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Embassy of Bulgaria, Ankara | Embassy of Turkey, Sofia |
Bulgarian–Turkish relations or the Turko-Bulgarian relations are the bilateral relations between the Republic of Bulgaria and the Republic of Turkey. Bulgaria has an embassy in Ankara, two general consulates in Istanbul and Edirne and a chancellery in Bursa. Turkey has an embassy in Sofia and two general consulates in Plovdiv and Burgas.
History
The Proto-Bulgarians (Bulgars) were the population from which the modern Bulgarians were formed. They were a Turkic people that originated in Central Asia and came to settle in the Balkans after the collapse of the Old Great Bulgaria in the 7th century. In the early Middle Ages, the Proto-Bulgarians were Slavicized and founded a second and third empire in the Balkans. Orthodox Bulgaria competed with the Muslim Ottoman Turks for supremacy in the Balkans and was eventually subjugated in a series of wars in the 15th century and subsequently incorporated into the Ottoman Empire. Numerous Turks immigrated to Bulgaria during Ottoman rule and in the Ottoman census of 1831, almost 37% of the population of Ottoman Bulgaria was Muslim. However, the Islamic population included not only Turks but also all other Muslims, including Pomaks, as many Bulgarians converted to Islam.
After the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) and the establishment of the Principality of Bulgaria and the autonomous province of Eastern Rumelia, a part of the Turkish population in the Bulgarian territories started returning to the Ottoman Empire. Bulgaria's status as an Ottoman vassal, which came about through international mediation, existed only de jure, and Bulgaria recognized the suzerainty of Istanbul at best symbolically. Bulgaria had its own constitution, flag and anthem and pursued an independent foreign policy. From 1880 it also had its own currency. In 1885, Eastern Rumelia was de facto annexed by Bulgaria after a bloodless revolution, which the Ottoman Empire accepted with the Tophane Agreement. On 5 October 1908, Bulgaria finally declared its complete independence as the Kingdom of Bulgaria. In the Balkan Wars, Bulgaria was able to conquer more territories from the Ottomans and the current border between Bulgaria and Turkey was established in 1913 with the Treaty of Constantinople, which ended the state of war between the two sides.
During World War I, there were no armed conflicts between the Ottomans and the Bulgarians, as both concluded the Ottoman–Bulgarian alliance. The war led to the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire, which was succeeded by the Republic of Turkey. Turkey then established diplomatic relations with Bulgaria, which recognized the mutual borders with the Treaty of Lausanne. In the interwar period, Turkey allied itself with Greece, Yugoslavia and Romania against Bulgaria and Hungary in the 1934 Balkan Entente. During World War II that soon followed, Turkey remained neutral, while Bulgaria cooperated with the Axis powers. After the end of the Second World War, Bulgaria became a part of the Warsaw Pact as the People's Republic of Bulgaria, while Turkey pursued a pro-Western foreign policy and joined NATO. Relations were also strained by which led to attacks by the Turkish National Liberation Movement in Bulgaria.
Bulgarian–Turkish relations subsequently improved. Both countries signed numerous agreements on intergovernmental cooperation and have intensified their economic relations. However, due to the high number of refugees from North Africa and the Middle East crossing the EU's external borders, Bulgaria began erecting a border fence on its border with Turkey in 2014.
European Union
Bulgaria joined the EU in 2007. Turkey is still a candidate country for the EU, and membership negotiations have been effectively frozen since 2016. Bulgaria fully supports Turkey's EU membership process, as it has effectively frozen membership negotiations.
NATO
Turkey joined NATO in 1952. Bulgaria joined NATO in 2004.
Economic relations
Both countries are important economic partners for each other. Turkey is one of Bulgaria's top 5 trading partners and accounts for almost 8 percent of total foreign trade. Between 2020 and 2022, the bilateral trade volume rose from $4.8 to $7.4 billion. 1,500 Turkish companies are active in Bulgaria and have invested more than two billion US dollars in the country.
Diplomacy
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See also
- Foreign relations of Bulgaria
- Foreign relations of Turkey
- Bulgarian Turks
- Bulgarian Turks in Turkey
- European Union–Turkey relations
- Bulgaria–Turkey border
- Turks in Europe
References
- ^ "History of Bulgaria | Key Events, Important People, & Dates | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
- Garabet K Moumdjian, Ph D. "OTTOMAN POPULATION, 1830-1914: Demographic and Social Characteristics, By KEMAL H. KARPAT".
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(help) - Lyman, Rick (2015-04-06). "Bulgaria Puts Up a New Wall, but This One Keeps People Out". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-07-21.
- "Relations between Türkiye and Bulgaria".
External links
- Turkish embassy in Sofia
- Bulgarian embassies in Turkey
- Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs about relations with Bulgaria
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