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ON A NOVEMBER DAY in 1185 hundreds of Bulgarians amassed in front
of the newly erected Church of St. Demetrius in Turnovo. They came
to celebrate the church's inauguration, hut cheered even louder
at the
appearance of two nobles, the brothers Todor and Assen (also known
as Belgun). Although the crowd had gathered for a holy purpose,
everybody there knew the two nobles had other plans in mind. Someone
in the crowd drew a sword and spoke prophetic words: "This
is not the time to stay idle; it's time that we took up arms and
fought the Byzantines!"
The two nobles' elder brother, Todor, was crowned tsar and took
the name of Peter. After 167 years of Byzantine domination, the
Bulgarians again had a state of their own. After a century and a
half of humiliation, suffering and many suppressed revolts, they
proved they were still statehood-conscious and that the memory of
Krum and Simeon still lived.
It is no coincidence that the two brothers, with a trace of Kumanian
blood in their veins, chose to call a revolt at the time when Byzantium
was in a state of decline, weakened by internal conflicts and by
Hungarian and Norman assaults. Heavy taxes and political oppression
and persecution had stirred up discontent in the Bulgarian lands.
When in 1185 another tax was levied on the population north of the
Balkan range, the two brothers saw the opportune moment for a new
uprising.
In the battles for Bulgaria's liberation, which spanned a whole
decade, Peter and Assen demonstrated both strong will and military
talent. Their patriotism won them the confidence of the nation and
their calls for troops met with an active response throughout the
territories north of the Balkan range. First they liberated the
northern part of Bulgaria and temporarily withdrew beyond the Danube
with their troops. Then, after recapturing their lands and the new
capital of Turnovo, Peter and Assen drove the Byzantine army south
to Eastern Thrace and fought their way to the Prosek fortress in
the Vardar region of Macedonia.
A decisive battle was fought in 1187 near the town of Lovech. After
a three-month siege Emperor Isaac II Angelus failed to crush the
resistance of the defenders of the fortress, fighting for their
newly liberated state. In the end, the basileus was forced into
a treaty, but he took the two leaders' younger brother Kaloyan to
Constantinople to guarantee good behavior from his neighbor.
The most important gain from the 1187 battles was the recognition
of the Bulgarian state. With self-confidence boosted by their triumph,
the two brothers appointed an archbishop of the now independent
Bulgarian church.
In the hard times when the Second Bulgarian State was regrouping
from Byzantine domination, the two brothers joined their efforts
for the consolidation of the new dynasty. A man of noble spirit,
Peter recognized his younger brother's superior skills as a commander
and statesman. Assen was crowned Tsar, and most of the Bulgarian
lands came under his control. Peter retained his throne and the
lands around the one-time capital Preslav.
In the fight with Byzantium the two brothers took advantage of
the alleviation of Byzantine pressure owing to the passage of the
Third Crusade through the Balkans, and urged the Kumanians to send
their swift cavalry against the Byzantines. Glorious victories were
won in the battles in the Tryavna pass and near Arcadiople (Eastern
Thrace). The borders of the state extended far south into Thrace
and the Aegean region. Even the battle-hardened Hungarians were
unable to put up resistance to the army of Assen and Peter, and
after a series of Bulgarian-won battles, were forced to give back
to Bulgaria the regions of Belgrade and Branichevo.
The Byzantine chronicler Nicetas Choniates wrote that the brothers
were striving to unite the three Bulgarian regions: Moesia, Thrace
and Macedonia under their rule, as it had been in earlier times.
They did not conceal their ambition to restore Bulgaria to its one-time
glory. The whole of the rebellious Bulgarian people stood behind
them.
The founders of the new dynasty did not die in battle, at the hands
of their enemies. Alarmed and annoyed by the resurgence of the Bulgarian
state, the Byzantines incited the boyars to plot against the Tsar.
In 1196 Tsar Assen I was murdered by his cousin Ivanko. Some 700
years later, during the period of national revival, a writer of
the name of Vassil Droumev depicted the story in the first Bulgarian
drama: Jvanko, Assen's Murderer. Tsar Peter sent the cousin into
exile but before a year had elapsed, himself became the victim of
a conspiracy. However, by that time the Bulgarian state was back
on its feet again.
Meanwhile, having escaped from Constantinople, younger brother
Kaloyan was riding fast towards.
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