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Bulgaria - an ancient land
As a state established by khan Asparoukh, Bulgaria has been existing
for more than 13 centuries. Thracians were the first settlers in the
Bulgarian lands and their civilisation is evidenced by the numerous
archaeological finds, uncovered tombs, discovered gold and silver
treasures. Testimonies for the presence of life in the pre-historic
ages have been preserved in the best-preserved Neolithic housings
discovered world-wide - namely those off the town of Stara Zagora, in
the "Bacho Kiro" cave off the town of Dryanovo and in the Magurata cave
- close to the town of Belogradchik. The first written reference where
the name "Bulgarians" is to be found is included in an anonymous Roman
chronograph of 452 AD.
The settlers
During the Bronze Age the present-day Bulgarian lands were inhabited by
the Thracians, mentioned for the first time by Homer. They were engaged
in agriculture and stockbreeding, and left evidence of a rich culture
(the Vulchitrun gold treasure). The first Thracian state unions emerged
in the 11th-6th centuries BC, which flourished in the 7th-6th centuries
BC. In the 1st century BC their lands were conquered by Rome, and after
the 5th century AD they were incorporated in the Byzantine Empire. The
Thracians were later gradually assimilated by the Slavs who settled in
the Balkan Peninsula in the 6th century AD.
First Bulgarian Kingdom
In the second half of the 7th century, the Proto-Bulgarians - an ethnic
community of Turkic origin - settled on the territory of the
present-day Northeastern Bulgaria. In alliance with the Slavs they
formed the Bulgarian State, which was recognised by the Byzantine
Empire in 681 AD. Khan Asparouh stood at the head of that state and
Pliska was made its capital.
A major political force
Under the rule of Khan Tervel (700-718 AD), Bulgaria expanded its
territory and turned into a major political force. Under Khan Kroum
(803-814 AD) Bulgaria bordered with the empire of Carl the Great to the
west, and to the east the Bulgarian troops reached the walls of
Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire. In 864 AD, during
the rule of Prince Boris I Michail (852-889 AD), the Bulgarians adopted
Christianity as their official religion. This act abolished the ethnic
differences between Proto-Bulgarians and Slavs, and started building a
unified Bulgarian nation. After adopting Christianity, the influence of
the Byzantine Empire grew. This is evidenced by the ossuary in the
Bachkovo Monastery (1083 AD). Bulgarian church music was created.
The Cyrillic alphabet
In the second half of the 9th century the brothers Cyril (Constantine
the Philosopher) and Methodius created and disseminated the Cyrillic
alphabet. Their disciples Clement and Nahum came to Bulgaria, where
they were warmly welcomed and found good conditions for work. They
developed a rich educational and literary activity. From Bulgaria the
Cyrillic script spread to other Slavic lands as well - present-day
Serbia and Russia. The cities of Ochrida and Pliska, and subsequently
the new capital city Veliki Preslav as well, became centres of
Bulgarian culture, and of Slav culture as a whole.
Golden Age of Bulgarian Culture
The reign of Tsar Simeon I (893-927 AD) marked the "Golden Age of
Bulgarian Culture", and the territory of his state reached the Black
Sea and the Aegean Sea. During the reign of Simeon's successors,
Bulgaria was weakened by internal struggles, the heresy of the priest
Bogomil spread and influenced the teachings of the Cathars and
Albigenses in Western Europe.
Second Bulgarian Kingdom
In 1018, after prolonged wars, Bulgaria was conquered by the Byzantine
Empire. From the very first years under Byzantine rule, the Bulgarians
started fighting for their freedom. In 1186, the uprising led by two
boyars, the brothers Assen and Peter, overthrew the domination of the
Byzantine Empire. The Second Bulgarian Kingdom was founded, and Turnovo
became the new capital. After 1186, Bulgaria was initially ruled by
Assen, and after that by Peter. The earlier power of Bulgaria was
restored during the reign of their youngest brother, Kaloyan
(1197-1207), and during the reign of Tsar Ivan Assen II (1218 -1241)
the Second Bulgarian Kingdom reached its greatest upsurge: political
hegemony was established in Southeastern Europe, the territory of the
country spread to the Black Sea, the Aegean Sea and the Adriatic Sea,
the economy and culture developed.
A new peak
Bulgaria reached a new peak, which lasted until the end of the Second
Bulgarian Kingdom (1186-1396). The schools of literature and the arts
in Turnovo developed the traditions in Bulgarian culture, which is
evidenced by the frescoes in the Boyana Church, the churches in
Turnovo, in the Zemen Monastery, the churches hewn into the rocks near
Ivanovo, the miniatures in the Gospel that belonged to Tsar Ivan
Alexander, kept at the British Museum in London, and Manassiy's
Chronicle. In 1235, the Head of the Bulgarian Church was given the
title of Patriarch.
The strife among some of the boyars resulted in the division of
Bulgaria into two kingdoms: the kingdoms of Vidin and Turnovo. This
weakened the country and it was conquered by the Ottoman Empire in
1396. For nearly five centuries Bulgaria was under Ottoman domination.
The initial years were characterised by sporadic and unorganised
attempts to win freedom. Later the appearance of the clandestine
fighters, the "haydouts", made the emergence of a well-organised
national liberation movement possible.
The formation of the Bulgarian nation and the development of Bulgarian
education started in the beginning of the 18th century. One impetus for
this was the work of the monk Paissii of Hilendar History of Slavs and
Bulgarians, written in 1762. The ideas of national freedom led to the
establishing of an autonomous Bulgarian national Church, and to the
flourishing of education and culture. Some of the key figures during
the Bulgarian National Revival were Zachary Zograph, Nikolay Pavlovich,
Stanislav Dospevski, and many others. That period marked also the
beginning of the first amateur theatre performances.
The start of the organised revolutionary movement for liberation from
Ottoman domination is associated with the work of Georgi Sava Rakovski
(1821-1867) - writer and journalist, founder and ideologist of the
national-liberal liberation movement. The main figures in the national
liberation movement were Vassil Levski (1837-1873) - strategist and
ideologist of the movement and national hero; Lyuben Karavelov
(1834-1879) - writer and journalist, leader and ideologist of the
movement; Hristo Botev (1848-1876) - poet and journalist,
revolutionary, democrat, national hero, and many other Bulgarians.
In 1876 the April Uprising broke out - the first significant and
organised attempt at liberation from Ottoman domination. The uprising
was brutally crushed and drowned in blood, but it drew the attention of
the European countries to the Bulgarian national issues. In 1878, as a
result of the Russian-Turkish War of Liberation (1877-1878), the
Bulgarian State was restored, but national unity was not achieved. The
former Bulgarian territories were divided into three: the Principality
of Bulgaria was proclaimed - with Prince Alexander Battemberg at its
head, Eastern Rumelia - with a Christian Governor appointed by the
Sultan, while Thrace and Macedonia remained under the domination of the
Ottoman Empire.
After
1878, the first cultural and educational institutions in the
Principality began to be built. The St. St. Cyril and Methodius
National Library was built in 1878, the St. Kliment Ohridski University
of Sofia opened its doors in 1888, and the Ivan Vazov National Theatre
- in 1904. The first film was shown in Rousse in 1897. The late 19th
and the early 20th century were characterised by remarkable
achievements in all fine arts. That was the period marked by the works
of the Bulgarian poets and writers Ivan Vazov, Aleko Konstantinov,
Dimcho Debelyanov, Pencho Slaveykov - the only Bulgarian nominated for
Nobel Prize, Peyo Yavorov and many others. The artists Anton Mitov,
Ivan Angelov, Ivan Mrkvicka, Yaroslav Veshin, B. Schatz and others
created some of the most remarkable works of art during that time. The
late 19th century also marked the beginning of Bulgarian professional
musical culture. The first Bulgarian composers were Emanouil Manolov,
Dimiter Christov and Georgi Atanassov-Maestro.
The decision for the fractionation of Bulgaria, taken at the Berlin
Congress (1878), was never accepted by the people. The decisions of
1878 triggered the Kresna-Razlog Uprising (1878-1879), which in 1885
led to the unification of the Principality of Bulgaria and Eastern
Rumelia. The Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising also broke out (1903).
Ferdinand Saxe-Coburg Gotha, Bulgarian Prince since 1887, proclaimed
Bulgaria's independence from Turkey and in 1908 became Kniaz of the
Bulgarian people. Bulgaria took part in the Balkan War (1912) and
fought together with Serbia and Greece for the freedom of Thrace and
Macedonia. Bulgaria won that war, but in the subsequent war among the
allies (1913) it was defeated by Romania, Turkey and by its earlier
allies, who tore from her territories with a Bulgarian population.
The intervention of Bulgaria in World War I on the side of the Central
Powers ended with a national catastrophe. In 1918, Kniaz Ferdinand
abdicated in favour of his son Boris III. The Neuilly Peace Treaty of
1919 imposed severe provisions on Bulgaria: it lost its outlet on the
Aegean Sea, Western Thrace became a part of Greece, Southern Dobroudja
was annexed to Romania, and the territories around Strumica,
Bosilegrad, Zaribrod and villages around Kula were given to the
Serbian-Croatian-Slovenian Kingdom. (Southern Dobroudja was restored to
Bulgaria by the Bulgarian-Romanian Treaty of 1940.)
In the early 1940s, Bulgaria led a policy in the interest of Germany
and the Axis powers. Later the participation of Bulgarian cavalry units
on the Eastern Front was discontinued. Tsar Boris III supported the
public pressure and did not allow the deportation of about 50,000
Bulgarian Jews. In August 1943 Tsar Boris III died and the regency of
the young Tsar Simeon II took over the governing of the country. On 5
September 1944, the Soviet Army entered Bulgaria and on 9 September the
Fatherland Front Government, headed by Kimon Georgiev, came to power.
In 1946 Bulgaria was proclaimed to be a People's Republic. The
Queen-Mother, Tsar Simeon ?? and Princess Maria-Louisa left Bulgaria
for Egypt via Turkey. The Bulgarian Communist Party came to power. The
political parties outside the Fatherland Front were banned, the economy
and the banks were nationalised, the arable land was coercively
organised in cooperatives. The governing of the state went successively
into the hands of Georgi Dimitrov, Vassil Kolarov, Vulko Chervenkov,
Anton Yougov and Todor Zhivkov.
The
date 10 November 1989 marked the beginning of the democratic changes in
Bulgaria. A new Constitution was adopted (1991), the political parties
were restored, the property expropriated in 1947 was resituated,
privatisation and restitution of the land started. In 1990 Zhelyu
Zhelev became President of Bulgaria - the first democratically elected
President. The key priorities in Bulgaria's foreign policy became the
membership in the European Union and NATO. As a result of the country's
considerable progress towards meeting the criteria for EU membership,
Bulgaria received on 10 December 1999 the invitation to start the
pre-accession negotiations. The negotiations started in Brussels on 15
February 2000. On 1 December 2000, the Council of Ministers of Justice
and Home Affairs of the European Union decided to remove Bulgaria from
the negative visa list.
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