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The agony of the medieval Bulgarian
state began only 12 years after the Turks' coming to Europe. In
1364 they invaded Bulgaria and took Central Thrace with the important
towns of Borouy or Berrhoea (today's Stara Zagora) and Plovdiv.
The attempted counter-offensive organized by two Bulgarian feudals
from the region of Macedonia in 1371, resulted in the tragic battle
at Chernomen (near Edirne). There the united Christian army of Serbs
and Bulgarians, coming from various feudal possessions in the Balkans,
was defeated. The Turks occupied new territories on the Balkans.
In 1372 they invaded Bulgaria once more and, after sanguinary fighting,
they eventually took a number of fortresses in the Rhodopes, Thrace
and at the foothills of the Balkan Range. The new Bulgarian tsar
Ivan Shishman (1371-1393) was forced to become a vassal to the Turkish
sultan.
The dramatic situation in Bulgaria and the Balkan states was not
yet clear to the Roman Catholic West. Instead of assisting the Christians
of the East in those years, Western Europe preferred to take part
in the division of the Balkan heritage. A crusade led by Amadeus
VI of Savoy, allegedly directed against the Turks, took the Bulgarian
southern Black Sea littoral in 1366. In 1365 the Hungarians occupied
the break-away Bulgarian state of Vidin. They were driven out of
there by the Bulgarians in 1369 at the cost of great effort. Genoa
got involved in a long war with the Bulgarian despotate of Dobmdja
which ended as late as 1387.
This short-sighted policy of the West helped the Turks to continue
their expansion in the Balkans. In 1378 the new political power
of Islam, the Ottoman empire, went to fresh war against Bulgaria
and Serbia. The strategic forts of Sofia and Nis" were conquered
after fierce battles in 1388 and 1385 respectively. The Ottoman
empire wedged deeply between Bulgarians and Serbs. The impending
frightful danger forced Serbia, Bulgaria, Bosnia and some other
Bulgarian and Serbian break-away feudal possessions to enter, at
long last, into a military and political alliance in 1387. The events
which took place after this act showed that it was a step in the
right direction. In spite of the coalition missing a number of the
strong Bulgarian, Serbian and all Byzantine feudal possessions,
the united Christian troops succeeded in striking a heavy blow on
the Islamic army, believed to be invincible until then, at Plochnik
in 1387. It was unfortunate that the following year, ~when the Ottomans
raided Bulgaria again, no one bothered to come to its assistance.
After strenuous fighting, the northeastern part of Bulgaria fell
to the Turks. A peace treaty confirmed Bulgaria as a vassal to the
Islamic Ottoman empire.
Then the Turks fixed their eyes on Serbia and Bosnia. In 1389 they
met the armies of the southern Slavs in a decisive battle on Kossovo
Pole (meaning the Field of Blackbirds). Despite the vassalage, Bulgarian
contingents also joined the Serbian army. The Turks won the battle
in which the leaders of both armies, prince Lazar and sultan Murad
got killed. This was the actual end of the clash between the Christian
East and the invasive Islamism. The Ottomans had an overwhelming
superiority in combat forces and it was only their crippling losses
at Plochnik, Kossovo and in the northern Bulgaria campaign between
1387 and 1389, that prolonged the agony of the Bulgarian states.
In 1393, Great Turnovo - the capital of Bulgaria, was brought to
heel and in 1395 tsar Ivan Shishman was killed in the defence of
Nicopolis on the Danube. Three other Bulgarian break-away states
- the despotates of Dobrudja, Prilep and Velbazhd, fell before the
end of that year. Only the Bulgarian state of Vidin remained as
a deserted island in the ocean of Turkish possessions.
At last Western Europe had realized the danger of the Muslim St
invasion. The bellicosity, or rather the enmity of Islamism to anything
not conforming to its ideology and its uttermost intolerance to
the European values, compelled the European political minds to organize
a massive crusade against the Turks. In 1396 over 60 000 West European
crussaders, led by king Sigismund invaded the Bulgarian lands. The
troops of tsar Ivan Sratsimir (1356-1396), ruler of the last Bulgarian
state, joined the West European army. The united forces of the Eastern
and the Western Christians, having obviously disregarded their imbecile
religious arguments in the face of the Islam, reached as far as
Nicopolis. There, beneath the walls of the ancient Bulgarian fortress,
the crussaders, lacking in coordinated and orderly command, let
themselves be defeated by the Turks once again. The Vidin despotate
lost its independence, too. This put an end to the medieval Bulgarian
statehood. The Byzantine empire and the kingdom of Serbia were both
destroyed a few decades after. The European Southeast found itself
in the hands of a hostile Asiatic power.
The seven-century presence of the medieval Bulgarian state on
the European political stage significantly contributed to the development
and shaping up of the medieval state-governed way of life on the
Old Continent, which later became the basis of the modern European
civilization. The Bulgarian political thought saw to the establishment
of the first state in Europe on the national identity principle
in contrast to the states advocating the principles of the universal
state. The latter would have doomed all new state formations to
political, cultural and national loss of identity. Having reached
the heights of a great power, it put Europe's political equilibrium
right by balancing or countering the ambitions of the two imperial
mainstays - the Holy Roman empire in the west and Byzantium in the
east. On the other hand, the might of the Bulgarian state was a
barrier to the waves of barbarians dashing at Europe and to the
onslaughts of Muslims invading it. The blood of its men, shed on
the battle-fields, had guaranteed the peaceful development of the
European West. The introduction of the nationally spoken language
into the workings of the state as well as in church service and
literature gave example of democracy and pluralism in culture.
Extract from the book "Bulgaria
Illustrated History"
Bojidar Dimitrov, PhD., Autor
Vyara Kandjieva, Photographer
Dimiter Angelov, Photographer Antoniy Handjiysky, Photographer
Maria Nikolotva, Translator
Published by BORIANA Publishing House, Sofia,Bulgaria
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