Principality of Bulgaria

Principality of Bulgaria
Княжество България
Knyazhestvo Bălgariya
1878–1908
Flag
State coat of arms
(1881–1927)
Motto: Съединението прави силата
Saedinenieto pravi silata
("Unity makes strength")
Anthem: "Шуми Марица"
Shumi Maritsa
Maritsa Rushes
(1886–1908)
Royal anthem: "Боже, Царя храни!"
Bozhe, Tsarya khrani!
God Save the Tsar!
Principality of Bulgaria (dark green) and Eastern Rumelia (light green), united in 1885, formally as a personal union.
  •   Principality of Bulgaria
StatusVassal of the Ottoman Empire
CapitalPlovdiv
(1878) (Provisional Russian Administration in Bulgaria)
Sofia
(1878–1908) (Provisional Russian Administration in Bulgaria until June 1879)
Tarnovo
(1879) (Bulgarian Constituent Assembly election, 1879)
Official languagesBulgarian
Religion
Orthodox Christianity, Sunni Islam (minority)
Demonym(s)Bulgarian
GovernmentUnitary absolute monarchy (1878–1879)
Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy (from 1879)
Knyaz (Prince) 
 1879–1886
Alexander I
 1887–1908
Ferdinand I
Regents 
 1886–1887
Stefan Stambolov
 1886–1887
Sava Mutkurov
 1886–1887
Petko Karavelov
Chairman of the Council of Ministers 
 1879 (first)
Todor Burmov
 1908 (last)
Aleksandar Malinov
LegislatureNone (rule by decree) (1878–1879)
National Assembly (from 1879)
History 
3 March 1878
13 July 1878
28 April 1879
6 September 1885
5 October 1908
CurrencyBulgarian lev
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Danube Vilayet
Eastern Rumelia
Tsardom of Bulgaria
Today part ofBulgaria
Serbia

The Principality of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Княжество България, romanized: Knyazhestvo Balgariya) was a vassal state under the suzerainty of the Ottoman Empire. It was established by the Treaty of Berlin in 1878.

After the Russo-Turkish War ended with a Russian victory, the Treaty of San Stefano was signed by Russia and the Ottoman Empire on 3 March 1878. Under this, a large Bulgarian vassal state was agreed to, which was significantly larger: its lands encompassed nearly all ethnic Bulgarians in the Balkans, and included most of Moesia, Thrace and Macedonia, stretching from the Black Sea to the Aegean. However, the United Kingdom and Austria-Hungary were against the establishment of such a large Russian client state in the Balkans, fearing it would shift the balance of power in the Mediterranean. Due to this, the great powers convened and signed the Treaty of Berlin, superseding the Treaty of San Stefano, which never went into effect. This created a much smaller principality, alongside an autonomous Eastern Rumelia within the Ottoman Empire.

In practice, Bulgaria's status as an Ottoman vassal was a legal fiction, and Bulgaria only acknowledged the authority of the Sublime Porte in a formal way. It had its own Constitution, flag and anthem, and conducted its own foreign policy. From 1880, it had its own currency as well. In 1885, a bloodless revolution resulted in Eastern Rumelia being de facto annexed by Bulgaria, which the Ottoman Empire accepted with the Tophane Agreement. On 5 October 1908, Bulgaria formally declared its independence as the Kingdom of Bulgaria.