Georgi Mikhailov Dimitrov
See also: Georgi Dimitrov
Georgi Mikhailov Dimitrov (ГеоргиДимитров) (June 18th 1882 - July 2nd 1949) communist was leading a Bulgarian.
Revolutionist in the heart as of adolescence, Dimitrov is a leader as of the communist insurrection of 1923 against Alexandre Tsankov. After the failure of the insurrection, Dimitrov leaves Bulgaria for the Soviet Union from where it continues the fight for the communist cause. In 1933, it is stopped with Berlin for complicity in the fire of the Reichstag. It is coldly denied the charges and counterpart by showing its indicters: this lawsuit will be worth a world famous to him.
After having been discharged, it regains the Soviet Union, which confers the Soviet citizenship to him. Dimitrov is general secretary of the Komintern of 1934 to its dissolution in 1943. In 1944, Dimitrov turns over in Bulgaria of which it directs the Communist party. It succeeds Kimon Georgiev like Prime Minister in 1946 while preserving its Soviet citizenship. Dimitrov asseoit a dictatorial Communist regime leading to the creation of the Popular republic of Bulgaria which puts an end to the existing monarchical mode. Dimitrov dies with Moscow in 1949 whereas it followed a medical care there. Certain historians evoke a poisoning ordered by Stalin.
Dimitrov, Newspaper (1933-1949), Belin, 2005
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