Zagore

For the Bulgarian village, see Zagore (village). For the Albanian settlement, see Zagorë.

Coordinates: 42°25′N 25°52′E / 42.417°N 25.867°E / 42.417; 25.867 Zagore (Bulgarian: Загоре, [zəˈɡɔrɛ]); also Zagorie, Zagora, Zagoria) was a vaguely defined medieval region in Bulgaria. Its name is of Slavic origin and means "beyond [i.e. south of] the [Balkan] mountains". The region was first mentioned as Ζαγορια in Medieval Greek (in an Old Bulgarian translation it was rendered as Загорїа) when it was ceded to the First Bulgarian Empire by the Byzantine Empire during the rule of Tervel of Bulgaria in the very beginning of the 8th century (Byzantine–Bulgarian Treaty of 716).[1] From the context, Zagore can be defined as a region in northeastern Thrace.[2]

During the Second Bulgarian Empire, the region was also mentioned in Tsar Ivan Asen II of Bulgaria's post-1230 Dubrovnik Charter which allows Ragusan merchants to trade in the Bulgarian lands, among which "the whole Zagore" (пѡ всемѹ Загѡриѹ).[3]

14th-century Venetian documents refer to Zagora as a synonym for Bulgaria (e.g. partes del Zagora, subditas Dobrotice in a document from 14 February 1384).[4] Similarly, later Ragusan sources regularly evidence the active import of high-quality Zagoran wax (cera zagora, variously spelled zachori, zaura, zachorj, zacora) from Bulgaria, often bought in Sofia.[5]

Today, the name of the region lives on in the toponyms Stara Zagora ("Old Zagora", a major city in northeastern Thrace, the capital of Stara Zagora Province) and Nova Zagora ("New Zagora", a city in Sliven Province). Zagore Beach on Livingston Island of the South Shetland Islands in Antarctica was also named after the region by the Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria.[6]

See also

References

  1. Zlatarski, Vasil (1971) [1927]. "1 Epoha na huno-bǎlgarskoto nadmoštie: 2 Bǎlgarskite vladeteli ot roda Dulo". Istorija na bǎlgarskata dǎržava prez srednite vekove. Tom I. Istorija na Pǎrvoto bǎlgarsko carstvo (in Bulgarian) (2 ed.). Sofia: Nauka i izkustvo. p. 231. OCLC 67080314.
  2. "Tervel (700721)" (in Bulgarian). Rodovo nasledstvo. Retrieved 2007-04-14.
  3. Daskalova, Angelina; Marija Rajkova (2005). Gramoti na bǎlgarskite care (in Bulgarian). Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. p. 30.
  4. Vasil Gjuzelev, ed. (2001). Venecianski dokumenti za istorijata na Bǎlgarija i bǎlgarite ot XIIXV v. (in Bulgarian). Sofia: General Department of Archives at the Council of Ministers of the Republic of Bulgaria. p. 136. ISBN 954-08-0022-9.
  5. Ioanna D. Spisarevska, ed. (2000). Dubrovniški izvori za bǎlgarskata istorija (in Bulgarian). Sofia: General Department of Archives at the Council of Ministers of the Republic of Bulgaria. pp. 36–37, 90–91. ISBN 954-9800-11-3.
  6. "Bulgarian Antarctic Gazetteer: Zagore Beach". Antarctic Place-names Commission. Republic of Bulgaria, Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2007-03-25.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, November 11, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.