Data

Name: Treaty of Bucarest

Type: Event

Start: 1913 AD

End: 1913 AD

Parent: Second Balkan War

All Statistics: All Statistics

Icon Treaty of Bucarest

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Was the treaty that ended the Second Balkan War.

Chronology


Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation

  • August 1913: The eastern frontier of Serbia was drawn from the top of Patarika and followed the watershed between the Vardar and Struma rivers to the Greek-Bulgarian border, except for the Strumica valley which remained in Bulgaria.
  • August 1913: After the First Balkan War of 1912, territories of Kosovo and north-western Macedonia were internationally recognised as a part of Serbia and northern Metohija as a part of Montenegro at the Treaty of London of May 1913. The final borders were ratified at the Treaty of Bucharest of 1913.
  • August 1913: Bulgarians stopped the Serbian offensive in Macedonia at Kalimanci.
  • August 1913: The border between Greece and Bulgaria was drawn from the Belasica crest at the mouth of the Mesta river on the Aegean Sea, including large parts of Epirus, Macedonia and Thessaloniki.
  • August 1913: The island of Crete was definitively assigned to Greece.
  • August 1913: In 1913, as a result of the Treaty of Bucharest, Bulgaria ceded southern Dobruja to Romania.
  • August 1913: The European borders of Turkey were set with the Treaty of Bucarest that ended the Second Balkan War.
  • August 1913: After the retreat of both the Bulgarian and Greek armies, an autonomous state was declared in Western Thrace with Ottoman support to prevent Bulgarian rule following the Treaty of Bucharest.
  • August 1913: The Sofia government obtained the Blagoevgrad district and a part of Western Thrace.

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