20:
156:. The IMRO aided the coup. Stamboliyski himself was captured while attempting to organize a peasant resistance, and was brutally tortured and executed by the IMRO. The rest of his government likewise collapsed, leaving Daskalov in Prague to form a government-in-exile and attempt to create foreign pressure against the new government of
132:, which obliged the Tsardom of Bulgaria to suppress the operations of the IMRO carried out from Bulgarian territory. This event caused an intensification of IMRO actions against the BANU government, which eventually would spell its end. Rayko Daskalov had left his ministries in February, and in May he arrived in the
184:
and
Tsankov, Tsitsonkov was sentenced to 20 years in prison this time around, which were to be spent in Tábor prison. After the authorities received information that he was planning an escape he was transferred to the maximum security prison Kartouzi in Ichin. There he took his own life on 23 January
172:
to speak in his defence. He was released not long afterwards, after during a 13–14 November Prague trial the jury sentenced him to only 48 hours in jail, with 8 votes against 4, under the argument that he had not acted on behalf of the
Tsankov government, and had committed the deed under pressure
144:
Pancho
Mikhailov (1891–1925) gave Tsitsonkov a fake passport with the name "Atanas Nikolov", a revolver, and a large sum of money. The young man was sent to Czechoslovakia, to complete his mission. The order had been authorized by the IMRO leader
100:
He joined the
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization, an insurrectionary movement for liberation of Macedonia from Yugoslav occupation, at an early age. The IMRO was in heavy opposition to the Bulgarian prime minister
188:
Today, a bilingual Czech–Bulgarian commemorative plaque marks the site of
Daskalov's assassination in Smíchov, Prague. The plaque describes Daskalov as a "great Slav and a fighter for freedom, democracy and republicanism".
167:
district of Prague, and killed him with three shots. He was immediately arrested. The IMRO took responsibility for defending him, and hired the well-known Czech nationalist lawyer Jan Renner and the famous painter
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372:Трите дела (1927). Прага-Табор-Виена-Милано: Страници от борбата на Македония (Йордан Цицонков, Менча Кърничева, Димитър Стефанов), София, Издателство „Пряпорец“, 289 стр. (in Bulgarian).
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93:. As most of the Slavic population of Macedonia until the early-20th century, the Tsitsonkov's self-identified ethnicity was
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who wanted to establish a closer bilateral friendship with
Yugoslavia. In March 1922 he was given the task of assassinating
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Ristic, Ivan (2012). Bugarska politicka emigracija u
Kraljevini SHS. Istorija 20. veka, 2/2012, 41-61 (in Serbian)
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Strong
Serbian diplomatic pressure however forced a re-trial, which took place between 22 and 27 October 1924 in
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On 9 June, the BANU government was ousted by a right-wing political alliance and the
Bulgarian military in a
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117:. Daskalov would face an attempt on his life by the IMRO on 15 December 1922 by the
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180:. Although the prosecution again tried and failed to prove a connection to the
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109:, a fierce opponent of the IMRO, who held a number of posts in Stamboliyski's
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On 26 August 1923, Tsitsonkov approached
Daskalov on Holeček Street in the
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Members of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
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the control of the region changed repeatedly between the
221:Благов, Крум (2000). "47. Атентатът в Народния театър".
385:(in Bulgarian). Земеделски народен съюз. Archived from
438:"Pamětní deska věnovaná: Rajko Daskalovi (1886-1923)"
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Asen Daskalov, who threw a bomb at Daskalov's car in
440:(in Czech). City Quarter of Prague 5. Archived from
140:as Bulgaria's envoy to the country. The same month
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113:(BANU) government and commanded the paramilitary
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289:Yugoslavia as history: twice there was a country
530:Murderers who died by suicide in prison custody
223:50-те най-големи атентата в българската история
199:Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
47:Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization
525:Prisoners who died in Czechoslovak detention
515:People convicted of murder by Czechoslovakia
490:Bulgarian people who died in prison custody
344:Панайотов, Филип; Николова, Иванка (1999).
295:: Cambridge University Press. p. 156.
65:Born in 1900, Tsitsonkov originates from
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18:
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37:, 1900 – 23 January 1926) was a
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262:: Cambridge University Press. p.
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128:In March 1923 Stamboliyski signed the
510:Suicides by hanging in Czechoslovakia
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83:Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
69:, which at this time was part of the
318:ВМОРО - псевдоними и шифри 1893-1934
49:(IMRO), who assassinated the exiled
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89:, while nowadays it is part of the
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485:Bulgarian people imprisoned abroad
254:A short history of modern Bulgaria
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111:Bulgarian Agrarian National Union
173:from death threats by the IMRO.
505:Bulgarian nationalist assassins
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416:: Havran. pp. 131–133.
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91:Republic of North Macedonia
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410:Vítejte v první republice
346:България: 20 век. Алманах
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408:Klimek, Antonín (2003).
250:Crampton, R. J. (1987).
316:Николов, Борис (1999).
287:Lampe, John R. (2000).
170:Professor Ivan Mrkvička
125:. He escaped unharmed.
103:Aleksandar Stamboliyski
73:. During and after the
16:Bulgarian revolutionary
352:: Труд. p. 1136.
23:
495:Macedonian Bulgarians
324:: Звезди. p. 12.
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45:and activist of the
182:Democratic Alliance
87:Tsardom of Bulgaria
57:on 26 August 1923.
41:revolutionary from
185:1926, by hanging.
158:Aleksandar Tsankov
24:
359:978-954-528-146-4
273:978-0-521-27323-7
147:Todor Aleksandrov
79:Kingdom of Serbia
27:Yordan Tsitsonkov
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520:People from Štip
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389:on 11 April 2011
383:"Райко Даскалов"
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35:Йордан Цицонков
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446:. Retrieved
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391:. Retrieved
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229:: Репортер.
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134:Czechoslovak
127:
115:Orange Guard
99:
64:
26:
25:
480:1926 deaths
470:1900 births
154:coup d'état
136:capital of
81:(later the
75:Balkan Wars
53:politician
464:Categories
448:12 October
393:12 October
205:References
85:) and the
293:Cambridge
260:Cambridge
119:komitadji
95:Bulgarian
61:Biography
51:Bulgarian
43:Macedonia
39:Bulgarian
31:Bulgarian
350:Bulgaria
322:Bulgaria
227:Bulgaria
193:See also
165:Smíchov
142:vojvoda
420:
414:Prague
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299:
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138:Prague
178:Tábor
123:Sofia
450:2014
418:ISBN
395:2014
354:ISBN
297:ISBN
268:ISBN
231:ISBN
67:Štip
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264:97
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29:(
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