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  1. Vasil Hristov Radoslavov (Bulgarian: Васил Христов Радославов) (27 July 1854 – 21 October 1929) was a leading Bulgarian liberal politician who twice served as Prime Minister. He was Premier of the country throughout most of World War I .

  2. Vasil Hristov Radoslavov (en búlgaro: Васил Христов Радославов; Lovech, [1] 15 de julio jul. / 27 de julio de 1854 greg. [2] -Berlín, 21 de octubre de 1929 [3] ) fue un político búlgaro, jefe de Gobierno durante el reinado del zar Fernando en dos ocasiones. [4]

  3. Born 15 July 1854 in Lovech, Bulgaria. Died 29 October 1929 in Berlin, Germany. Dr. Vasil Radoslavov was a Bulgarian politician and Prime Minister from 1913 to 1918. As Prime Minister he played a decisive role in Bulgaria’s decision to enter the First World War on the side of the Central Powers.

  4. Vasil Hristov Radoslavov fue un político búlgaro, jefe de Gobierno durante el reinado del zar Fernando en dos ocasiones. Decidió la intervención de Bulgaria en la I Guerra Mundial y atacó Serbia , aliándose con los Imperios Centrales.

  5. hmn.wiki › es › Vasil_Radoslavovvasil radoslavov

    Vasil Hristov Radoslavov ( búlgaro: Васил Христов Радославов) (27 de julio de 1854 - 21 de octubre de 1929) fue un destacado político liberal búlgaro que se desempeñó dos veces como primer ministro. Fue primer ministro del país durante la mayor parte de la Primera Guerra Mundial.

  6. Other articles where Vasil Radoslavov is discussed: Bulgaria: World War I: …and a Germanophile government under Vasil Radoslavov encouraged both sides to bid for Bulgarian intervention. In this contest, the Central Powers (Austria-Hungary and the German Empire) could offer far more at the expense of Serbia, Greece, and, later, Romania than could the Triple Entente (an alliance of Great ...

  7. Dejan Antic. The subject matter of this paper are some issues of the Serbian-Bulgarian relations after the Balkan Wars in 1912-1913, and especially after reestablishing diplomatic relations in January 1914, up to the autumn of 1915. Special attention was paid to the attempts of the political leadership in Sofia to destabilize the security ...