- Bulgarians",
rendered tsr’ Bl’garom in
Bulgarian do****ents and
imperator Bulgarorum in Latin. The
second empire's
third ruler,
Kaloyan (1196–1207), adopted...
- Pope
Innocent III, Kaloyan—whose self-****umed
Latin title was "Imperator
Bulgarorum et Blachorum"—claims that the
imperial crowns of
Simeon I, his son Peter...
-
Nicholas answered these inquiries in his "Responsa
Nicolai ad
consulta Bulgarorum" (Giovanni
Domenico Mansi, "Coll. Conc.", XV, 401 sqq.) and sent missionaries...
-
Bulgarians and Vlachs" (rex
Bulgarorum et Blachorum); in
answering the Pope, John
called himself imperator omnium Bulgarorum et
Blachorum ("Emperor of all...
- of
nobility is
further confirmed in the
Responsa Nicolai ad
consulta Bulgarorum (Responses of Pope
Nicholas I to the
Questions of the Bulgarians), where...
-
omnium Bulgarorum atque Blachorum ("Emperor Kaloyan, Lord of All
Bulgarians and Vlachs") by
Patriarch Basil I of
Bulgaria and the
title Rex
Bulgarorum et...
- Hungary, a
count Narad was
mentioned as
having fought the fury of the "
Bulgarorum et Rume⟨n⟩orum" .
Hungarian historian Imre Nagy
believed Rumeorum to be...
-
Apostolic Vicariate of the
Bulgarians (1860 – 1883) (Apostolicus
Vicariatus Bulgarorum)
Archbishop Joseph Sokolsky (14
April 1861 – 18 June 1861) Archimandrite/parish...
-
Great Bulgarian Forest (latin:
Silva Magna Bulgarica or
Silvas Bulgarorum) was the
territory between Belgrade and the Gate of Trajan,
entering Via Militaris...
- 14th
century refer to Dobro****a as a "despot of Bulgarians" (DESPOTUM
BULGARORUM DOBROTICAM) and to his
realm as "parts of
Zagore (Bulgaria) subordinate...