Eastern Rumelia Източна Румелия Ανατολική Ρωμυλία روم الى شرقى |
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Autonomous Province of the Ottoman Empire | |||||
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Eastern Rumelia in 1890.
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Capital | Plovdiv | ||||
Government | Autonomous Province | ||||
Governor-General | |||||
• | 1879–1884 | Aleksandar Bogoridi | |||
• | 1884–1885 | Gavril Krastevich | |||
• | 1886 | Aleksandar Battenberg | |||
• | 1887–1908 | Ferdinand Sakskoburggotski | |||
History | |||||
• | Treaty of Berlin | 13 July 1878 | |||
• | United with Bulgaria | 6 September 1885 / 1908 | |||
Population | |||||
• | 1884 census | 975,030 | |||
Today part of | Bulgaria |
Eastern Rumelia (Bulgarian: Източна Румелия, Iztochna Rumeliya; Ottoman Turkish: روم الى شرقى, Rumeli-i Şarkî; Greek: Ανατολική Ρωμυλία, Anatoliki Romylia) was an autonomous territory (oblast in Bulgarian, vilayet in Turkish) in the Ottoman Empire, created in 1878 by the Treaty of Berlin and de facto ended in 1885, when it was united with the principality of Bulgaria, also under Ottoman suzerainty. It continued to be an Ottoman province de jure until 1908, when Bulgaria declared independence.
Ethnic Bulgarians formed a majority of the population in Eastern Rumelia, but there were significant Turkish and Greek minorities. Its capital was Plovdiv (Ottoman Filibe, Greek Philippopolis).
Eastern Rumelia was created as an autonomous province within the Ottoman Empire by the Treaty of Berlin in 1878. The region roughly corresponded to today's southern Bulgaria, which was also the name the Russians proposed for it; this proposal was rejected by the British. It encompassed the territory between the Balkan Mountains, the Rhodope Mountains and Strandzha, a region known to all its inhabitants—Bulgarians, Ottoman Turks, Greeks, Roma, Armenians and Jews—as Northern Thrace. The artificial name, Eastern Rumelia, was given to the province on the insistence of the British delegates to the Congress of Berlin: the Ottoman notion of Rumelia refers to all European regions of the empire, i.e. those that were in Antiquity under the Roman Empire. Some twenty Pomak (Bulgarian Muslim) villages in the Rhodope Mountains refused to recognize Eastern Rumelian authority and formed the so-called Republic of Tamrash.