Armistice with Bulgaria
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The Armistice with Bulgaria (also known as the Armistice of Solun) was signed on September 29, 1918. It was signed at the Bulgaria Armistice Convention. It regulated the conditions of suspensions Bulgaria would receive from the Allied Powers for taking part in World War I aligned with the Central Powers.
The signers that participated were General Louis d'Esperey and a Bulgarian Commission appointed by the Bulgarian Government: General Lonkhoff, M. Liapcheff, Minister of Finance, and M. Radeff, a former Cabinet leader.
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[edit] Terms
The terms of the armistice called for the immediate demobilization of all Bulgarian military activities. It ordered the evacuation of Bulgarian occupied Greek and Serbian territories. It placed limits and restrictions to the size of Bulgaria's military employment. Finally, it required Bulgaria to return military equipment that had been taken from the Fourth Greek Army Corps during the Bulgarian occupation of Southern Macedonia. The document would remain in effect until a final general peace was concluded.
[edit] References
- (1919) "Bulgaria Armistice Convention, September 29th, 1918". The American Journal of International Law Vol. 13 No.4 Supplement: Official Documents, 402-404.