the Turkish state realities and potentialities
for headway development brought the various strata of the Bulgarian society to
the conclusion that there would be no future for them within the boundaries of
that state. The Bulgarians from all walks of life, the Bulgarian bourgeoisie in
particular, were interested in restoring the Bulgarian independence and building
up a modern Bulgarian state. It was the bourgeoisie who were at the head of the
Bulgarian national liberation movement during the 19th century.
The struggle for national liberation flared up with several parallel actions
launched almost at the same time. The movement for national enlightenment and
for independent Bulgarian church was the first to break out as it was possible
to wage with methods prescribed by the law. This slant was extremely important
in the first decades of the 19th century since the Bulgarians were not
officially recognized as a separate people within the Ottoman empire. When the
Turks conquered the country at the end of the 15th century, they placed the
Bulgarian bishoprics under the oecumenical patriarchal in Constantinople and
considered all Christian peoples one Romilet i.e. a Roman people. That Graecized
Christian institution with corruption pervading it, unloaded fresh tax burden on
the Bulgarians, and yet, the consequences of the official introduction of the
Greek language in public worship and in schools were much more detrimental. This
tendency extended particularly after the establishment of the Greek state
independence in 1829. The Greek bishops in the Bulgarian lands became ardent
supporters of the so called Greek state megali idea, envisaging restoration of
the Byzantine empire within the boundaries of the Balkan Peninsula. They did not
acknowledge the Bulgarians existing as an independent ethnic community and waged
persistent struggle aiming at their denationalization.
The Bulgarian society reacted sharply to the nationalistic ambitions of the
patriarchal in Constantinople. The local communities led a stubborn struggle
against the Greek bishops' presence in the Bulgarian bishoprics. Meanwhile a
network of Bulgarian elementary and secondary schools was set up. The Bulgarian
initial demands boiled down to requests for the replacement of the Greek bishops
with Bulgarian ones and for the wide-spread use of the Bulgarian language in
church service. The patriarchal in Constantinople was relentless which made the
Bulgarians claim full independence of the Bulgarian church immediately after the
Crimean War in 1858. Between 1856-1860 the Greek bishops were expelled from
everywhere. A national center took shape around the Bulgarian community in
Constantinople, attracting eminent writers and public figures. That center took
up the leadership of church independence struggle. On 3 April 1860, during
Easter Sunday service in Constantinople, the Bulgarian bishop Illusion of
Makariopol expressed the will of the whole Bulgarian people by solemnly
proclaiming the separation of the Bulgarian church from the patriarchal in
Constantinople. The day commemorating the Resurrection of Jesus Christ coincided
with the resuscitation of the Bulgarian people. However, that unilateral act of
the Bulgarians was not sanctioned either by the see of Constantinople or by the
Turkish government. Russia, in her capacity as patron of the Orthodox peoples
within the boundaries of the Muslim empire - a right obtained as a result of her
victories over the Turks, did not approve of it either. The struggle continued
for another ten years. It was only when the Catholic propaganda in the Bulgarian
lands became disturbingly successful that Russia changed her attitude and,
eventually, forced Turkey to recognize de jure the situation which had existed
de facto. In 1870 a firman of the sultan decreed the establishment of an
autonomous Bulgarian church institution - the Bulgarian exarchate. All lands
inhabited by Bulgarians in Moesia, Thrace, Dobrudja and a large part of
Macedonia came under its jurisdiction.
The independence of the church and the establishment of national educational
institutions became heralds of the victory of the Bulgarian national revolution
for at least two reasons: they put an end to the assimilation of the Bulgarian
population and led to the formal international recognition of the Bulgarian
nation.
The struggle for autonomous church and for national enlightenment and culture
was waged along with the struggle for the political liberation of the country.
On this problem the Bulgarian bourgeoisie was not united. Some circles were of
the opinion that the Bulgarians had not been up to carrying out the armed
revolution by themselves and thus prescribed help from abroad, mainly from the
neighbouring Balkan countries and Russia. The upholders of this standpoint cared
to organise large Bulgarian armed detach- ments for both the Russo-Turkish wars
and the liberation uprisings of the other Balkan peoples. Their opponents
thought it possible to achieve the cherished political independence by
duplicating the so called 'Hungarian pattern' - a velvet revolution within the
Turkish state by gradually infiltrating the upper tiers of power in the economy,
local government, culture and education and then, by turning the Muslim empire
into something like the dual monarchy of Austria-Hungary
The most radically-minded part of the Bulgarian bourgeoisie saw no other way
to the liberation of Bulgaria except the one passing through the cathartic
flames of a nation-wide armed revolution. The first leader of that ideological
trend was Georgi As for the tactics, obviously influenced by past experiences of
the haidouk movement, he envisaged the setting up of Bulgarian armed detachments
in all of Turkey's Balkan neighboring states whose task it would be to make
their way into the Bulgarian lands. Rakovski expected these armed main bodies to
grow into an avalanche of discontented Bulgarians who would spontaneously join
in to ultimately form a strong national army capable of winning the country's
independence.
Rakovski's attempts in the 60s to carry out the Bulgarian national revolution
with 'pressure and sword' failed. Taking advantage of conflicting situations
between the Balkan states and their Muslim neighbor Rakovski tried, on several
occasions, to make his dream of shaping up the kernel of the Bulgarian national
army come true. However, upon the settlement of any of these conflicts, the
governments of Serbia and Romania always found their own reasons and excuses to
limit Rakovski's activity. In 1867 Rakovski died. His death put an end to one of
the significant stages of the Bulgarian national revolution.
Rakovski's revolutionary activity awakened the Bulgarian immigrants in
Romania and Russia. Their activity was a direct after- effect of the changes
taking place in European political life. The unification of Germany, the
liberation of Italy, the autonomy of Hungary - all these events inspired hope
for the approaching settlement of the Bulgarian national question. Several
centers of revolutionary activity had been set up to unite various groups of the
Bulgarian immigrant bourgeoisie looking for the best possible way to national
liberation. Their quests ranged from political combinations with Balkan and
European powers, through revolutionary printed propaganda to the dispatch of
armed detachments to the Bulgarian lands. In 1868 the last one of these, known
as the cheta of Stefan Karadja and Hadji Dimiter, consisted only of 120 men but
they had both the Balkans and Europe lost in admiration for their heroism.
Leading ceaseless battles against the Turkish regular and mercenary troops many
thousands strong, the cheta crossed Moesia. Stranded and besieged in the Balkan
Range, the revolutionaries fought to the last bullet. Rather than surrendering
they died in a desperate man-to-man battle.
After the failure of Rakovski's tactics and the utter defeat of the
detachments in 1867-1868, the Bulgarian liberation movement entered a phase of
total reassessment of its revolutionary strategy and tactics. In Bucharest in
1869, young revolutionaries moving in the circle of the eminent Bulgarian
intellectual Liuben Karavelov and his newspaper Svoboda (Freedom) formed a group
which was the precursor of a Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee I (BRCC),
set up before the end of that year. This new center had I the revolutionary
trends merge and come under the same hat. The center's political programme
subjected to criticism the social situation in Turkey, condemning it as an
indecent anachronism in the modern European civilization and exposing the
Turkish government as the obvious adversary to human rights and human progress.
Karavelov's notion of the liberation revolution placed, first and foremost,
reliance on the Bulgarian people and then, on aid from a foreign power. He
wrote: 'The Bulgarians should not count on Napoleon Ill, Alexander II, Pius IX
or Queen Victoria, they should rely only on themselves'. In this the staunch
democrat saw a prerequisite for Bulgaria 'to set its state in order, according
to the best ordinances (read 'constitutions') which had already been used by the
enlightened peoples - the American, the Belgian and the Swiss'.
However, in 1869-1870 the BRCC confined its activities to nothing else but
verbose public statements. The center did not undertake any real practicable
measures. For this reason, a group of radically-minded associates with Vassil
Levski at the head of it, launched some resolute and efficient initiatives
aiming at the political liberation of Bulgaria.
Vassil Levski, whom the present-day Bulgarians consider their greatest
national hero of all times and epochs, was born in Karlovo, a prosperous center
of craftindustry in 1837. At the age of twenty four he took the vows of a
deacon. The lot in store for the young Bulgarian was obviously not the one of a
monk living in resignation to the world. In 1862 he fled to Serbia and enlisted
as a volunteer in the Bulgarian legion raised by Rakovski. The legion took part
in the Serbo-Turkish hostilities. Between 1862-1868 Levski participated in
almost all Bulgarian armed assaults against the Ottoman empire.
The revolutionary theory which took form in Vassil Levski's mind towards the
end of the 60s, turned out to be a leap forward for the Bulgarian liberation
movement. Levski viewed the national liberation revolution as a concomitant
armed upheaval of the whole Bulgarian population in the Ottoman empire. It
followed that this uprising had to be well-prepared in advance, with all
adequate military training and proper coordination on the part of an internal
revolutionary organization branching out into committees in each living area.
That organization was supposed to operate independent from the plans or the
political combinations of any foreign powers which, as known by previous
experience, had brought only trouble and failure to the national revolutionary
cause.
Levski also determined the future form of government in liberated Bulgaria -
a democratic republic, standing on the principles of the Human and Citizen
Rights Charter of the Great French Revolution. That was the only document
hitherto known to guarantee the individual freedom of expression, speech and
association. In their essence Levski's ideas tallied with the most radical ideas
of the European bourgeois-democratic revolution.
In more practical terms, in 1869 Levski addressed himself to the task of
setting up local committees. By the middle of 1872 he had scoured the Bulgarian
lands with the dedication of an apostle, and succeeded in establishing a strong
network of committees in hundreds of Bulgarian towns and villages which were in
constant contact with and subordination to the clandestine government in the
town of Lovech. They provided weapons, organized combat detachments, and got
traitors and Turkish officials punished.
In May 1872, the Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee and the Internal
Revolutionary Organization, convinced that a coordination of the efforts would
be for the general good, merged into one organization. Revolutionary uplift
overwhelmed the whole country.
This enthusiasm was short-lived as only a few months on, in the autumn of
that year, during a robbery of a Turkish post-office meant to procure money for
weapons, the Turkish police picked up the trail of some committees in northeast
Bulgaria including the organization headquarters in Lovech. Numerous arrests of
revolutionaries followed, threatening the organization to fall through.
karavelov demanded that Levski should immediately rise the Bulgarians in revolt.
Levski, who was in Bulgaria at that time and was well-aware that the population
was yet unprepared, refused to fulfil the order and tried to take into his
charge all documentation belonging to the organization - a safety precaution
against its getting into Turkish hand, which could destroy the movement
completely. Unfortunately, he himself fell in the hands of the Turkish
authorities who put him on trial and sentenced him to death by hanging. Levski
was sent to the gallows in Sofia in February 1837. The death of Vassil Levski -
a generally recognized leader of the national revolutionary movement, caused
temporary crisis. The Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee was groping for
new ways and means. A number of revolutionaries undertook actions without
coordinating them with the underground headquarters, while others sank into
apathy.
By 1875 a group of young revolutionaries - Hristo Botev, Stefan Stambolov,
Nikola Obretenov and others, was ready to play an important role in the
Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee. They attempted at and partly
succeeded in restoring the internal revolutionary committee network. Taking
advantage of the deep crisis of the Ottoman empire (in 1875 Turkey was adjudged
bankrupt, while Bosnia and Herzegovina were shaken up by uprisings), the young
revolutionaries speeded up the preparation for an armed uprising. It broke out
in the spring of 1876 and was recorded in the annals of Bulgarian history as the
April uprising.
However, that uprising did not spread all over the Bulgarian lands. Only the
towns and villages, nestling among the mountain hills surrounding Plovdiv - the
capital city of Thrace, rose on a mass scale. In the other regions only guerilla
detachments had been set up. After several days of heroic fighting, it was
crushed with cruelty unheard of in the human history. The Turkish atrocities
were unprecedented. The troops made a massacre of the population both in
rebellious and non-rebellious settlements. In some places the inhabitants were
killed to the last man without distinction of age or sex. The Bulgarian
immigrants in Romania formed a detachment of 200 rebels. Led by Hristo Botev,
they seized the Austrian packet boat 'Radetzky' and, eventually, landed on the
Bulgarian bank of the Danube. It took some heroic battles for this cheta
(detachment) to be defeated, too. That happened in June 1876 when the Bulgarian
liberation uprising was fought to its bitter end.
Monastery of Rozhen Monastery
of Rila
Monastery of Preobrazhenie
Map of Bulgaria 1821 Hajduts
Finally, one man had the vision to build a national
revolutionary network. To synchronize the resistance in all of
Bulgaria
Vasil Levski
The Apostle Vasil Levski, roomed with Hristo Botev in an old shack in
Romania over one bitter winter. With no heating and the bitter winter winds
sweeping across the Danubian plain, Levski would wake up singing. Every morning
Botev was amazed at Levski's happy demeanor despite the brutal cold and their
lack of food.
Levski, together with Lyuben Karavelov, organized the Bulgarian Central
Revolutionary Committee, which established a network of agents in Bulgaria.
Levski spoke fluent Turkish. He would often act as a double agent and was brazen
enough to join, as just another Turk, the very Ottoman troops that were looking
for him!
Levski was siting in a tavern when he was betrayed to Ottoman troops, by a
Bulgarian priest. Levski managed to get out of the tavern and jumped across it's
fence, just as it looked like he would escape yet again, his shoelace became
tangled in the fence and he was caught.
During his questioning he did not reveal a single name of fellow
revolutionaries. When asked why he devoted his life to this task, he answered: "If
I win, all the people will win, if I lose, I will lose myself alone."
He was hanged on the 6 th. of February, 1873 in the outskirts of
Sofia. No one knows where his bones lie. Botev wrote one of his best poems on
The Hanging Of Levski
O you,
my Mother, my Native Land,
Why is your cry so sad and heart-rending!
And you, O Raven, accursed bird,
On whose grave croak you of ill impending?
I know, ah I know, you weep, my Mother,
Because you're a slave in bondage lying,
You weep because your sacred voice
Is a helpless voice in a desert crying.
Weep on, weep on! Near Sofia town
A ghastly gallows I have seen standing,
And your own son, Bulgaria,
There with dreadful force is hanging.
The raven gives its grim hoarse croak,
Dogs yelp, wolves howl, the sky is bleak,
Old men in prayers their God invoke,
Women shed tears, the children shriek.
The winter sings its evil song,
Squalls chase the thistles in the plain,
And cold and frost and hopeless tears
Wring and twist your heart with pain.
____________________________________________________
Once again the Bulgarian nation could not tolerate oppression
and countless Bulgarians were willing to give their lives for independence. The
struggle for Bulgaria's independence was fought on two fronts, with the sword
and the feather. Some of Bulgaria's best {revolutionary} poetry was written
during this time.
Hristo Botev
Let's hope they discover my rifle,
my rifle, my mother, my sword,
then wherever they meet with the foe
they can welcome him with a bullet,
give him a sword's caresses?
Obviously, it loses a lot in the translation. Still
you can get a fairly good picture of what motivated this man, by the name of
Hristo Botev, to give his life for his country. He also happens to be one of
Bulgaria's greatest poets. He was leading his small band of revolutionaries
through the Balkan, when he was killed in a skirmish with Ottoman troops.
Here's an excerpt from another one of his poems. It's about a
wounded freedom fighter dying in the Balkan. Wondering what has happened to his
friend named Karadja, he is visited during the night by mystical {Magical
maidens who live in the forests} Bulgarian creatures called 'Samodivas':
They
clap their hands and then embrace,
and singing songs towards heaven they take flight,
flying and singing until dawn arrives,
they search for Karadja's soul...