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Пълно е с глупости, но може да се научат интересни факти за Балканските войни. Не ми е ясно само как някакво партизанско отрядче би "освободило" Струмица, ако нашите сами не се изтегляха оттам. Пропускат да напишат, че нашата армия гони немците от Струмица по-късно. И нещо доста забавно. На картинката за битката при Ключ на Самуил ясно се вижда старият надпис БЛЪГАРЪ...
On October 21, 1912, a Bulgarian detachment entered Strumica, while the following day, larger Serbian and Bulgarian army units followed. The military authority was given to the commander of the Serbian units stationed in the city. A couple of days later, 5,000 Turks were slain on the right hand side of the road to Radovis and significant number of Turkish population was also killed in the villages.
After the Second Balkan War (1913), according to the Bucharest Peace Treaty, the Strumica district remained under Bulgarian rule, while the neighboring districts were held by Serbia.
In the summer of 1913, Strumica and its district experienced another, short-lived but vandal and severe occupation by the Greek army. Only nine days after the outbreak of the Second Balkan War, on June 25, the Greek army entered the city and on August 8 set it on fire, which raged until August 15. Over 1,900 public buildings, churches, houses, cafes, warehouses, and practically all cultural and historical monuments, were destroyed. Entirely or partially, the Greeks also burnt down the villages Kosturino, Raborci, Popcevo, Dabile, Novo Selo, Zubovo, and Cam Ciflik. The latter was never reconstructed. On their departure, August 17, they set on fire the Veljusa Monastery, burning down the monastery overnight shelter and partially the church.
In 1919, according to the Versailles Peace Treaty, the Strumica district was included in the newly established Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Hence, once a central Macedonian region, Strumica, after the partition of Macedonia, became a border zone, which resulted in its long years of stagnation.
Strumica made great contribution to the National Liberation Movement in the Second World War. Under the banner of the Fourth Macedonian Action Brigade, then of the 14th and 20th, the Strumica Partisan detachment and other units of the 50th and 51st Macedonian division, 3,800 fighters from the Strumica region took part. One of these soldiers was proclaimed a national hero (Blagoj Jankov - Muceto), 11 were awarded the 1941 Partisan Memorial Medal, 73 were killed in the battles, while 62 were victims of the fascist terror.
The Strumica partisan detachment, headed by commander Boro Pockov, liberated Strumica from the Bulgarian occupational authority, on September 11, 1944. On November 6, the same year, Strumica was finally liberated from the German occupators.
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