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The History of Bulgaria (the Bulgarian state the descendant of which is the present-day Republic of Bulgaria; to be differentiated from Great Bulgaria and Volga Bulgaria) begins in the 7th century AD with the arrival in the Balkan Peninsula of the Bulgars, who had been moving north-westwards across the Caucasus and what is now southern Russia and the Ukraine. The origin of the Bulgars is not entirely clear. The established theory is that the Bulgars are related to the Huns, and more distantly the Turks, a position which is increasingly challenged by a theory claiming Aryan - Pamirian origin of the Bulgars. The Bulgars were governed by hereditary Khans and a class of nobles called boyars. Religiously, they were monotheists, and starting in the 8th century many in Volga Bulgaria converted to Islam. They were a warlike people who spent most of their time on horseback, raiding their neighbours and moving from place to place.

In the 6th and 7th century the Bulgars had lived on the northern coast of the Black Sea. Under pressure from peoples further east, such as the Khazars, one confederation of Bulgars, the Kutriguri , moved into the territory which is now RomaniaRomania (formerly spelled Rumania or Roumania is a country in southeastern Europe. Romania is bordered by Ukraine and Moldova in the northeast, Hungary and Serbia in the west and Bulgaria to the south. Romania also has a small sea coast on the Black Sea. in the 6th century. By 681Events Bulgaria is recognised as an independent state. Wilfrid of York is expelled from Northumbria by Ecgfrith and retires into Sussex Births Deaths January 10 Pope Agatho Ebroin, Mayor of the Neustrian Palace Heads of states Japan Temmu Emperor of Japan they had crossed the Danube into what is now Bulgaria. The Utiguri Bulgars settled on the Volga, where they converted to Islam and maintained an independent state until the 13th century.

1 The First Bulgarian Empire


Bulgaria in Roman60 and 400 with major cities. During this time only Dacia and Mesopotamia were added to the Empire but were lost before 300. The Roman Empire is the term conventionally used to describe the Roman state in the centuries following its reorganization under t times had been called MoesiaIn ancient geography, Moesia was a district inhabited by a Thracian people. It was bounded on the south by the mountain ranges of Haemus and Scardus (Scordus, Scodrus), on the west by the Drinus, on the north by the Danube and on the east by the Euxine. and had a mixed population of ThraciansThe Thracians were an Indo-European tribe, inhabitants of Thrace, a region to the north of ancient Greece (currently southern Bulgaria, northern Greece, European Turkey and eastern FYR Macedonia). They spoke Thracian language. As non- Greek speakers, they, 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 Dacians, most of whom spoke either Greek or a sub-Latin language known as Romance. It had been overrun by the Slavs in the mid 7th century. In 681 the Bulgars founded a Khanate on the Danube after the defeating the Byzantine army under Emperor Justinian II in a battle south of the Danube delta. Following their defeat an agreement was made between the Bulgar ruler Asparukh and the Byzantine Emperor. The agreement gave the Bulgars the territorry between the Danube and the Balkan. The Byzantines also agreed to pay a yearly tax to the Khanate, a usual Byzantine custom. The Bulgars were greatly outnumbered by the Slav population among whom they had settled. Between the 7th and the 10th centuries, the Bulgars were gradually absorbed by the Slavs, adopting a South Slav language and converting to Orthodox Christianity under Boris I in 865. By 1000, the Bulgars had become Bulgarians, who are now classed as a South Slav people related to the Serbs, rather than a Turanian people. The Bulgar Khan became the Czar of Bulgaria, and the Bulgarian Empire (called by some historians the West Bulgarian Empire to distinguish it from the lands of the Turanian Bulgars who still lived in the Volga valley).

The arrival of the Magyars in Hungary in the 9th century forced the Bulgars out of this area, enouraging them to expand to the south. Under the warrior Khan Krum ( 802- 14 (also known as Crummus and Keanus Magnus), Bulgaria expanded southwards, occupying Sofia in 811 and Adrianople (modern Edirne) in 813, and threatening Constantinople itself. Under Boris I the Bulgarians became Christians, and the Ecumenical Patriarch agreed to allow an independent Bulgarian Patriarch at Ochrida.

Missionaries from Constantinople, Cyril and Methodius, devised the Glagolitic alphabet, adopted in the Bulgarian Empire around 886. The alphabet and the Old Church Slavonic language gave rise to a rich literary and cultural activity centered around the Preslav and Ohrid Literary Schools, established by order of Boris I in 886. In the beginning of 9th century AD, a new alphabet - the Cyrillic alphabet - developed on the basis of Greek and Glagolitic cursive at the Preslav Literary School. According to an alternative theory, the alphabet was devised at the Ohrid Literary School by Saint Climent of Ohrid, a Bulgarian scholar and disciple of Cyril and Methodius. A pious monk of Sofia, St John of Rila (Ivan Rilski, 876- 946), became the patron saint of Bulgaria.

By the late 9th century Bulgaria extended from the mouth of the Danube to Epirus in the south and Bosnia in the north-west. A Serbian state came into existence as a dependency of the Bulgarian Empire. Under Czar Simeon I (Simeon the Great), who was educated in Constantinople, Bulgaria became a serious threat to the Byzantine Empire. Simeon hoped to take Constantinople and make himself Emperor of both Bulgars and Greeks, and fought a series of wars with the Byzantines through his long reign ( 893- 927). Simeon proclaimed himself " Tsar (Caesar) of the Bulgarians and the Greeks," a title which was recognised by the Pope, but not of course by the Byzantine Emperor. Simeon made Sofia a centre of learning.

After Simeon's death, however, Bulgarian power declined. Under Peter I and Boris II the country was divided by the egalitarian religious heresy of the Bogomils, and distracted by wars with the Hungarians to the north and the breakaway state of Serbia to the west. In 972 Emperor John Tsimisces was able to make eastern Bulgaria a Byzantine protectorate. The Bulgarians maintained an independent state for a time in the western part of the country, but in 1014 Emperor Basil II defeated the armies of Czar Samuil at the Balasita and massacred thousands, acquiring the title "Bulgar-slayer" (Voulgaroktonos). He ordered 14,000 Bulgarian prisoners blinded and sent back to their country. At the sight of his returning armies Samuil suffered a heart attack and died. By 1018 the country had been mostly subjugated by the Byzantines.



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