AN
OLD RUSSIAN PROVERB SAYS that the thirst for power is the hardest
to quench. Ivan Shishman, Ivan Alexander's frstborn son from his
second marriage, craved power. But his proved to be a short brush
with power. He succeeded his father to the throne in Turnovo, but
the state had become a shadow of one-time great Bulgaria. Almost
all ties with the other two Bulgarian states, Ivan Sratsimir's Vidin
principality and the Dobroudja principality of Despot Dobrotitsa,
had been severed. Ivan Shishman's struggle to survive under the
pressure of the Ottoman offensive soon turned into a desperate and
valiant, though hopeless fight.
At the end of September 1371 a messenger brought the news that
at the village of Chernomen in the valley of the Maritsa river,
Sultan Murad's army had defeated the troops of the brothers Vulkashin
and Uglesha from Macedonia. The two defeated nobles were the first
to face and fight the invader. The Turks ravaged the Bulgarian lands,
leaving terror and ruin behind them. Ivan Shishman watched them
conquer Macedonia and the Rhodopes, aware that he was not strong
enough to help Bulgarian strongholds in the Rhodopes against the
assailants. Northern Thrace and the Zagore region also fell prey
to the invader. "And indeed, those still alive were envying
those already dead...," wrote the monk Issay.
The son of Ivan Alexander was to suffer the consequences of dissent
between him the Balkan rulers. Ivan Shishman himself, in the face
of the common threat, found it hard to extend a hand to his neighbors.
He was compelled to make peace and to suffer the humiliation of
becoming vassal to the Sultan, even allowing the Sultan to marry
his sister Kera Tamara. Soon afterwards the Turks violated the treaty.
After heavy fighting, Ivan Shishman surrendered Ihtiman, Samokov
and Sofia. He fought desperately to defend the western part of the
Balkan range, but Murad's troops overran Nish and Prilep and headed
for the heart of the Balkans.
Only then did Ivan Shishman and the other Balkan rulers manage
to join forces. King Lazar of Serbia, the Bosnian King and Despot
Ivanko of Dobroudja offered an alliance to Ivan Shishman, which
he entered though unable to supply troops. In 1387 the allied Christian
forces routed the Turks at Plocnik (Serbia), proving that the Sultan's
army was not immune to defeat. Tsar Ivan Shishman could heave a
sigh of relief, see to his rump of a kingdom and encourage Patriarch
Euthymius to keep the Turnovo art school going, to the glory of
Bulgaria in the Slavic world.
However, the Turkish army, once recovered from the defeat, took
the offensive again. It penetrated the Balkan passes and conquered
some of northeastern Bulgaria around the fortress of Drustur on
the Danube. Ivan Shishman was forced to confirm his submission as
vassal to the Sultan. After the tragic defeat of the Christian army
at Kossovo Pole (Serbia) in June 1389 the Bulgarian troops returned
home fewer in number and frustrated. The defeat of the allied Christian
forces paved the way for total Balkan domination by the Ottoman
Turks.
The Tsar in Turnovo was in a bind. He was a good warrior and diplomat,
but he was not strong enough to prevent the Ottoman conquest. In
July 1393, after three months in siege under the courageous leadership
of Patriarch Euthymius, the capital Turnovo finally fell. In the
besieged stronghold of Nikopol, the Tsar heard of the massacred
boyars and of the population sold as slaves. Ivan Shishman held
this last piece of Bulgarian land in the ancient fortress on the
Danube for months, while Turkish attempts to crush the resistance
failed. But so did Ivan Shishman's efforts to form an alliance with
the Hungarian King Sigismund against the Turks. He watched the principality
of Dobroudja collapse and the invaders close the ring around the
Vidin kingdom. The Second Bulgarian State was perishing before his
eyes.
In 1395 Ivan Shishman finally succumbed to the army of Sultan Murad
and died in captivity. The Bulgarian people sang songs about Tsar
Ivan Shishman and his army which took the blow and temporarily saved
Europe from the Ottoman invaders.
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