Peter II of Bulgaria

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Peter II,[note 1] born Theodor, also known as Theodor-Peter (Template:Langx; died in 1197), was the first emperor or tsar of the restored Bulgarian Empire from 1185 to 1197. He hails from the Byzantine theme of Paristrion, although his exact place and date of birth are unknown.

He and his younger brothers, Asen and Kaloyan, were mentioned as Vlachs in most foreign contemporaneous sources but they were probably of a mixed Vlach, Bulgarian, and Cuman origin. In 1185, Theodor and Asen approached the Byzantine Emperor Isaac II Angelos in Thrace, demanding an estate in the Balkan Mountains. After the Emperor refused and humiliated them, they decided to incite a rebellion, taking advantage of the discontent that a new tax had caused among the Bulgarians and Vlachs. To convince their compatriots to join them, they had native prophets declare that Saint Demetrius of Thessalonica had abandoned the Romans in favour of the Bulgarians and Vlachs. Before the end of the year, Theodor was crowned Emperor of Bulgaria, taking the name Peter and adopting the insignia used only by emperors.

The Byzantine army defeated the rebels, forcing Theodor-Peter and Asen to flee to the Cumans in April 1186. Returning in the autumn at the head of Cuman troops, they took control of Paristrion, firmly establishing the new state, regarded as the successor to the First Bulgarian Empire. The brothers made regular raids against nearby Byzantine territories in the early 1190s. Conflicts between Isaac II and the Holy Roman Emperor Frederick Barbarossa during the Third Crusade enabled Peter to conquer new territories in 1190. Peter and Asen divided their realm around 1192, with Peter receiving Preslav and the north-eastern region. After Asen was murdered by a boyar in 1196, Peter appointed Kaloyan as his co-ruler in Asen's place. Peter was also murdered the following year.

Names

The Synodikon of Tzar Boril, composed in 1211, referred to him as "Theodor, called Peter", proving that Theodor was his original name.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to a widespread scholarly theory, he changed his name when he was crowned emperor, most probably in memory of Peter I of Bulgaria who had been canonized in the early 11th century.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Historian Alexandru Madgearu says Theodor must have adopted the new name in reference to two leaders of 11th-century anti-Byzantine rebellions, Peter Delyan and Constantine Bodin (or Peter), rather than Peter I, who attempted to maintain peace with the Byzantine Empire.Template:Sfn Theodore Balsamon, Patriarch of Antioch, called him "the rebel Slavopetros" in a poem.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Two chronicles about Frederick Barbarossa's crusade referred to him as "Kalopeter" (from the Greek expression for "Peter the Handsome").Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Early life

The year of Theodor-Peter's birth is unknown.Template:Sfn He was apparently the eldest son of a wealthy shepherd from the Haemus Mountains, according to Madgearu.Template:Sfn On the other hand, no source records that he or his brother, Asen, owned cattle.Template:Sfn Madgearu says, they may have administered an imperial horse farm, adding that their estates were most probably located near Tarnovo.Template:Sfn Historian Ivan Dujčev writes that the brothers were local chieftains in the Balkan Mountains.Template:Sfn

Theodor-Peter and his brothers were mentioned as VlachsTemplate:Sfnin sources written in the late 12th and early 13th centuries,Template:Sfn but their ethnicity is subject to scholarly debates.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The presence of many ethnic groups in the lands to the south of the Lower Danube in the 12th century is well documented, thus they were most likely of mixed Vlach, Bulgarian and Cuman origin.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, they chose to identify themselves as Bulgarians.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Theodor-Peter and Asen approached the Byzantine Emperor Isaac II Angelos near Kypsela in Thrace (now İpsala in Turkey) in late 1185.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn They asked the emperor to recruit them in the imperial army and to grant them "by imperial rescript a certain estate situated in the vicinity of Mount Haimos, which would provide them with a little revenue",[1] according to the Byzantine historian, Niketas Choniates.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Choniates' words show that the brothers wanted to receive a pronoia grant (that is, the revenues from an imperial estate in exchange for military service).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to a scholarly theory, the brothers actually tried to convince the emperor to make them the autonomous rulers of Moesia, because Choniates notes that at a later stage of their rebellion, they "were not content merely to preserve their own possessions and to assume control of the government"[2] of Moesia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Whatever their request was, Isaac II refused them.Template:Sfn Asen was also "struck across the face and rebuked for impudence"[1] at the command of the emperor's uncle, John Doukas.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Uprising

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A rectangular church built of bricks with two towers
Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki in Tarnovo, allegedly erected on the place where the "house of prayer" built by Theodor-Peter and Asen had stood

After their humiliation at Kypsela, Theodor-Peter and Asen returned to their homeland and decided to incite a rebellion.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn A formal speech, delivered in praise of Isaac II in 1193, stated that Theodor-Peter had been the "first to rebel" against the emperor.Template:Sfn Madgearu notes that Michael Choniates describes Theodor-Peter as a "hateful and renegade slave", which also suggests that he was the instigator of the uprising.Template:Sfn

The brothers knew that the collection of an extraordinary tax, which had been levied in the autumn of 1185, angered the population, especially in the region of Anchialos (now Pomorie in Bulgaria).Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn However, they could not provoke the discontented people into rebellion initially because their compatriots looked "askance at the magnitude of the undertaking",[3] according to Choniates.Template:Sfn Theodor-Peter and Asen decided to take advantage of the Bulgarians and Vlachs' devotion to the cult of the martyr saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki to persuade them to rise up against the Byzantine rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Theodor-Peter and Asen built a "house of prayer"[3] dedicated to the saint and gathered Bulgarian and Vlach prophets and prophetesses.Template:Sfn At the brothers' instruction, the soothsayers announced "in their ravings" that God had consented to the uprising against the Byzantines, and Saint Demetrius would abandon Thessaloniki and "come over to them to be their helper and assistant" during the forthcoming rebellion.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This "professional work of manipulation"Template:Sfn was effective: all who were present willingly joined the brothers' movement.Template:Sfn Niketas Choniates, who recorded these events, did not name the venue of the gathering, but Tarnovo is the most probable place according to modern scholars' views.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Emperor

Beginnings

Taking advantage of the war between the Byzantine Empire and the Normans of Sicily, the rebels invaded Thrace and persuaded others to join them.Template:Sfn Heartened by the victories, Theodor-Peter "bound his head with a gold chaplet and fashioned scarlet buskins to put on his feet",[4] thus adopting insignia that had been used only by the emperors.Template:Sfn Although Choniates does not mention that Theodor-Peter also styled himself emperor, the use of imperial insignia shows that he either had been proclaimed emperor, or at least laid claim to the title.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Madgearu says, the coronation most probably took place before the end of 1185, because a priest, Basil, was allegedly made the head of the restored Bulgarian Orthodox Church in that year.Template:Sfn

Theodor-Peter laid siege to Preslav, which had been the capital of the First Bulgarian Empire, but they could not capture it.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The rebels again stormed into Thrace and carried away "many free [people], much cattle and draft animals, and sheep and goats in no small number" in early 1186.[4]Template:Sfn To prevent the rebels from crossing the mountain passes, Isaac II launched a campaign against them, but they occupied "the rough ground and inaccessible places"[4] and resisted the attacks.Template:Sfn However, a sudden "blackness" (associated with the solar eclipse of 21 April 1186) rose up and "covered the mountains",[5] enabling the Byzantines to inflict a severe defeat on the rebels.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Exile and return

Two wagons, each delivering people in tents, and four horsemen
Cumans depicted in the Radziwiłł Chronicle

After the Byzantine victory, a courtier stated that Theodor-Peter and Asen were soon forced to yield to the emperor, describing Theodor-Peter as a bull who had broken the yoke.Template:Sfn However, the brothers fled across the Lower Danube and sought assistance from the Cumans.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The imperial troops "set up fire to the crops gathered in heaps" by the local inhabitants, but made no major efforts to capture the rebels' fortresses which were "built on sheer cliffs and cloud-capped peaks".Template:Sfn[6]Template:Sfn

Isaac II also failed to garrison the castles along the Lower Danube, enabling the refugees to return, accompanied by Cuman troops in the autumn of 1186.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Theodor-Peter had promised rich booty and salary to the Cumans to talk them into supporting him, according to a letter that Niketas Choniates wrote on the emperor's name a year after the events.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The same author attributes the leading role to Asen in the ensuing military campaign in his chronicle.Template:Sfn The rebels and their Cuman allies invaded the Byzantine Empire and took control of Paristrion (or Moesia) between the Lower Danube and the mountains.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Thereafter the unification of Moesia and Bulgaria "into one empire as of old"[2] (namely, the restoration of the First Bulgarian Empire) became their principal goal.Template:Sfn Around that time (in 1187 or 1188), Asen became Theodor-Peter's co-ruler.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

According to a scholarly theory, Isaac II acknowledged the independence of the territories under the rule of Theodor-Peter and Asen in a peace treaty signed in the summer of 1188.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn John Van Antwerp Fine writes, the brothers' realm "included the territory between the Balkan Mountains and the Danube".Template:Sfn Madgearu proposes, territories to the south of the mountains, as far as the line connecting Plovdiv, Stara Zagora and Ahtopol, were also incorporated into the new state.Template:Sfn The supposed treaty is not mentioned by Choniates.Template:Sfn Historian Paul Stephenson states that he has found no evidence in support of a treaty acknowledging the independence of the new state, but he also emphasizes that the territory to the north of the mountains was ruled by various Vlach, Bulgarian and Cuman lords who regarded Theodor-Peter and Asen as their sovereigns.Template:Sfn

Third Crusade

Significant numbers of Bulgarians and Vlachs remained under Byzantine rule after 1188.Template:Sfn Those who were subjected to the Byzantine governor of Braničevo harassed the crusaders of the Holy Roman Emperor, Frederick Barbarossa, in July 1189.Template:Sfn Around that time, Stefan Nemanja, Grand Župan (or ruler) of Serbia, seized parts of the Byzantine theme (or district) of Bulgaria.Template:Sfn Nemanja and Theodor-Peter concluded an agreement against the Byzantines.Template:Sfn

Theodor-Peter wanted to take advantage of the crusaders' presence to expand his rule.Template:Sfn He and his brother took control of "the region where the Danube flows into the sea"[7] (present-day Dobruja) in the summer. He had already dispatched an embassy to Barbarosa in Niš in July,Template:Sfn offering him "due respect and a promise of faithful assistance against his enemies".[7]Template:Sfn He sent a second envoy to Barbarossa, who had come into conflict with Isaac II, to Adrianople (now Edirne in Turkey) in December, offering "forty thousand Vlachs and Cumans armed with bows and arrows"[8] to fight against the Byzantines.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He also announced his claim to "the imperial crown of the kingdom of the Greeks"[8] (or the Byzantine Empire).Template:Sfn

Barbarossa was indeed contemplating an attack against Constantinople, but he changed his mind and concluded a peace treaty with Isaac II in February 1190.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn On the day when the treaty was concluded, Isaac II's envoy tried to talk Barbarossa into a joint military action against the Vlachs, while Theodor-Peter's delegate again proposed an alliance against the Byzantines.Template:Sfn However, Barbarossa, who wanted to continue the crusade towards the Holy Land, refused both offers.Template:Sfn

New conflicts

A map of the Second Bulgarian Empire not universally accepted by historians.
Second Bulgarian Empire from 1185 to 1196 under the rule of Tsar Peter II and Tsar Ivan Asen I., according to a Bulgarian historical atlas. The theory that Bulgaria included Oltenia and Muntenia, as it is presented on the map, is not universally accepted by historians.Template:Sfn

After Barbarossa left Thrace, Isaac II was able to make new attempts to recover the lands lost to Theodor-Peter and Asen.Template:Sfn In July 1190, he invaded the brothers' realms across the Rish Pass and dispatched a fleet to the Lower Danube to prevent the Cumans from crossing the river.Template:Sfn However, the brothers had already strengthened their fortification and avoided direct confrontations with the invaders.Template:Sfn The emperor decided to return to his capital after he was informed that Cuman troops had crossed the Lower Danube in September.Template:Sfn The Vlachs and the Bulgarians ambushed the imperial army at a narrow pass and inflicted a major defeat on it.Template:Sfn Isaac II escaped, but much of the army perished and the victors seized "the more valuable of the emperor's insignia",[9] including his pyramidal crown and relics associated with the Virgin Mary.Template:Sfn

The Vlachs, Bulgarians and Cumans resumed their raids against Byzantine territories.Template:Sfn They sacked Varna and Pomorie; they destroyed Triaditsa and seized the relics of Ivan of Rila, a saint especially venerated by the Bulgarians.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Isaac II routed Cuman marauders near Plovdiv in April 1191.Template:Sfn He made his cousin, Constantine Doukas Angelos, the commander of Plovdiv in 1192.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Constantine prevented Theodor-Peter and Asen from making frequent pillaging raids against Thrace, but he was blinded after he tried to dethrone the emperor.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Theodor-Peter and Asen rejoiced over Constantine's fate. According to Choniates,Template:Sfn they said they were ready to make "Isaac emperor over their own nation, for he could not have benefited the Vlachs more than gouging out Constantine's eyes".[10]

At least two eulogies delivered in 1193 provide evidence that Isaac had succeeded in creating a rift between Theodor-Peter and Asen.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn An orator mentioned that Theodor-Peter had concluded a peace treaty with the Byzantines; the other described him as "a stumbling block to his brother" and an enemy to his own family, while describing Asen as a "most reckless and obdurate rebel".Template:Sfn George Akropolites records that Preslav, Provadia and the "area around them" was still known as "Peter's land"[11] in the 13th century.Template:Sfn The sources suggest that the brothers divided the territories under their rule into two, most probably in 1192, according to Madgearu.Template:Sfn Receiving the northeastern region, Theodor-Peter set up his capital at Preslav.Template:Sfn Fine says the strife between the brothers was most probably soon rectified, because they jointly ordered the invasion of Thrace in 1193.Template:Sfn

Last years

Asen was murdered in Tarnovo by the boyar Ivanko in the fall of 1196.Template:Sfn Theodor-Peter soon mustered his troops, hurried to the town and laid siege to it.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Ivanko sent an envoy to Constantinople, urging the new Byzantine Emperor, Alexios III Angelos, to send reinforcements to him.Template:Sfn The emperor dispatched Manuel Kamytzes to lead an army to Tarnovo, but fear of an ambush at the mountain passes led to an outbreak of mutiny and the troops forced him to return.Template:Sfn Ivanko realized that he could not defend Tarnovo any more and fled from the town to Constantinople.Template:Sfn Theodor-Peter entered Tarnovo.Template:Sfn After making his younger brother Kaloyan the ruler of the town, he returned to Preslav.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Theodor-Peter was murdered "in obscure circumstances"Template:Sfn in 1197. He was "run through by the sword of one of his countrymen",[12] according to Choniates' record.Template:Sfn Historian István Vásáry writes, Theodor-Peter was killed during a riot;Template:Sfn Stephenson proposes, the native lords got rid of him, because of his close alliance with the Cumans.Template:Sfn

See also

Notes

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  1. Georgi Atanasov, Miliana Kaimakamova and some other Bulgarian historians refer to him as Peter IV (Template:Langx), because they take into consideration two previous leaders of anti-Byzantine rebellions, Peter Delyan (who assumed the imperial title in 1040) and Constantine Bodin (who took the name Peter in 1072).Template:Sfn

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References

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  1. a b O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.369), p. 204.
  2. a b O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.374), p. 206.
  3. a b O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.371), p. 205.
  4. a b c O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.372), p. 205.
  5. O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.372), p. 206.
  6. O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.1.373), p. 206.
  7. a b The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick, p. 64.
  8. a b The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick, p. 84.
  9. George Akropolites: The History (ch. 11.), p. 133.
  10. O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.3.437), p. 240.
  11. George Akropolites: The History (ch. 12.), p. 137.
  12. O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates (5.3.472), p. 259.

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Sources

Primary sources

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  • George Akropolites: The History (Translated with and Introduction and Commentary by Ruth Macrides) (2007). Oxford University Press. Template:ISBN.
  • O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniatēs (Translated by Harry J. Magoulias) (1984). Wayne State University Press. Template:ISBN.
  • "The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick". In The Crusade of Frederick Barbarossa: The History of the Expedition of the Emperor Frederick and Related Texts (Translated by G. A. Loud) (2013). Ashgate Publishing. pp. 33–134. Template:ISBN.

Secondary sources

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Template:Sister project

Peter II of Bulgaria
 Died: 1197
Regnal titles
Vacant
Title last held by
Ivan Vladislav
Emperor of Bulgaria
1185–1197
with Ivan Asen I
Kaloyan Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded byas sole emperor

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