Bucharest Peace Accords

Bucharest Peace Accord (Bucharest, 28. ⅶ / 10. ⅷ 1913) – Agreement between Greece, Serbia, Montenegro and Romania, one, and Bulgaria on the other. The agreement committed a division of territories after the changes created by the war and established new borders. Macedonia was divided between Greece, Serbia and Bulgaria. Serbia retained the occupied Vardar part of Macedonia, without Strumica, and Greece occupied Aegean part of Macedonia to the east to the mouth of the R. Places in the Aegean Sea. The smallest Pirins part of Macedonia was left on Bulgaria. The mixed Serbian-Bulgarian and the mixed Greek-Bulgarian commission were obliged to mark the terrain of the new borders, within 15 days from the signing of the contract. Bulgaria was obliged to translate its army into a peacetime, with the evacuation of the occupied territories (old and new) to begin immediately after the demobilization of the army and end in 15 days. After the exchange of ratifications, the signatories were envisaged to exchange the captives. Lit.: Documents for the struggle of the Macedonian people for autonomy and national state, 1, Skopje, 1981; Skopje, 2000; Macedonia in international agreements 1875-1919, Skopje, 1994. M. Min.


Original article in Macedonian language Cyrillic alphabet
Кириличен напис БУКУРЕШКИ МИРОВЕН ДОГОВОР

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