Bulgaria: Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Ottoman Rule
The Ottoman Empire was founded in the early fourteenth
century by Osman I, a prince of Asia Minor who began pushing
the eastern border of the Byzantine Empire westward toward
Constantinople. Present-day European Turkey and the Balkans,
among the first territories conquered, were used as bases
for expansion far to the West during the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries. The capture of Constantinople in 1453
completed Ottoman subjugation of major Bulgarian political
and cultural institutions. Nevertheless, certain Bulgarian
groups prospered in the highly ordered Ottoman system, and
Bulgarian national traditions continued in rural areas. When
the decline of the Ottoman Empire began about 1600, the
order of local institutions gave way to arbitrary
repression, which eventually generated armed opposition.
Western ideas that penetrated Bulgaria during the 1700s
stimulated a renewed concept of Bulgarian nationalism that
eventually combined with decay in the empire to loosen
Ottoman control in the nineteenth century.
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Bulgaria: Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
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