Wayfaring Travel Guide

Discover Ancient Bulgaria

Find breathtaking cultural heritage, treasures and monuments,
Bulgarian people created from antiquity to present days




Bulgaria's History topics related to 'decline'

Tsar John Alexander stood at Bulgaria’s helm from 1331 to 1371. It was during his rule that the country was given some breathing space, He was not lucky in the wars he waged but neither did he suffer any particular defeat. Bulgarian territories were part of international trade. There was a special “Frankish” neighbourhood in the capital inhabited by foreign merchants. Jews who had probably come a century or two before that from Byzantium also lived separately. The most active merchants were those from Ragusa /Dubrovnik/, on the Adriatic Sea, who crossed the peninsula far and wide. As the items they imported and exported were interesting, the tsar had given them special grants specifying their privileges.
Continue reading The Decline of the Second Bulgarian Kingdom part II



Emperor Basil II defeats Tsar Samouil - 14th century miniature

Emperor Basil II defeats Tsar Samouil - 14th century miniature.

One of the greatest tragedies in Bulgarian history occurred in 1014. The Byzantine Emperor Basil the Macedonian (for then Macedonia was the name of the region we call Thrace today) organized a new march. Samouil, who was too elderly to fight himself, sent his army against the Byzantines. The Bulgarians built a fortified camp in a narrow valley between two mountain slopes along the Stroumeshnitsa River, a hundred kilometers or so to the north of Salonika. The Byzantine army had no choice but to try a frontal attack. Or at least that was what the Bulgarian commanders thought, not so their enemy. Bribed guides led numerous companies along goat tracks and the surprised Bulgarians were attacked both front and back. The defeat was absolute, and 14,000 men were taken prisoners. Quite familiar with the significance of psychological warfare, Basil II decided on a step with few analogues in world history. All 14,000 prisoners of war were blinded upon his order, one in each hundred being left with one eye to lead the rest. Several days later, an indescribable column of thousands of blind men in their prime reached Samouil’s capital. The heart of the ruler could not stand the sight. He suffered a heart attack and died several days later. The Byzantine was called some time after Basil Bulgaroctonos (Slayer of Bulgarians) a name with which he has remained in the annals of history.
Continue reading The Decline of the First Bulgarian Kingdom part II



The Decline of the First Bulgarian Kingdom part I Byzantium sensed Bulgaria’s weakening and, although an open attack was to be feared, it had nothing against someone else being its cat’s paw. Thus the prince of Kievan Rus’ was encouraged to attack Bulgaria. At that time, Tsar Peter had already passed away, and it is widely known that the change of guard presents the best time for attack. Pagan Russian hordes came and galloped through the eastern Bulgarian territories. They liked the fertile and sunny land, however, and Prince Sviatoslav declared he intended to move his capital to the mouth of the Danube. Byzantium had not counted on such a turn and had to resort to its favorite tactics yet again. This time it was the Pechenegs who were driven to attack the Russians and the Bulgarians helped in this respect. Sviatoslav returned to defend his capital, where he was surprised by his enemies one night and lost his life.

Bulgaria was in chaos and its southern neighbour took the opportunity. The Byzantine army crossed the passes of the Balkan range, took the capital of Great Preslav without any particular resistance, subjected it to plunder, took the Bulgarian tsar prisoner and had him marched through the streets of Constantinople in his ceremonial clothes as a sign of his subjugation. It seemed yet again, as it had happened on so many occasions, that the patience, cunning, and why not even the military might of the Byzantine Empire, had prevailed over a small barbarian state.
Continue reading The Decline of the First Bulgarian Kingdom part I




`