Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria

(Redirected from Ivan Alexander)

Ivan Alexander (Bulgarian: Иван Александър, transliterated Ivan Aleksandǎr,[1] pronounced [iˈvan ɐlɛkˈsandɐr]; original spelling: ІѠАНЪ АЛЄѮАНдРЪ),[2] also sometimes anglicized as John Alexander,[3] ruled as Emperor (Tsar) of Bulgaria from 1331 to 1371,[4] during the Second Bulgarian Empire. The date of his birth is unknown. He died on 17 February 1371. The long reign of Ivan Alexander is considered a transitional period in Bulgarian medieval history. Ivan Alexander began his rule by dealing with internal problems and external threats from Bulgaria's neighbours, the Byzantine Empire and Serbia, as well as leading his empire into a period of economic recovery and cultural and religious renaissance.[5]

Ivan Alexander
Portrait, miniature from the Gospels of Tsar Ivan Alexander (1355–1356)
Tsar of Bulgaria
Reign1331 – 17 February 1371
PredecessorIvan Stephen
SuccessorIvan Shishman
Ivan Sratsimir
Died(1371-02-17)17 February 1371
SpouseTheodora of Wallachia
Sarah (Theodora)
Issuesee below
DynastySratsimir
FatherSratsimir
MotherKeratsa Petritsa
ReligionEastern Orthodox

However, the emperor was later unable to cope with the mounting incursions of Ottoman forces, Hungarian invasions from the northwest and the Black Death.[4] In an ill-fated attempt to combat these problems, he divided the country between his two sons,[6][7] thus forcing it to face the imminent Ottoman conquest weakened and divided.[4][7]

Early rule

edit

Ivan Alexander was the son of the Despot Sracimir of Kran by Petrica, a sister of Michael Asen III of Bulgaria.[8] Therefore, Ivan Alexander was a nephew of Michael Asen III.[5][6] Paternally, Ivan Alexander descended from the Asen dynasty.[5][6] By 1330 Ivan Alexander was himself a despot and governed the city of Lovech. Together with his father and his father-in-law Basarab of Wallachia, Ivan Alexander fought in the Battle of Velbazhd against the Serbs at modern-day Kyustendil in 1330, in which Bulgaria suffered defeat. The defeat, combined with the worsening relations with the Byzantine Empire, precipitated an internal crisis, which was exacerbated by an invasion of the Byzantines. A coup d'état drove Ivan Stefan out of the capital Tarnovo in 1331, and the conspirators placed Ivan Alexander on the throne.[9]

 
Contemporary mural portrait of Ivan Alexander from the Rock-hewn Churches of Ivanovo

The new ruler set about consolidating his position by regaining territories recently lost to the Byzantine Empire. In 1331 Ivan Alexander campaigned around Adrianople and reconquered northeastern Thrace.[5][6] Meanwhile, Stefan Uroš IV Dušan deposed his father Stefan Uroš III Dečanski and became Serbian king in 1331. This helped normalize the previously tense relations between the two countries. Ivan Alexander and Stefan Uroš IV Dušan concluded an alliance, which was cemented by the marriage of the Serbian king to Helena of Bulgaria, a sister of Ivan Alexander, on Easter 1332.[5][6][10]

At about the same time, Belaur, a brother of Michael Asen III, rebelled in Vidin, probably in support of his deposed nephew Ivan Stefan's claim to the throne. The advance of the Byzantine Emperor Andronikos III Palaiologos against Bulgaria in the summer of 1332 protracted military operations against the rebels. The Byzantines overran Bulgarian-controlled northeastern Thrace, but Ivan Alexander rushed southward with a small army and swiftly caught up with Andronikos III at Rusokastro.[10]

Nobody of our first tsars seems to us like this great tsar Ivan Alexander, in his military power he looks to us like a second ancient Alexander the Great, in faith and piety he is a second Saint Constantine; he captured thus all his enemies, put them under his knees and established firm peace in the Universe.[11]

— Praise to Ivan Alexander[12] by an anonymous contemporary of the tsar

After giving the impression that he wished to negotiate, Ivan Alexander, reinforced by Mongol cavalry, overwhelmed the smaller but better organized Byzantine army in the Battle of Rusokastro.[6] The contested cities surrendered to Ivan Alexander, while Andronikos III sought refuge within the walls of Rusokastro. The war ended with Ivan Alexander meeting Andronikos and agreeing a peace based on the status quo. To seal the alliance, he betrothed his eldest son, Michael Asen IV, to Andronikos's daughter Maria (Eirene), the marriage eventually taking place in 1339.[6][13] The Bulgarian emperor was now free to turn his attentions to Belaur, but it was not until 1336 or 1337 that the rebellion in the northwest was put down.[14]

In about 1332 Ivan Alexander had crowned his eldest son Michael Asen IV co-emperor, perhaps to safeguard possession of the throne by his own family. He followed up this traditional association with the coronation of his younger sons Ivan Sracimir and Ivan Asen IV in 1337. Ivan Alexander may have intended the creation of two younger co-emperors to establish immediate control over important cities and regions, as Ivan Sracimir was eventually based in Vidin, and Ivan Asen IV perhaps in Preslav. Nevertheless, this was a marked departure from Byzantine practice, in which younger sons of the sovereign were made despots, whether they were charged with a territorial administration or not.[15]

Relations with the Byzantine Empire

edit
 
The Bulgarian lands during the reign of Ivan Alexander[16]

In the early 1340s relations with the Byzantine Empire temporarily deteriorated. Ivan Alexander demanded the extradition of his cousin Šišman, one of the sons of Michael Asen III, threatening the Byzantine government with war. Ivan Alexander's show of force backfired, as the Byzantines managed to see through his intentions and sent against him the fleet of their ally, the Turkish emir of Smyrna Umur Beg. Landing in the Danube Delta, they pillaged the countryside and attacked nearby Bulgarian cities. Forced to restrain his demands, Ivan Alexander invaded the Byzantine Empire again at the end of 1341, claiming that he was summoned by the people of Adrianople.[17] However, Ivan Alexander's troops were defeated twice by Turkish allies of the Byzantines near the city.[18]

In 1341–1347 the Byzantine Empire was plunged into a protracted civil war between the regency for Emperor John V Palaiologos under Anna of Savoy and his intended guardian John VI Kantakouzenos. The neighbours of the Byzantines took advantage of the civil war, and while Stefan Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia sided with John VI Kantakouzenos, Ivan Alexander backed John V Palaiologos and his regency.[6] Although the two Balkan rulers picked opposite sides in the Byzantine civil war, they maintained their alliance with each other. As the price for Ivan Alexander's support, the regency for John V Palaiologos ceded him the city of Philippopolis (Plovdiv) and nine important fortresses in the Rhodope Mountains in 1344.[4][19] This peaceful turnover constituted the last major success of Ivan Alexander's foreign policy.[citation needed]

Rise of Serbia and the Ottoman threat

edit
 
Silver coin of Ivan Alexander, Bulgaria, 1331–1371

During the same period, the Serbian king took advantage of the Byzantine civil war to take possession of what is now Macedonia, and of most of Albania and northern Greece. In 1345 he began to call himself "Emperor of Serbs and Greeks", and in 1346 he was crowned as such by the newly created Serbian Patriarch.[6] These actions, which the Byzantines received with indignation, appear to have been supported by Bulgaria, as the Patriarch of Bulgaria Simeon had participated in both the creation of a Serbian Patriarchate of Peć and the imperial coronation of Stefan Uroš IV Dušan.[20]

By the second half of the 1340s, little remained of Ivan Alexander's initial successes. John VI Kantakouzenos' Turkish allies pillaged parts of Bulgarian Thrace in 1346, 1347, 1349, 1352 and 1354, to which were added the ravages of the Black Death.[21] The Bulgarians' attempts to repel the invaders met with repeated failure, and Ivan Alexander's third son and co-emperor, Ivan Asen IV, was killed in battle against the Turks in 1349, as was his older brother Michael Asen IV in 1355 or a little earlier.[22]

By 1351 the Byzantine civil war was over, and John VI Kantakouzenos had realized the threat posed by the Ottomans to the Balkan Peninsula. He appealed to the rulers of Serbia and Bulgaria for a united effort against the Turks and asked Ivan Alexander for money to construct warships,[6][23] but his appeals fell on deaf ears as his neighbours distrusted his intentions.[24] A new attempt for cooperation between Bulgaria and the Byzantine Empire followed in 1355,[25] after John VI Kantakouzenos had been forced to abdicate and John V Palaiologos had been established as supreme emperor. To cement the treaty, Ivan Alexander's daughter Keraca Marija[26] was married off to the future Byzantine Emperor Andronikos IV Palaiologos,[4] but the alliance failed to produce concrete results.[27]

Further stability problems and external conflicts

edit
 
Coin depicting Ivan Alexander with one of his sons, co-emperor Michael Asen IV (right)

At home Ivan Alexander compromised the internal stability of his realm by divorcing his first wife Theodora of Wallachia (in about 1349) and marrying a converted Jew, also named Theodora.[6] The new marriage produced new sons, whom Ivan Alexander proceeded to crown co-emperors, Ivan Šišman in about 1356 and Ivan Asen V by 1359. Ivan Alexander's last surviving son from his first marriage, the co-emperor Ivan Sracimir, became effectively independent around 1356;[6] and Ivan Alexander's control over other powerful vassals, such as the rulers of Wallachia and Dobruja, who pursued their own foreign policies, was hardly stronger.[28]

From the middle of the 14th century, Bulgaria fell prey to the aspirations of the Angevin king Louis I of Hungary, who annexed Moldavia in 1352 and established a vassal principality there, before conquering Vidin in 1365,[6][23] and taking Ivan Sratsimir and his family into captivity.[6][28]

 
Military campaign of Amadeus VI against Bulgaria (1366–67)

In the meantime Bulgarians and Byzantines had clashed again in 1364. In 1366, when Emperor John V Palaiologos was returning from his trip to the west, the Bulgarians refused to let him pass through Bulgaria. This stance backfired, as another Byzantine ally, Count Amadeus VI of Savoy, leading the Savoyard crusade, captured several Bulgarian maritime cities in retaliation, including Ankhialos (Pomorie) and Mesembria (Nesebǎr), though he failed to take Varna. Outmanoeuvred, Ivan Alexander was forced to make peace.[29]

The captured cities were turned over to the Byzantine Empire, while Emperor John V Palaiologos paid the sum of 180,000 florins to Ivan Alexander.[6] The Bulgarian emperor used this sum and territorial concessions to induce his at least de jure vassals Dobrotica of Dobruja[30] and Vladislav I of Wallachia[31][32] to reconquer Vidin from the Hungarians.[33] The war was successful, and Ivan Sracimir was reinstalled in Vidin in 1369, although the Hungarian king forced him to acknowledge his overlordship.[34]

The relatively successful resolution of the crisis in the northwest did nothing to help recover the losses in the southeast. To make matters worse, in 1369 (the date is disputed), the Ottoman Turks under Murad I conquered Adrianople (in 1363) and made it the effective capital of their expanding state. At the same time, they also captured the Bulgarian cities of Philippopolis and Boruj (Stara Zagora).[35] As Bulgaria and the Serbian princes in Macedonia prepared for united action against the Turks, Ivan Alexander died on 17 February 1371.[36] He was succeeded by his sons Ivan Sracimir in Vidin[23] and Ivan Shishman in Tarnovo,[23] while the rulers of Dobruja and Wallachia achieved further independence.[citation needed]

Culture and religion

edit
 
Contemporary donor portrait in fresco of Ivan Alexander from the Bachkovo Monastery ossuary

During Ivan Alexander's rule, the Second Bulgarian Empire entered a period of cultural renaissance, which is sometimes referred to as the "Second Golden Age of Bulgarian culture",[37][verification needed] the original one being the rule of Simeon the Great.[38] A large number of Bulgarian monasteries and churches were constructed or renovated on the order of Ivan Alexander.[4][39] Mural portraits of him as a donor can be seen in the Bachkovo Monastery's ossuary and in the Rock-hewn Churches of Ivanovo.[citation needed] Donor's deeds of Ivan Alexander prove that the monasteries of the Holy Mother of God Eleoussa and St Nicholas in Nesebǎr were reconstructed during that period,[6][verification needed] as was the St Nicholas monastery near Pernik, according to a Hilandar monastery deed.[citation needed] In addition, the tsar also initiated the construction of the Dragalevci and Kilifarevo monasteries.[6]

Literary activity also flourished during the reign of Ivan Alexander. Several important literary works were created in the period, such as the Middle Bulgarian translation of the Manasses Chronicle (1344–1345), currently preserved in the Vatican Secret Archives in Rome,[6][40] the richly illustrated Tetraevangelia of Ivan Alexander (1355–1356), now exhibited in the British Library,[41] the Tomić Psalter (1360), today in Moscow,[6] and the Sofia Psalter (1337).[42]

Ivan Alexander's rule was also marked by efforts to strengthen the position of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church by pursuing heretics and Jews.[citation needed] He organized two anti-heretical church councils, in 1350 and 1359–1360,[citation needed] that condemned various sects[6][verification needed] such as the Bogomils, the Adamites and the Judaizers.[6][43]

The spiritual practice of hesychasm, a form of incantatory prayer, deeply influenced certain areas of the Eastern Orthodox world of the 14th century. A notable Bulgarian representative of the movement during Ivan Alexander's reign was Theodosius of Tǎrnovo.[citation needed]

During this time, the Bulgarian Empire had trade relations with the Mediterranean maritime powers Venice, Genoa and Ragusa.[44] In 1353, Ivan Alexander issued a charter allowing Venetian merchants to buy and sell goods throughout Bulgaria after Doge Andrea Dandolo assured him they would observe the prior treaties between the two countries.[45]

In modern times, the rule of Ivan Alexander inspired Bulgarian national writer Ivan Vazov to write the novelette Ivan-Aleksandǎr[citation needed] and the drama Kǎm propast (Towards an Abyss), in both of which the tsar is the main character.[citation needed]

A piece of a garment signed by Ivan Alexander and interwoven with gold was discovered in a noble's grave near Pirot in the 1970s; today it is preserved in the National Museum of Serbia in Belgrade. It is the first find of its kind, demonstrating a medieval tradition attested in writing according to which Orthodox rulers would present their most eminent dignitaries with a piece of a garment they had worn.[46]

Ivan Alexander Point on Nelson Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria.[47]

Family

edit

With his first wife Theodora of Wallachia (nun Teofana), a daughter of Basarab I, he had:

With his second wife Sarah-Theodora, Ivan Alexander had several other children:

Family tree of Ivan Alexander[8][26]
Sracimir of Krǎn Petrica
1 2
Theodora of Wallachia Ivan Alexander
(d. 1371, ruled 1331–1371)
Sarah (Theodora)
1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2
Michael Asen IV Thamar (Kera Tamara) Ivan Šišman
(b. 1350–1351, d. 1395,
ruled 1371–1395)
Ivan Asen V Vasilisa
Ivan Asen IV Ivan Sracimir
(b. c. 1324, d. c. 1397,
ruled 1356–1397)
Keraca Marija
(b. 1348, d. 1390)
Desislava

Timeline

edit
Timeline of Ivan Alexander's life

Notes

edit
  1. ^ This article uses the United Nations-authorized scientific transliteration system to romanize Bulgarian Cyrillic. For details, see Romanization of Bulgarian.
  2. ^ As spelled in the Zograf and Orjahov Charters. Daskalova, Angelina; Marija Rajkova (2005). Gramoti na bǎlgarskite care (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. pp. 58–59. ISBN 954-322-034-4.
  3. ^ For example in "John Alexander (emperor of Bulgaria)". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Retrieved 19 January 2007.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Lalkov, Rulers of Bulgaria, pp. 42–43.
  5. ^ a b c d e Bǎlgarite i Bǎlgarija, 2.1
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Delev, Istorija i civilizacija za 11. klas
  7. ^ a b Castellan, Georges (1999). Histoire des Balkans, XIVe–XXe siècle (in French). Paris: Fayard. p. 42. ISBN 2-213-60526-2.
  8. ^ a b c d Bozhilov, Familiyata na Asenevtsi, pp. 192–235.
  9. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 273.
  10. ^ a b Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 274.
  11. ^ Originally from the Sofia Psalter, folios 311a–312b. Adapted by Canev, Bǎlgarski hroniki, pp. 459–460.
  12. ^ Full original text in Middle Bulgarian available in Arhangelskij, A. S. (1897). "Bolgarskij "pěsnivec" 1337 goda. "Pohvala" i otryvok psaltyrnago teksta". Izvestija ORJAS IAN (in Russian). Retrieved 11 February 2007.
  13. ^ Božilov, Familijata na Asenevci, pp. 192–197.
  14. ^ Andreev, Bǎlgarija prez vtorata četvǎrt na XIV v., pp. 33–41.
  15. ^ Andreev, Balgariya prez vtorata chetvart na XIV v., pp. 23–52.
  16. ^ Based on Lalkov, Rulers of Bulgaria
  17. ^ Bakalov, Istorija na Bǎlgarija, "Esenta, 1341 g."
  18. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, pp. 292–293.
  19. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 304.
  20. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, pp. 309–310.
  21. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, pp. 322, 325, 328.
  22. ^ Andreev, Bǎlgarija prez vtorata četvǎrt na XIV v., pp. 67–75.
  23. ^ a b c d Bǎlgarite i Bǎlgarija, 2.2
  24. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 325.
  25. ^ Bakalov, Istorija na Bǎlgarija, "1355 g."
  26. ^ a b Božilov, Ivan; Vasil Gjuzelev (2006). Istorija na srednovekovna Bǎlgarija VII–XIV vek (tom 1) (in Bulgarian). Anubis. ISBN 954-426-204-0.
  27. ^ Božilov, Familijata na Asenevci, pp. 218–224.
  28. ^ a b Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 366.
  29. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 367.
  30. ^ Bakalov, Istorija na Bǎlgarija, "Dobrotica (neizv.–okolo 1385)"
  31. ^ Koledarov, Petǎr (1989). Političeska geografija na srednovekovnata bǎlgarska dǎržava 2 (1186–1396) (in Bulgarian). Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. pp. 13–25, 102.
  32. ^ Miletič, Ljubomir (1896). "Dako-romǎnite i tjahnata slavjanska pismenost. Novi vlaho-bǎlgarski gramoti ot Brašov". Sbornik Za Narodni Umotvorenija, Nauka I Knižnina (in Bulgarian). 2 (13). Sofia: 47. Retrieved 11 February 2007.
  33. ^ Bakalov, Istorija na Bǎlgarija, "Esenta, 1369 g."
  34. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, pp. 367–368.
  35. ^ Tjutjundžiev and Pavlov, Bǎlgarskata dǎržava i osmanskata ekspanzija
  36. ^ Fine, Late Medieval Balkans, p. 368.
  37. ^ Kǎnev, Petǎr (2002). "Religion in Bulgaria after 1989". South-East Europe Review (1): 81. Archived from the original on 29 July 2012. Retrieved 18 February 2007.
  38. ^ "1.2.3 "Zlaten vek" na bǎlgarskata kultura". Bǎlgarite i Bǎlgarija (in Bulgarian). Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Bulgaria, Trud, Sirma. 2005. Archived from the original on 7 September 2006.
  39. ^ Sinodik na Car Boril, additions from the 13th and 14th century, cited in Canev, Bǎlgarski hroniki, p. 456.
  40. ^ Gjuzelev, Vasil (1963). "Njakoi pametnici na starobǎlgarskata knižnina" (in Bulgarian). Kosmos. Archived from the original on 24 February 2007. Retrieved 19 January 2007.
  41. ^ "Gospels of Tsar Ivan Alexander". British Library. Archived from the original on 13 February 2006. Retrieved 25 March 2006.
  42. ^ Miltenova, Anisava (June 2005). "ИЗЛОЖБИ" [Exhibitions]. Informacionen Bjuletin Na BAN (in Bulgarian) (89). Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences: 24. ISSN 1312-5311.
  43. ^ Canev, Bǎlgarski hroniki, p. 457.
  44. ^ glaven red.: Evgeni Golovinski (2005). "Ivan Aleksandǎr Asen (?–1371)". Bǎlgarska enciklopedija A–JA – treto osǎvremeneno izdanie (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Trud, Sirma. ISBN 954-528-519-2.
  45. ^ Bakalov, Istorija na Bǎlgarija, "Venecianska gramota"
  46. ^ Beniševa, Daniela (18 November 2002). "Otkrita e unikalna zlatotkana dreha na Car Ivan Aleksandǎr" (in Bulgarian). Bǎlgarska armija. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 3 February 2007.
  47. ^ Composite Gazetteer of Antarctica: Ivan Alexander Point.
  48. ^ Sugar, Pete (1983). Southeastern Europe Under Ottoman Rule, 1354–1804. University of Washington Press. p. 16. ISBN 0-295-96033-7.
  49. ^ Bozhilov, Familiyata na Asenevtsi, pp. 192–235.

References

edit
edit
Preceded by Emperor of Bulgaria
1331–1371
Succeeded by