Teodor Teodorov

Teodor Ivanovich Teodorow ( Bulgarian Теодор Теодоров; born April 8, 1859 in Elena; † August 5, 1924 in Borovets, Samokov at ) was a Bulgarian politician and Prime Minister.

Study and career

After school he studied law at the universities of Paris and Odessa. After graduating in 1886 he worked as a lawyer.

MP and Minister

Teodorow began his political career in 1894 with the election of deputies of the National Assembly, where he remained until 1923. Already in his first election time he was on 15 October 1894 to the October 10, 1896 President of the National Assembly.

In addition, he was appointed Minister of Justice on 22 February 1896 in the Cabinet of Konstantin Stoilov. This office he held until September 7, 1897. Subsequently, he was appointed Minister of Finance of Stoilow the first time and held this office until January 30, 1899.

After his resignation from the Cabinet, he became a public prosecutor ( prosecutor ) at the District Court of Sofia and then subsequently Judge of the Court of Appeal. During this time he was also a commission for the reform of the judiciary, which in 1911 agreed to the introduction of the administrative procedural law, and the establishment of a Supreme Administrative Court.

On March 29, 1911, he was appointed by Iwan Geschow in his cabinet back to the Minister of Finance. After the end of its reign on June 14, 1913, he took office in the ruling only until July 17, 1913 the Transitional Government of Stojan Danew.

Prime Minister from 1918 to 1919

After the end of World War I, he was appointed on 28 November 1918 as the successor of Aleksandar Malinow himself as prime minister. This office he held until 6 October 1919 and held at this time at the same time, the Office of the Minister of Foreign Affairs and religions. In this office he was the predecessor to the Cabinet since 17 October 1918.

As prime minister, he was head of the Bulgarian delegation to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, at the after end of his term, the Treaty of Neuilly -sur -Seine was closed on 27 November 1919 by which you limited the strength of the Bulgarian Army on 20,000 soldiers. Bulgaria also had to cede to Yugoslavia in the west several smaller areas. In addition, the Bulgarian ruled Thrace fell to Greece ( Western Thrace ).

He subsequently withdrew largely from politics, but took in June 1923, the preparations for the coup against his successor as Prime Minister, Aleksandar Stambolijski, in part.

Swell

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