Showing 1 - 9 results of 9 for search '"Second Bulgarian Empire"', query time: 0.29s Refine Results
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    Tirnovo (since 1965 “VelikoTărnovo”) From Medieval Bulgarian Capital to Turkish Islamic Cultural Centre. A general overview by Machiel KIEL

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…Tirnovo is located on the Yantra River and is famously known as the historical capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire. The subject matter research is exploring the history, art and architecture of Tirnovo through ages; and specifically during the Ottoman times (1393-1878), when became an Islamic cultural centre. …”
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    A “Divine Sanction” on the Revolt: The Cult of St. Demetrius of Thessalonica and the Uprising of Peter and Asen (1185–1186) by Anastasia Dobyčina

    Published 2012-08-01
    “…Demetrius of Thessalonica as a tool of maintaining legitimacy of the anti-Byzantine revolt in Tărnovo, 1185–1186, led by brothers Theodore-Peter and Asen-Belgun, which is viewed in the modern scholarship as a starting point of the history of the so-called Second Bulgarian Empire. Apart from the peculiarities of the official and popular veneration of St. …”
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    The Bulgarophilia of the Cumans in the Times of the First Asenids of Bulgaria by Konstantin Golev

    Published 2018-09-01
    “…The author seeks to answer the question: what were the factors that shaped the persistent Cuman support of the newly established Second Bulgarian Empire against various adversaries, such as Byzantium, the Latin Empire of Constantinople and the Kingdom of Hungary? …”
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    Глазирана паничка за керамопластична украса с монограм от Червен (опит за реконструкция и идентификация)... by Georgi Sengalevich

    Published 2019-11-01
    “…Having command and using the Greek language and literacy in the capital and in the large urban centers of the Second Bulgarian Empire is no surprise at all. Concerning the interpretation of the inscription, it is necessary to consider similar monograms belonging to high-ranking patrons in the socio-political life: tsars, despotes, high-ranking individuals in the military administration, high-born members, as well as high-ranking clergymen – patriarchs and metropolitan bishops, which are found on the exterior or in the interior of a number of Late Byzantine churches. …”
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