Despotate of Lovech explained

Conventional Long Name:Despotate of Lovech
Common Name:Lovech
Native Name:
Alt Coat:Coat of arms of the Sratsimir dynasty in the 14th century
Capital:Lovech
Coordinates:43.1347°N 24.7172°W
Largest City:capital
Religion:Bulgarian Orthodoxy
Government Type:Monarchy
Currency:Various coins
Status:Despotate
Era:Middle Ages
Status Text:Despotate
Empire:Second Bulgarian Empire
Year End:1446
Life Span:1330–1446
Year Start:1330
Common Languages:Middle Bulgarian
Title Leader:Despot
Year Leader1:1330–1371
Leader1:Ivan Alexander
Event Start:Appointment of Ivan Alexander
Event End:Conquest by the Ottomans
P1:Second Bulgarian Empire
S1:Ottoman Empire
Today:Bulgaria

The Despotate of Lovech, was a Bulgarian state, covering parts of the territory of what is now Lovech Province, formed in 1330 after Ivan Alexander was appointed to govern Lovech, the capital of the despotate, and the nearby area around the town. It was dissolved after the fall of the Lovech Fortress in 1446 to the Ottomans.

The state was the last independent Bulgarian state after 1396, before its conquest by the Ottoman Empire. It was ruled by the Sratsimir dynasty.

History

Formation

The despotate was formed after Ivan Alexander became the despot, most likely being appointed due to Lovech being a major town that controlled commercial passage through the Stara Planina passes, and the migration of intellectuals to Moldavia and Wallachia, due to Ottoman conquests.[1] [2] [3]

Period of prosperity

The area was the center for many Bulgarian rulers. In the 14th century, the commercial, administrative, and spiritual centers were at their peak. The despot also made a great contribution towards stopping the Serbian advance, although Bulgaria still lost the Battle of Velbazhd. Ivan married Princess Theodora of Wallachia.[4] He gradually won trust to become the elected Tsar of Bulgaria in 1331, after Ivan Stefan was driven out by a coup d'état, and the conspirators placed him on the throne.[5]

Dissolution

Ivan Alexander died on 17 February 1371. Despite his early years of success, his later decisions, such as splitting the empire among his sons in 1356, left the Bulgarian states to face outside powers politically divided and weakened, contributing to the fall of the despotate. The Ottoman invasions of Bulgaria in the 14th century did not directly result in the fall of the despotate. The Turkish traveller Kâtip Çelebi testified the late conquest of Lovech. He mentioned that the city was conquered in 1446, This was confirmed by the Armenian travel writer Hugaz Indzedzyan according to whom "Lovech had been conquered in 1446 by Sultan Fatih Mehmed."[6]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lovech Fortress . 2022-08-01 . History Hit . en-GB.
  2. Web site: Lovech - historic medieval town - Bulgaria . 2022-08-01 . ermakvagus.com.
  3. Book: Petkov, Kiril . The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria, Seventh-Fifteenth Century: The Records of a Bygone Culture . 2008-08-31 . BRILL . 978-90-04-16831-2 . 447 . en.
  4. Mladenov . Momchil . Before the Throne: Early Years of Ivan Alexander Asen (1331–1371) . Journals.uni-vt.bg.
  5. Web site: Pavlova . Venteta . 9 February 2022 . 20 March 2014 . Translated to English by Alexander Markov . Bulgaria under Tsar Ivan Alexander: an upsurge before sundown . 2022-08-01 . . en.
  6. Book: Домът на Шишман . Петър Николов Зиков . 2021 . 978-619-7496-74-1 . Sofia . Bulgarian.