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The organization was founded in 1895 in Thessaloniki by a group of Macedo-Bulgarian nationalists led by Goce Delchev and Damjan Gruev under the name Bulgarian Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Committee (BMARC). BMARC later changed its name to Secret Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization ( 1902) and to Internal Macedonian-Adrianople Revolutionary Organization ( 1906). After being disbanded during the Bulgarian occupation of Macedonia ( 1915 - 1918), the organization was revived in 19201920 is a leap year starting on Thursday (link will take you to calendar) Events January January 7 Forces of Russian White admiral Kolchak surrender in Krasnoyarsk. January 9 Britain announces it will build 100,000 homes for war veterans. January 10 Leagu under the name Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization, under which it is generally known nowadays.
The goal of the original Committee was to unite all elements dissatisfied with the Ottoman oppression in Macedonia and the Adrianople Vilayet, eventually obtaining political autonomy for the two regions. In this task the organisation hoped to enlist the support of the local VlachsVlachs (also called Wlachs, Wallachs, Olahs are the Romanized population in Central and Eastern Europe, including Romanians, Aromanians, Istro-Romanians and Megleno-Romanians, but since the creation of the Romanian state, this term was mostly used for the, GreeksSee The Greeks for the financial term for the set of measures derived from the Black-Scholes option pricing formula, named for the use of the Greek alphabet to denote parameters. Greeks in Ancient History In Latin literature, Graeci (or Greeks in English) and even Turks. Efforts were concentrated on moral propaganda and the prospect of rebellion and terrorist actions seemed distant. The organisation developed quickly: only in a matter of a few years, the Committee had managed to establish a wide network of local organisations across Macedonia and the Adrianople Vilayet. These usually centered around the schools of the Bulgarian Exarchate and had as leaders local or Bulgarian-born teachers.
The initial period of idealism for IMRO ended, however, with the Vinitza Affair and the discovery by the Ottoman police of a secret depot of ammunition near the Bulgarian border in 1897Events January 1 Brooklyn, New York merges with New York City. January 4 A British force is ambushed by Chief Ologbosheri, son-in-law of the Oba of Benin. This leads to a Punitive Expedition against Benin. February 2 The Pennsylvania state capitol is dest. The wide-scale repressions against the activists of the Committee led to its transformation into a militant guerilla organisation, which engaged into attacks against Ottoman officials and into punitive actions against suspected traitors. The launch of pro-Serbian and pro-Greek guerilla detachments into Macedonia at the end of the 19th century contributed additionally to its establishment as a nationalistic organisation. By 1903 the Greeks and the Serbians were as decidedly enemies for IMRO as were the Turks. Murder and terrorism were the usual tactics of the organisation not only against the rival military factions, but also against Greek and Serbian teachers and priests.
Though IMRO was pro-Bulgarian since its establishment, it split up early into two major fractions. The Autonomists favoured the idea of an autonomous Macedonia whereas the Supremists resorted to terrorism against the Ottomans and the kidnapping of foreigners in the hope of provoking a war and thus Bulgarian annexation of Macedonia. In August 1903 they organised a rising against the Ottomans in the Bitola area, which was crushed with much loss of life, including the life of Delchev, who had actually opposed the rising as premature.
The failure of the 1903 rising resulted in the dispersal of the anti-Bulgarian, left-wing faction of IMRO and its becoming largely an agent of Bulgarian expansionism. Armed groups sponsored by all three neighboring states fought the Ottomans and each other, and the Ottomans took reprisals. The resulting turmoil played a large part in provoking the Balkan Wars which broke out in 1912.
The result of the Balkan Wars was that Macedonia was partitioned between Bulgaria, Greece and the new state of Yugoslavia, with Bulgaria getting the smallest share. IMRO, now led by Todor Alexandrov , was largely driven out of the Greek and Yugoslav sections of Macedonia, but it maintained its existence in Bulgaria, where it played a role in politics as an extreme right-wing nationalist party, urging a renewed war to "liberate" Macedonia. This was one factor in Bulgaria allying itself with Germany and Austria-Hungary in World War I.