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TSAR
IVAN SRATSIMIR'S STATE spanned the lands between the Timok and the
Iskar. He was crowned Tsar in Vidin at the request of his father
Ivan Alexander. During his lifetime he had attempted to settle the
relationship between his two sons from different marriages by making
the elder one ruler of the northwestern Bulgarian lands. However,
distrust and resentment persisted. In times of ordeal, Ivan Sratsimir
and Ivan Shishman failed to come to agreement, making things easier
for the conqueror.
Ivan Sratsimir has been the subject of much debate by historians.
Was he an able or a mediocre ruler? Either way, however, the tiny
kingdom would have been too frail an obstacle to the advancement
of Sultan Murad and his successor Bayazid. In the spring of 1365
the Hungarian king Ludovik overran the tiny kingdom and incorporated
it into his state, taking the Bulgarian ruler captive. Ivan Sratsimir
was imprisoned in Croatia and forced to convert to Catholicism.
Several years later Ivan Alexander, assisted by Vlach troops, restored
his son to the throne. After his father's death in 1395, Ivan Sratsimir
became a tsar in his own right.
In the two decades that followed there is no evidence in the chronicles
of successful military campaigns against the Turks. Conscious of
the weakness of his army, in 1388 Ivan Sratsimir declared himself
vassal to Sultan Murad and allowed the Turks to enter the fortress
of Vidin. His aim was to guard his throne and save his subjects
from death at the hands of the Turks. For a while he even took Sofia
away from the Turnovo kingdom in the hope that, of the three fragments
of the Bulgarian state, his would survive. His hopes were soon dashed.
The wave of Turkish invasion menacingly approached the borders of
his small kingdom. At the beginning of 1396, the European rulers
finally realized that the Turkish hordes were a threat to the entire
Christian world and with the Pope's blessing the Hungarian King
Sigismund led a crusade against the Turks. The knights headed southeast,
to the Balkans, filling Ivan Sratsimir with hope. He renounced his
vassal status, slaughtered the Turkish soldiers in the Vidin fortress
and joined the crusaders. However, the Christian army was disunited,
each commander seeking personal fame and achievement.
On 25 September 1396 the Turks routed the Christian army at Nikopol.
Vidin fell, too. Bulgaria's last medieval ruler was taken captive
and died in Asia Minor. Bulgaria fell under a five-century Turkish
domination.
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