Radomir Rebellion

Radomir Rebellion
Part of World War I
Date27 September – 2 October 1918
Location
Result Loyalist victory
Belligerents
Rebels Loyalists
Commanders and leaders
Rayko Daskalov  (WIA) Aleksandar Protogerov
Units involved
German 217th Division
Strength
15,000 (6,000–7,000 for final assault on capital)
8 infantry battalions and 2 machine-gun companies
Casualties and losses
2,500–3,000 killed
2,000 captured
10,000 wounded

The Radomir Rebellion, also known as Vladaya Uprising and Soldiers' Uprising,[1][2] was a revolt by Bulgarian soldiers in 1918 during World War I in the Tsardom of Bulgaria. It was among the other mutinies that occurred during the war.

  1. ^ Joseph Rothschild (2016). East Central Europe between the Two World Wars. University of Washington Press. p. 326. ISBN 9780295803647.
  2. ^ Dimitŭr Konstantinov Kosev, ed. (1982). Bulgaria Past & Present. Publishing House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. p. 260.

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