Peter I, emperor of Bulgaria

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Peter

Russian: Пётр, Bulgarian: Петър
Birthdate:
Death: January 30, 969 (64-73)
Immediate Family:

Son of Simeon I "the Great," emperor of Bulgaria and N.N.(Maria) Sursuvul (Serbia)
Husband of Maria (Eirene) Lekapene
Father of Boris II, emperor of Bulgaria and Roman, emperor of Bulgaria
Brother of Ivan; Benjamin and N.N.
Half brother of Mihail

Occupation: владетел на България (927–969)
Managed by: Noah Tutak
Last Updated:

About Peter I, emperor of Bulgaria

http://www.friesian.com/romania.htm#bulgar-1

Peter I (Bulgarian: Петър I) was emperor (tsar) of Bulgaria from May 27, 927 to 969, died January 30, 970.

Early Reign

Peter I was the son of Simeon I of Bulgaria by his second marriage to the sister of George Sursuvul. Peter had been born early in the 10th century, but it appears that his maternal uncle was very influential at the beginning of his reign. In 913 Peter may have visited the imperial palace at Constantinople together with his older brother Michael. For unspecified reasons, Simeon had forced Michael to become a monk and had named Peter as his successor.

To prove himself a worthy successor to his father both at home and in the eyes of foreign governments, Peter began his reign with a military offensive into Byzantine Thrace in 927. Nevertheless, he followed up his quick successes by secretly negotiating a peace treaty before the Byzantine government had a chance to retaliate. The Byzantine Emperor Romanos I Lakapenos eagerly accepted the proposal for peace and arranged for a diplomatic marriage between his granddaughter Maria and the Bulgarian monarch. In October 927 Peter arrived near Constantinople to meet Romanos and signed the peace treaty, marrying Maria on November 8. To signify the new era in Bulgaro-Byzantine relations, the princess was renamed Eirene ("peace"). The treaty of 927 actually represents the fruit of Simeon's military successes and diplomatic initiatives, ably continued by his son's government. Peace was obtained with the frontiers restored to those defined in treaties of 897 and 904, the Byzantines recognised the Bulgarian monarch's title of emperor (basileus, tsar) and the autocephalus status of the Bulgarian patriarchate; the payment of an annual tribute to Bulgaria by the Byzantine Empire was renewed.[1]

Revolts and Incursions

The initial successes of Peter's reign were followed by several minor setbacks. Around 930, Peter faced a revolt led by his younger brother Ivan, who was defeated and sent into exile in Byzantium. Soon afterwards Peter's older brother Michael escaped from his monastery and led a more formidable rebellion, which terminated with his early death. The youngest brother, Benjamin (also called Bojan), was accused of being a werewolf and a magician by the Italian Bishop Liutprand of Cremona, but apparently posed no threat to Peter's authority.

Perhaps taking advantage of these challenges to Peter's rule, the Serbian prince Časlav Klonimirović escaped the Bulgarian capital Preslav in 931 and, with tacit Byzantine support, managed to raise a Serbian revolt against Bulgarian rule. The revolt succeeded, and the western part of Serbia recovered its independence. Peter may have had to also face the incursions of the Magyars, who had been defeated and forced into Pannonia by his father in 896. Perhaps after an initial defeat, Peter came to terms with the enemy, and now utilized Magyar groups as his allies against Serbia. Various Magyar clans and chieftains appear to have begun to settle in what was still Bulgarian territory north of the Danube, where they may have become Bulgarian federates, enjoying independence from the Árpád dynasty. This arrangement paved the way for the eventual loss of the region to the Magyars, although that happened over the half-century following Peter's death. Peter apparently allowed these groups to cross Bulgaria and raid Byzantine territories in Thrace and Macedonia, perhaps as an underhanded reaction against Byzantine support for the Serbian rebellion.

Domestic Rule

Peter I presided over a long and relatively peaceful reign, albeit one poorly illuminated by foreign or native sources. In spite of the challenges he encountered soon after his accession and the critical situation at the very end of his life, Peter's Bulgaria appears to have been prosperous and increasingly well organized, with an administrative apparatus noted by foreign travelers and confirmed by the numerous finds of imperial seals. Peter was particularly generous towards the Church, which he endowed lavishly throughout his reign. The emperor's generosity reached such an extent that it was seen as a corrupting factor by even Orthodox clerics, like Cosmas Presbyter. Others chose a path away from the temptations of the secular world, most notably Saint Ivan of Rila, but their ascetic existence still drew the attention of the monarch. Luxury and social tensions may have contributed to the spread of the Bogomil heresy, which Peter duly undertook to combat, soliciting the advice of famous hermits and even his uncle-in-law, the Patriarch of Constantinople Theophylact.

Conflict with Byzantium and Kiev

Relations with the Byzantine Empire worsened after the death of Peter's wife in the mid-960s. Victorious over the Arabs, Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas refused to pay the annual tribute to Bulgaria in 966, complaining of the Bulgarian alliance with the Magyars, and undertook a show of force at the Bulgarian border. Dissuaded from a direct attack against Bulgaria, Nikephoros II dispatched a messenger to the Kievan prince Sviatoslav Igorevich to arrange a Kievan attack against Bulgaria from the north. Sviatoslav readily launched a campaign with a vast force (60,000 troops), and routed the Bulgarians on the Danube and defeated them in the battle near Silistra, seizing some 80 Bulgarian fortresses in 968. Stunned by the success of his ally and suspicious of his actual intentions, Emperor Nikephoros II now hastened to make peace with Bulgaria and arranged the marriage of his wards, the underage emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII, to two Bulgarian princesses. Two of Peter's sons were sent to Constantinople as both negotiators and honorary hostages. In the meantime Peter managed to secure the retreat of the Kievan forces by inciting Bulgaria's traditional allies, the Pechenegs, to attack Kiev itself.

In spite of this temporary success and the reconciliation with Byzantium, Bulgaria faced a new invasion by Sviatoslav in 969. The Bulgarians were defeated again, and Peter suffered a stroke, which led him to abdicate and become a monk. He died on January 30, 970.

Reputation

Compared with the military success of his father's reign, Peter has been traditionally considered a weak ruler, who lost lands and prestige, allowed his military forces to decline while his country was ravaged by foreign invaders, and turned Bulgaria into a Byzantine satellite governed by Byzantine agents in the persons of his empress and her retinue. This view has been questioned by more recent scholarship, which emphasizes the affluence and internal peace enjoyed by Bulgarian society during this long reign, re-evaluates the relationship between Bulgaria and its semi-nomadic neighbors (Magyars and Pechenegs), and questions the allegedly sinister role of Romanos' granddaughter and her retinue. While Peter's reign witnessed the spread of the Bogomil heresy, its origins were more demographic (perhaps inspired by Paulicians settled earlier by Byzantine emperors in Thrace) than social, and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church canonized the monarch as a saint. Peter was considered a good ruler in the Middle Ages, and when Bulgaria fell under Byzantine rule (1018-1185), leaders of attempts to restore Bulgarian independence adopted his name to emphasize legitimacy and continuity.

Family

By his marriage to Maria Lakapena (renamed Eirene), Peter I had several children, including:

   * Plenimir

* Boris II, who succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria in 969
* Roman, who succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria in 977
Honour

Peter Peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Peter I of Bulgaria.

References:

   * John V.A. Fine, Jr., The Early Medieval Balkans, Ann Arbor, 1983.

* (Bulgarian) Jordan Andreev, Ivan Lazarov, Plamen Pavlov, Koj koj e v srednovekovna Bălgarija, Sofia 1999.

O Peterovi I, emperorovi of Bulgariovi (čeština)



https://gw.geneanet.org/comrade28?lang=en&iz=0&m=A&p=prince+mundzuk...

........



https://cs.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr_I._Bulharsk%C3%BD


https://cs.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr_I._Bulharsk%C3%BD


Po znamenité vládě cara Simeona Bulharsko upadlo. Historici to kladli za vinu Petrovi I. – následníkovi trůnu po Simeonovi. Popisovali ho jako slabého, krotkého a nezkušeného panovníka, který nerozuměl diplomacii. I naproti tomuto handicapu tento pokojný a skromný monarcha zůstal na trůně déle než všichni středověcí panovníci – od roku 927 do roku 970.

Celá příčina bulharského neštěstí má kořeny právě v synovi cara Simeona. Války, které car Petr uskutečnil, přivedly bulharskou říši do totální katastrofy. A v polnohospodářství, které bylo hlavním zdrojem obživy vojáků brzy nastal kolaps.

Během jeho vlády vyšší duchovenstvo bohatlo na rozdíl od obyvatelstva. Rozšířilo se nové hnutí – bogomilství. Jeho cílem bylo projevovat nenávist vůči carovi a duchovenstvu. Jeho členy se stali i dva Petrovi synové, aby tak mohli dělat víc nepříjemností otci. Car se už na ně potom nemohl spolehnout v bitvách proti nepříteli.

Když car nastoupil na trůn, ihned ztratil část svého území – v bitvě proti Uhrům na severu Bulharska. Za oběť padlo území při Dunaji a dokonce i Thrákie. Dunaj se stal severní hranicí, odkud sousední státy podnikaly vojenské výpravy do regionu Dobrudža.

Vztahy s Byzantskou říší byli tou dobou pokojné, protože v roce 927 se Petr I. oženil s vnučkou císaře Romana Lakapena. Podepsala se i mírová smlouva na období 30 let. V ní byl potvrzen titul car pro bulharského panovníka.

Na konci vlády Petra I. mír mezi Byzancí a Bulhary skončil. Carovi synové – Roman a Boris – byli v Konstantinopoli zajati a panovník Nikeforos II. poštval knížete Svjatoslava, aby na bulharskou říši zaútočil. Petrova armáda byla v Dobrudži poražena a zajata ruskou armádou. Rusové obsadili pár pevností a kníže Svjatoslav založil své nové centrum ve městě Preslav.

Během vykořisťování země car utrpěl infarkt a vstoupil do kláštera. Pár dní po smrti byl kanonizován v bulharské pravoslavné církvi.

Externí odkazy


http://www.friesian.com/romania.htm#bulgar-1

Peter I (Bulgarian: Петър I) was emperor (tsar) of Bulgaria from May 27, 927 to 969, died January 30, 970.

Early Reign

Peter I was the son of Simeon I of Bulgaria by his second marriage to the sister of George Sursuvul. Peter had been born early in the 10th century, but it appears that his maternal uncle was very influential at the beginning of his reign. In 913 Peter may have visited the imperial palace at Constantinople together with his older brother Michael. For unspecified reasons, Simeon had forced Michael to become a monk and had named Peter as his successor.

To prove himself a worthy successor to his father both at home and in the eyes of foreign governments, Peter began his reign with a military offensive into Byzantine Thrace in 927. Nevertheless, he followed up his quick successes by secretly negotiating a peace treaty before the Byzantine government had a chance to retaliate. The Byzantine Emperor Romanos I Lakapenos eagerly accepted the proposal for peace and arranged for a diplomatic marriage between his granddaughter Maria and the Bulgarian monarch. In October 927 Peter arrived near Constantinople to meet Romanos and signed the peace treaty, marrying Maria on November 8. To signify the new era in Bulgaro-Byzantine relations, the princess was renamed Eirene ("peace"). The treaty of 927 actually represents the fruit of Simeon's military successes and diplomatic initiatives, ably continued by his son's government. Peace was obtained with the frontiers restored to those defined in treaties of 897 and 904, the Byzantines recognised the Bulgarian monarch's title of emperor (basileus, tsar) and the autocephalus status of the Bulgarian patriarchate; the payment of an annual tribute to Bulgaria by the Byzantine Empire was renewed.[1]

Revolts and Incursions

The initial successes of Peter's reign were followed by several minor setbacks. Around 930, Peter faced a revolt led by his younger brother Ivan, who was defeated and sent into exile in Byzantium. Soon afterwards Peter's older brother Michael escaped from his monastery and led a more formidable rebellion, which terminated with his early death. The youngest brother, Benjamin (also called Bojan), was accused of being a werewolf and a magician by the Italian Bishop Liutprand of Cremona, but apparently posed no threat to Peter's authority.

Perhaps taking advantage of these challenges to Peter's rule, the Serbian prince Časlav Klonimirović escaped the Bulgarian capital Preslav in 931 and, with tacit Byzantine support, managed to raise a Serbian revolt against Bulgarian rule. The revolt succeeded, and the western part of Serbia recovered its independence. Peter may have had to also face the incursions of the Magyars, who had been defeated and forced into Pannonia by his father in 896. Perhaps after an initial defeat, Peter came to terms with the enemy, and now utilized Magyar groups as his allies against Serbia. Various Magyar clans and chieftains appear to have begun to settle in what was still Bulgarian territory north of the Danube, where they may have become Bulgarian federates, enjoying independence from the Árpád dynasty. This arrangement paved the way for the eventual loss of the region to the Magyars, although that happened over the half-century following Peter's death. Peter apparently allowed these groups to cross Bulgaria and raid Byzantine territories in Thrace and Macedonia, perhaps as an underhanded reaction against Byzantine support for the Serbian rebellion.

Domestic Rule

Peter I presided over a long and relatively peaceful reign, albeit one poorly illuminated by foreign or native sources. In spite of the challenges he encountered soon after his accession and the critical situation at the very end of his life, Peter's Bulgaria appears to have been prosperous and increasingly well organized, with an administrative apparatus noted by foreign travelers and confirmed by the numerous finds of imperial seals. Peter was particularly generous towards the Church, which he endowed lavishly throughout his reign. The emperor's generosity reached such an extent that it was seen as a corrupting factor by even Orthodox clerics, like Cosmas Presbyter. Others chose a path away from the temptations of the secular world, most notably Saint Ivan of Rila, but their ascetic existence still drew the attention of the monarch. Luxury and social tensions may have contributed to the spread of the Bogomil heresy, which Peter duly undertook to combat, soliciting the advice of famous hermits and even his uncle-in-law, the Patriarch of Constantinople Theophylact.

Conflict with Byzantium and Kiev

Relations with the Byzantine Empire worsened after the death of Peter's wife in the mid-960s. Victorious over the Arabs, Emperor Nikephoros II Phokas refused to pay the annual tribute to Bulgaria in 966, complaining of the Bulgarian alliance with the Magyars, and undertook a show of force at the Bulgarian border. Dissuaded from a direct attack against Bulgaria, Nikephoros II dispatched a messenger to the Kievan prince Sviatoslav Igorevich to arrange a Kievan attack against Bulgaria from the north. Sviatoslav readily launched a campaign with a vast force (60,000 troops), and routed the Bulgarians on the Danube and defeated them in the battle near Silistra, seizing some 80 Bulgarian fortresses in 968. Stunned by the success of his ally and suspicious of his actual intentions, Emperor Nikephoros II now hastened to make peace with Bulgaria and arranged the marriage of his wards, the underage emperors Basil II and Constantine VIII, to two Bulgarian princesses. Two of Peter's sons were sent to Constantinople as both negotiators and honorary hostages. In the meantime Peter managed to secure the retreat of the Kievan forces by inciting Bulgaria's traditional allies, the Pechenegs, to attack Kiev itself.

In spite of this temporary success and the reconciliation with Byzantium, Bulgaria faced a new invasion by Sviatoslav in 969. The Bulgarians were defeated again, and Peter suffered a stroke, which led him to abdicate and become a monk. He died on January 30, 970.

Reputation

Compared with the military success of his father's reign, Peter has been traditionally considered a weak ruler, who lost lands and prestige, allowed his military forces to decline while his country was ravaged by foreign invaders, and turned Bulgaria into a Byzantine satellite governed by Byzantine agents in the persons of his empress and her retinue. This view has been questioned by more recent scholarship, which emphasizes the affluence and internal peace enjoyed by Bulgarian society during this long reign, re-evaluates the relationship between Bulgaria and its semi-nomadic neighbors (Magyars and Pechenegs), and questions the allegedly sinister role of Romanos' granddaughter and her retinue. While Peter's reign witnessed the spread of the Bogomil heresy, its origins were more demographic (perhaps inspired by Paulicians settled earlier by Byzantine emperors in Thrace) than social, and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church canonized the monarch as a saint. Peter was considered a good ruler in the Middle Ages, and when Bulgaria fell under Byzantine rule (1018-1185), leaders of attempts to restore Bulgarian independence adopted his name to emphasize legitimacy and continuity.

Family

By his marriage to Maria Lakapena (renamed Eirene), Peter I had several children, including:

   * Plenimir

* Boris II, who succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria in 969
* Roman, who succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria in 977
Honour

Peter Peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Peter I of Bulgaria.

References:

   * John V.A. Fine, Jr., The Early Medieval Balkans, Ann Arbor, 1983.

* (Bulgarian) Jordan Andreev, Ivan Lazarov, Plamen Pavlov, Koj koj e v srednovekovna Bălgarija, Sofia 1999.