тъкмо питах и за конкретни изночници и се заформи интересен "разговор"
след списъка с източниците "чата" ме пита: Would you like me to prepare a short annotated bibliography (with page numbers) from these works, so you have precise references for academic use?
и след моето "yes, please" - разбивка по източници с референции по страници
Annotated Bibliography
Димитър Димитров.
България и Съветската армия (1944–1947). София: Университетско издателство „Св. Климент Охридски“, 1999.
(pp. 42–45, 88–93)
Dimitrov uses Bulgarian and Russian archival material. He states that ~260,000 Red Army soldiers of the 3rd Ukrainian Front entered Bulgaria in September 1944, concentrated in northern and central regions. By spring 1945, numbers declined to ~100,000, and by 1947 only residual troops and advisers remained.
Geoffrey Roberts.
Stalin’s Wars: From World War to Cold War, 1939–1953. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2006.
(pp. 268–269)
Roberts describes the advance of the 3rd Ukrainian Front into Bulgaria and notes that 200,000–250,000 troops crossed the Danube in September 1944, staying until early 1945 when most were redeployed to Hungary.
Norman Naimark.
The Russians in Bulgaria, 1944–1947. In: The Russians in Eastern Europe: 1944–1947. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1970.
(pp. 137–144)
Naimark emphasizes the political and administrative role of the Soviet occupation. He estimates the occupation force at over 200,000 in late 1944, but stresses that Bulgaria was not treated like Germany — the Soviets withdrew rapidly as local Communist authorities consolidated control.
Keith Sword.
The Soviet Occupation of Eastern Europe, 1944–1956. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 1991.
(pp. 54–55)
Sword gives a general overview, putting Soviet troop numbers in Bulgaria at “approximately 200,000” in autumn 1944, with quick reductions in 1945 as the Red Army focused on Hungary and Austria.
Архив на Министерство на външните работи (МВнР), София.
Фонд „Съюзна контролна комисия в България“ (1944–1947).
Various reports to the Allied Control Commission record 200,000–250,000 Soviet troops present in September 1944, falling to under 100,000 by mid-1945. These documents were used as primary sources by Dimitrov and others.
и после още малко гъзарийки в такъв стил /пропускам детайлите защото са доста дълги/:
чатджипити: Do you want me to also prepare a table with the figures year-by-year (1944, 1945, 1946, 1947) and the corresponding authors/sources, so you can cite them side by side?
аз - yes please
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чатджипити: Would you like me to also prepare a citation-ready footnote style (Chicago / APA / MLA), so you can use this directly in academic writing?
аз - yes please
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кажи му северномакедонец вместо да го обиждаш
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