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Tsar
Boris
III
of
Bulgaria
(January
30,
1894
-
August
28,
1943),
son
of
Ferdinand
I,
came
to
the
throne
in
1918
upon
the
abdication
of
his
father,
following
Bulgaria's
defeat
in
World
War
I.
This
was
the
country's
second
major
defeat
in
only
five
years,
after
the
disastrous
Second
Balkan
War
(1913).
Under
the
Treaty
of
Neuilly,
Bulgaria
was
forced
to
cede
land
to
its
neighbors
and
pay
crippling
reparations,
thereby
threatening
political
and
economic
stability.
Two
movements,
the
Agrarian
Union
and
the
Communist
Party,
were
calling
for
the
overthrow
of
the
monarchy
and
change
of
government.
It
was
in
these
circumstances
that
Boris
succeeded
to
the
throne.
One
year
after
Boris's
accession,
Aleksandar
Stamboliyski
of
the
Agrarian
Union
was
elected
prime
minister.
Though
popular
with
the
large
peasant
class,
he
earned
the
animosity
of
the
middle
class
and
military,
which
toppled
his
government
in
1923.
In
1925,
Greece
declared
war.
Despite
the
intervention
of
the
League
of
Nations,
the
turmoil
continued
until
1934,
when
Boris
helped
the
military
establish
a
dictatorship.
The
following
year,
he
assumed
control
of
the
country,
ruling
as
an
absolute
monarch.
Boris
married
Giovanna
of
Savoy,
daughter
of
Victor
Emmanuel
III
of
Italy,
first
in
Assisi
in
October
1930,
and
then
at
an
Orthodox
ceremony
in
Sofia.
The
marriage
produced
a
daughter,
Marie-Louise
in
January
1933
and
a
son
and
heir
in
Simeon
in
1937.

In
the
early
days
of
World
War
II,
popular
sentiment
swayed
toward
Germany,
which
had
forced
Romania
to
cede
southern
Dobruja
back
to
Bulgaria.
In
1941,
Boris
reluctantly
allied
himself
with
the
Axis
Powers
and
joined
Germany's
war
against
Greece
and
the
Yugoslavia
in
an
attempt
to
regain
territories
lost
under
the
Treaty
of
Neuilly.
However,
in
spite
of
siding
with
Nazi
Germany,
Boris
consistently
refused
cooperation
on
two
major
issues.
In
early
1943,
Nazi
officials
requested
that
Bulgaria's
Jews
be
sent
to
Poland
as
part
of
Hitler's
"final
solution."
The
request
caused
public
outcry,
led
by
prominent
figures
such
as
Parliament
Chairman
Dimitar
Peshev
and
Archbishop
Stefan
of
Sofia.
Boris
was
thus
compelled
to
cancel
the
deportation
of
Bulgaria's
50,000
Jews
to
Auschwitz.
Even
more
threatening
to
Hitler,
however,
was
the
tsar's
refusal
to
declare
war
on
the
Soviet
Union,
particularly
as
the
war
was
turning
against
Germany.
In
August
1943,
Hitler
summoned
Boris
to a
stormy
meeting
in
Berlin.
While
Boris
agreed
to
declare
war
on
the
distant
United
Kingdom
and
United
States,
he
again
refused
to
get
Bulgaria
involved
in
the
war
against
the
USSR.
The
"symbolic"
war
against
the
Western
Allies
turned
a
disaster
for
the
citizens
of
Sofia
as
the
city
was
heavily
bombarded
by
the
US
and
British
Air
Force
in
1943
and
1944.
Shortly
after
returning
to
Sofia,
Boris
died
of
apparent
heart
failure
while
hiking
in
Rila
Mountain.
Many
believed
he
was
poisoned
by
Hitler
in
an
attempt
to
put
a
more
obedient
government
in
place.
Boris
was
succeeded
by
his
six-year-old
son
Simeon
II.
He
was
buried
in
the
ancient
Rila
Monastery.
After
assuming
power
in
1944,
the
Communist-dominated
government
had
his
body
exhumed
and
secretly
buried
in
the
courtyard
of
Vrana
Palace.
After
the
fall
of
the
Berlin
Wall,
there
was
an
excavation
attempt
but
only
Boris's
heart
was
recovered.
It
was
reburied
at
Rila
Monastery.
Special
Thanks
to
Wikipedia |