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In Bulgaria 26 March is Thrace Day

| updated on 3/26/24 2:03 PM
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Photo: BTA

26 March is Thrace Day – the date was included in the official Bulgarian calendar in 2006, but has been celebrated long before that. On this day in 1913 the Bulgarian army conquered the Edirne fortress, until then deemed “impregnable”. The defeat forced the Ottoman Empire to sign the peace treaty of London, by force of which it handed its Balkan territories over to the victorious Balkan allies.
Officers and soldiers from the Second Bulgarian Army in the captured Edirne fortress
In June the Second Balkan War began. The Bulgarian army fought against Greece and Serbia over the disputed territories in Macedonia, and against Romania for Southern Dobrudzha. Taking advantage of this, the Ottoman army breached the border along the Midia-Enos line, occupied Edirne Thrace and drove the Bulgarian population away with much brutality.

For Thracians the date 26 March is a symbol of the struggle for freedom, a day to commemorate the fallen heroes, but also a day to remember the victims who lost their lives in the pursuit of the national idea, saysthe Union of Thracian Associations in Bulgaria, an organization that brings together the descendants of the Thracian Bulgarians.  

Varna is one of the cities where, in front of the Portal Monument to the 8th Infantry Sea Regiment, official ceremonies take place to mark the Day of Thrace and the 111th anniversary since the conquering of the Edirne fortress by the Bulgarian army during the Balkan War of 1912-1913.
The Portal Monument to the 8th Infantry Sea Regiment in Varna
“The main refugee waves took place after the Russo-Turkish of 1878, after the Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising of 1903, and most of all after the Balkan War (1912-1913), after the ruination of the Thracian Bulgarians, that was when the Bulgarians were driven out of Eastern and Western Thrace as well. More than 350,000 Bulgarians were forced to leave their homes and go to Bulgaria,” says Rumyana Valcheva, chair of the Thracian Association Captain Petko Voivode. “Some of them settled in Varna and the environs. It is difficult to say how many there are at the moment, but if we go back in time, maybe there were more than 20,000 people coming to Varna during the different migration streams, and the number of their descendants in our day is much, much bigger. That is why we are particularly proud to note that the Bulgarian “face” of Varna was shaped precisely by the coming of the Thracian refugees, mostly from Eastern Thrace, but there are some from Aegean Thrace as well. Not to mention the role of the descendants of the Thracian refugees in the construction and evolution of Varna.”

Interview by Mariela Dimitrova, BNR-Varna

Compiled by Elena Karkalanova

Photos:BTA, BGNES, National Museum of Military History, archive 



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