
Aleksandar Stamboliyski (1 March 1879 – 14 June 1923) was Prime Minister of Bulgaria from 14 October 1919 to 9 June 1923, succeeding Teodor Teodorov and preceding Aleksandar Tsankov. He was a member of the centrist BZNS party.
Biography[]
Aleksandar Stamboliyski was born in Slavovitsa, Principality of Bulgaria in 1879, the son of a wealthy peasant family. He went to study agriculture in Germany, and, upon his return, he became head of the Bulgarian Agrarian National Union in 1908, gaining a seat in Parliament. He was imprisoned in 1915, but in 1918 the powerful, populist leader was released in the hope that he might be able to contain growing army unrest. With the more traditional forces discredited, his party polled 31% at the elections of August 1919, whereupon he became Prime Minister. He established effectively a one-party agrarian state which discriminated heavily against urban dwelling areas, such as through severe property restrictions. Despite his success in gaining relatively light terms of punishment at the Paris Peace Conference, he was nonetheless opposed by many right-wing and military groups for allowing the reduction in size of his army. They also opposed his efforts to improve relations with Yugoslavia, which had just taken control of Macedonia, and with the Communist Soviet Russia. On 9 June 1923, he was deposed in a right-wing coup. Five days later he was discovered in hiding, and brutally murdered, his severed head being sent to Sofia in a cake tin.