Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Czech journalist Vladimir Sis and the Balkan War

 

© Photo: Veneta Pavlova

The cover of the Bulgarian edition of the book

Some 100 years ago a book, entitled “From Bulgarian Battlefields” was published in Prague. The book collects the reports by Czech journalist Vladimir Sis from the Balkan war (1912-1913). Vladimir Sis was just 23-years-old when he began sending his reports as a correspondent for the Narodni Listy newspaper in Prague. The book is published for the first time in Bulgaria. One of the consultants for the Bulgarian edition was Colonel Dimitar Zafirov from the Georgi Sava Rakovski military academy. Here is what he told Radio Bulgaria:

“He is a Slavophile, a Bulgarophile and a very good journalist. He traveled across Europe and when he came to Bulgaria he created a number of connections with the royal court here and the military elite. That is how he was granted such access to the events of the Balkan War that no other foreign reporter had at the time. In his book he presents a realistic picture from the first period of the Bulgarian participation in the Balkan War. He also deals with the Serbian actions and pays attention to the battles on the western frontline. However, he focuses mostly on the battlefields in the region of Eastern Thrace where mostly Bulgarian forces operated.”

© Photo: wikipedia.org

In his reports Vladimir Sis tells about the atmosphere before the war and the mobilization. He writes also about the battles near Lozengrad, Catalca, Bunarhisar and others. While other reporters were receiving censured information from the military he was allowed to be at the frontline. After the victory in Lule Burgas, Sis asked an officer about the heroism of Bulgarian soldiers. “It is all due to the selflessness, courage and intelligence of the Bulgarian soldier. Even when all officers of a battalion were killed, not a single soldier thought of retreat,” the officer answered. In cases like this command was taken by the highest military rank or when there is no one with a higher rank, by the most experienced soldiers.

The personal example and great courage shown by Bulgarian officers during the war also had an incredible effect on the soldiers. “Officers lived in the same conditions as the ordinary soldiers,” reporter Vladimir Sis writes.

English version: Alexander Markov

По публикацията работи: Veneta Pavlova


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

On September 20, Prof. Ludmil Vagalinski's team discovered a statue in Heraclea Sintica, three days later they also discovered the head of the sculpture.

Floor mosaic and the head of a Roman statue discovered at Heraclea Sintica

The head of a statue has been unearthed during excavations in the great canal of the ancient city of Heraclea Sintica located in Southwestern Bulgaria, close to the town of Petrich. The head longs to the statue that was discovered a few days ago..

published on 9/23/24 4:48 PM

85 European archaeologists meet in Bulgaria to discuss "Frontier Landscapes along the Danube"

From 23 to 28 September, Sofia and Vidin will host the 7th International Conference on the Roman Danubian Provinces on the theme "Frontier Landscapes along the Danube", reports BNR Vidin. The initiative was taken by the University of Ferrara, Italy...

published on 9/23/24 8:45 AM
Memorial on Tsarevets hill in Veliko Tarnovo where the independence of Bulgaria was proclaimed

On 22 September 1908 Bulgaria gained its independence

The independence of Bulgaria was proclaimed on 22 September, 1908. After the most audacious independent act in Bulgarian history – the unification of Eastern Rumelia with the Principality of Bulgaria – Bulgarians once again demonstrated the power of..

published on 9/22/24 7:05 AM