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  1. 1 de nov. de 2019 · Bulgars, Bulgaria, and Bulgarians. The Bulgars were the early people of eastern Europe. The word "bulgar" derives from an Old Turkic term denoting a mixed background, so some historians think they may have been a Turkic group from central Asia, made up of members of several tribes. Along with the Slavs and the Thracians, the Bulgars were one of ...

  2. Saved from death by his cousin Gavril Radomir, the Bulgarian Emperor, in 976, Ivan Vladislav murdered him in October 1015 and seized the Bulgarian throne. Due to the desperate situation of the country following the decades-long war with the Byzantine Empire , and in an attempt to consolidate his position, he tried to negotiate truce with the Byzantine emperor Basil II .

  3. In 717, Byzantium faced an army of 100,000 Arabs and an armada of 1,800 ships besieging the capital, Constantinople. The then Emperor, relying on the treaty with Bulgaria, asked for help from Khan Tervel. Bulgaria joined the battle and from the very beginning managed to destroy a large part of the Arab army.

  4. 25 de oct. de 2022 · The First Bulgarian Empire (Old Bulgarian: ц︢рьство бл︢гарское, ts'rstvo bl'garskoe) was a medieval Bulgarian state that existed in Southeastern Europe between the 7th and 11th centuries AD. It was founded in 681 when Bulgar tribes led by Asparuh moved to the northeastern Balkans. There they secured Byzantine recognition of their right to settle south of the Danube by ...

  5. This is done by assesssing whether the blinding of all the soldiers of a captured Bulgarian army by Byzantine emperor Basil II in 1014 was historical fact or a later fiction. This chapter concludes that some sort of mass blinding did occur, even if the immense numbers of victims as well as the decisiveness of this Byzantine victory over the Bulgarians can be questioned.

  6. Died: 1196 AD. 14. Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria. (Emperor) Birthdate: 1196 AD. Birthplace: Bulgaria. Died: June 24, 1241. Scroll for more or click here. Find out more about famous Bulgarian Emperors & Kings, including Aurelian, Decius, Ahmed III, Galerius and Simeon I of Bulgaria.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › EmperorEmperor - Wikipedia

    The Bulgarian monarch, who had further irritated his Byzantine counterpart by claiming the title "Emperor of the Romans" (basileus tōn Rōmaiōn), was eventually recognized, as "Emperor of the Bulgarians" (basileus tōn Boulgarōn) by the Byzantine Emperor Romanos I Lakapenos in 924.