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  1. Simeon was born in 864 or 865, as the third son of Knyaz Boris I [14] of Krum 's dynasty. [15] As Boris was the ruler who Christianized Bulgaria in 865, Simeon was a Christian all his life. [14] [16] Because his eldest brother Vladimir was designated heir to the Bulgarian throne, Boris intended Simeon to become a high-ranking cleric, [17 ...

  2. In 971 John I Tzimiskes, the Byzantine emperor, subjugated much of the weakening Bulgarian Empire, as it faced wars with Russians, Pechenegs, Magyars and Croatians, and by defeating Boris II and capturing Preslav, the Bulgarian capital. Byzantine Emperor Basil II completely conquered Bulgaria in 1018, as a result of the 1014 Battle of Kleidion.

  3. Most of the nine campaigns of the ambitious Emperor Constantine V to eliminate the young Bulgarian state, which suffered political crisis, failed in the mountain passes of the Balkan. In 811 the whole Byzantine army was destroyed in the Varbitsa Pass and in 12th–13th centuries several other Byzantine forces shared that doom.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KrumKrum - Wikipedia

    Krum ( Bulgarian: Крум, Greek: Κροῦμος/Kroumos [a] ), often referred to as Krum the Fearsome ( Bulgarian: Крум Страшни) was the Khan of Bulgaria from sometime between 796 and 803 until his death in 814. During his reign the Bulgarian territory doubled in size, spreading from the middle Danube to the Dnieper and from Odrin ...

  5. 16 de feb. de 2024 · We know that it even happened in medieval Europe, though the context was anything but kinky. Meet Krum, the Bulgarian Khan who defeated the Byzantines and turned the head of the emperor into a drinking cup. And to make matters worse, while Krum was sipping wine from his enemies’ skulls, his strict laws had made drinking illegal.

  6. The Bulgarian emperor indeed managed to impose his rule in a wider region of the Balkans amongst the contemporary key political and military powers of that time, Nicaea, the State of Epirus, and the Latin Empire in Constantinople.14 Thus he marked the newly conquered territories with the geographical entry „between Jedrene and Drač“, which matches contemporary regions of Trace, Northern ...

  7. First Bulgarian Empire. The First Bulgarian Empire was a medieval Bulgar-Slavic and later Bulgarian state that existed in Southeastern Europe between the 7th and 11th centuries CE. It was founded in 680–681 after part of the Bulgars, led by Asparuh, moved south to the northeastern Balkans.