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"THE
FIRST
SIGN
of
true
political
wisdom
has
always
been
the
ability
to
give
up
the
unachievable,"
Stefan
Zweig
wrote.
Of
all
post-liberation
Bulgarian
statesmen
Stefan
Stambolov
seems
to
be
the
best
example
of
the
validity
of
this
rule.
He
is
the
most
enthusiastically
praised
and
the
most
violently
denounced
politician
in
Bulgaria's
modern
history,
and
what
could
be a
better
proof
that
he
was
an
extraordinary
personality?
Born
in
Turnovo
in
1854,
he
made
his
way
into
political
life
after
the
liberation
of
Bulgaria.
He
started
his
career
as a
champion
of
national
revival.
He
was
a
student
at
the
Odessa
Seminary,
an
envoy
of
the
Central
Revolutionary
Committee
in
Bucharest,
leader
of
the
suppressed
uprising
in
Stara
Zagora
in
1875,
head
of
the
1876
uprising
in
the
region
of
Turnovo.
Indeed,
he
participated
in
all
stages
of
the
national
liberation
movement.
He
also
wrote
a
book
of
poems,
Songs
and
Poems
by
Botyov
and
Stambolov,
and
worked
as a
journalist
for
the
Nova
Bulgaria
newspaper.
And
there
was
a
lot
more
than
that
in
his
versatile
and
complex
personality.
In
the
first
post-liberation
years
he
threw
himself
with
equal
energy
and
ambition
into
the
struggle
against
the
Treaty
of
Berlin,
into
the
formation
of a
liberal
party
and
into
parliamentary
debates.
Stambolov
actively
supported
the
unification
of
the
Principality
of
Bulgaria
with
Eastern
Rumelia
in
the
autumn
of
1885.
And
when
the
Bulgarians
were
called
to
defend
their
Fatherland
in
the
war
with
Serbia,
Stambolov,
who
was
at
that
time
Chairman
of
the
National
Assembly,
put
on a
soldier's
uniform.
He
was
not
one
of
Prince
Alexander's
admirers.
in
fact,
he
opposed
the
Prince's
absolute
power
and
demanded
the
restoration
of
the
Turnovo
Constitution.
But
in a
moment
which
was
crucial
for
the
state
he
was
the
one
to
oppose
Prince
Alexander's
abdication.
His
resolution
and
his
ability
to
distinguish
the
possible
from
the
impossible
turned
the
former
revolutionary
into
the
most
influential
and
respected
politician
of
the
Principality
of
Bulgaria.
He
was
the
natural
choice
for
a
first
regent
during
the
brief
interim
preceding
the
selection
of a
new
monarch.
Stambolov
displayed
the
best
of
his
political
talent
as
prime
minister
from
20
August,
1887
to
17
May,
1894.
His
rule
represented
the
strongest
push
for
Bulgaria's
overall
development
towards
European
standards.
He
was
responsible
for
Bulgaria's
modernization
in
economic,
political,
administrative
and
cultural
aspects.
His
laws
revealed
a
modern
statesman's
way
of
thinking.
foreign
diplomat
once
exclaimed.
Striving
for
economic
and
political
development,
he
built
a
complex
transport
network,
created
laws
which
promoted
agriculture,
provided
government
protection
for
locally
produced
goods,
and
signed
favorable
trade
contracts
with
the
large
European
states.
He
sought
to
improve
health
care,
local
self-government,
culture
and
urban
development.
On
the
other
hand,
Stambolov's
adversaries
had
much
to
blame
him
for:
authoritarian
rule,
violent
treatment
of
political
opponents,
persecution
of
the
opposition.
Despotic,
ambitious
and
militant,
Stambolov
did
not
care
about
obstacles
when
pursuing
an
objective.
His
purposefulness
eventually
led
to a
clash
with
the
no
less
ambitious
Tsar
Ferdinand
and
sealed
his
political
fate.
In
Western
Europe
Stambolov
has
been
referred
to
as
"the
Bulgarian
Bismarck".
The
strength
of
his
foreign
policy
also
reminded
some
of
the
German
"Iron
Chancellor".
Many
historians
describe
him
as a
"Russophobe"
because
of
his
daring
decision
to
break
off
relations
with
liberator
Russia.
On
the
other
hand,
he
did
not
rely
on
the
West,
either,
telling
Bulgarian
diplomats,
"We
can
never
count
on
Austria
because
of
our
interests
in
Macedonia".
Stambolov
carefully
maintained
the
internal
political
independence
of
his
country.
He
sought
diplomatic
support
in
Britain
and
Austro-Hungary,
but
his
commitment
to
London
and
Vienna
in
no
way
impaired
Bulgaria's
national
interests.
He
tactfully
pursued
a
peaceful
consolidation
of
Bulgarian
church
and
education
in
Macedonia.
He
was
the
only
person
able
to
bring
the
"Bulgarian
issue
,
which
sprang
from
the
severance
of
relations
with
Russia
and
the
lack
of
international
recognition
of
Tsar
Ferdinand,
to a
successful
resolution.
After
meeting
with
him,
monarchs,
aristocrats,
diplomats
and
statesmen
invariably
felt
respect
for
Stambolov.
He
was
slain
by
compatriots
a
year
after
he
had
resigned
as
prime
minister
-
the
usual
lot
of a
statesman
born
before
his
time.
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