Albania's independence recognition document discovered by Bulgaria

Regional archives appear to be full of evidence and documents for Albania and Albanians. One of the richest is the Bulgarian State Archives, whose shelves seem to take place with hundreds of documents of particular importance to nationwide history, since books published in Albanian in the 1890s, [...]
Regional archives appear to be full of evidence and documents for Albania and Albanians. One of the richest is the Bulgarian State Archives, whose shelves seem to take up hundreds of documents of particular importance to nationwide history, from books published in Albanian in the 1890s to acts, decisions and agreements that testify to relations between the two countries.
Archives as a permanent point of history become even more important when events of special importance are involved. As for any other country, the establishment of the state represents, if not history itself, its zenith, writes the paper “Eagle”
And until the declaration of the establishment of the Albanian state announced on 28 November 1912, it is certainly located in the Albanian Central Archive, Kosovo diplomat in Sofia Bujar Descu, referring to the State Archives Agency in Sofia, has published the Form Act of recognition of Pavaresia on the part of Albania, under the inscription Proposal of Pavaresia and the consolidation of citizenship, making it a parallel and with the support Bulgaria has given Kosovo in the legitimacy of Kosovo Pavaresia. Desiring the original document, it is seen that the verdict dates back to 24 .02, of the distant year 1922, that is, 10 years after Albania declared Pavaresia.
Among other things, in this formal-juridical act, the Bulgarian government reportedly takes this de-jure step, referring to the decision of the Ambassador Conference held in November 1921 in Paris and signed by representatives of Great Britain, Frances, Italy and Japan who recognise Albania as sovereign and Independent states. The document bears the stamp of the Ministry of Foreign and Cults and is signed by then Bulgarian Prime Minister Aleksandar Stamboliski.













