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To what extent was Gladstone's religion the driving force behind his attempt to 'sabotage' Disraeli's policy during the Bulgarian Crisis of 1876?
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- Mon Sep 01 2008
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... To what extent was Gladstone's religion the driving force behind his attempt to 'sabotage' Disraeli's policy during the Bulgarian Crisis of 1876? 'Of all the Bulgarian atrocities perhaps the greatest'1 was the label Disraeli ascribed to Gladstone's 1876 pamphlet The Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, which 'concentrated into a single utterance a profoundly excited public mood struggling for articulation'.2 With the publication of this pamphlet, Gladstone effectively undermined Disraeli's policy of unwavering support for the Turks in the face of the Bulgarian massacres, and emerged at the forefront of the Bulgarian Agitation. The popular pressure that ensued ultimately forced Disraeli to abandon any overt military support of the Ottoman Empire, and to declare neutrality in the issue. While the consequences of Gladstone's action are known, his reasons for involving himself in the debate are questionable. Gladstone's fervent religious beliefs could have provided the main impetus for his involvement,













