
BULGARIA - CENTRALISED
MONARCHY
Under Krum (803-814) and Omurtag (814-831) the independence of the Slav
principalities was eliminated. The enormous territory of the country was divided
into eleven administrative areas - one of them was the capital and was called
internal area and the other ten were external. They were not governed by people
who had the hereditary right to do so, but by officials appointed by the central
power. The boundaries of the administrative areas did not have anything in
common with the boundaries of the various Slav, Avar and other tribes. Thus,
from a federation of voluntarily associated tribes, Bulgaria became an early
feudal centralized monarchy.
The wars, the territorial acquisitions, and the requirements for control over
the new territories caused large-scale population shifts. A large part of the
initial compact main body of the Bulgarians established in Dobrudja got
dispersed in many small detached places in strategic centers all over the vast
country. The removal of the boundaries between the Slav tribes speeded up the
process of population diffusion. The latter, in its turn, gave rise to a new
ethno- demographic development - the building up of a united Bulgarian nation.
Towards the middle of the 9th century, both Byzantine and West European
chroniclers ceased to use different names for the different tribes dwelling in
Bulgaria. At that time they were already referring to the state of the 'numerous
Bulgarians'. A prodigy - the new ethnic category 'a Bulgarian people', appeared
as the finale of these developments: it took its name from the Turkic Bulgarians
and its language from the Slavs. Both in Old Bulgarian and in the contemporary
written and spoken language of the Bulgarian nation, there have survived only a
few thousand words of the language of the small but highly mettled and organized
ancient Bulgarian race which ventured and eventually succeeded in founding its
own state on the most contended land on the European continent.
The consolidation of the Bulgarian nation in the middle of 9th century came
up against a stumbling block - the religious pluralism among the Bulgarian
subjects. It is difficult to enumerate all religions and the heretic diversions
from them, all peacefully co-existing before the condescending eyes of the
authorities. The Turkic Bulgarians believed in Tangra, the God-Heaven. Part of
them were Christians. The Slavs were polytheists - their chief deities' idols
Perun, Lada and Volos were patrons of large territories in Moesia, Pannonia,
part of Macedonia, Wallachia and Moldavia. The areas in Thrace and Macedonia
which had been detached from Byzantium were inhabited by Christianized Slavs and
Thracians some of whom were adherents of various Christian heresies. The
Christian preachers demonstrated the zeal of the early Christian missionaries in
conducting active religious propaganda in the heathen-populated areas. We can
judge of their success by the facts about Christianized members of noble
families from 830 AD onwards, as reported by West European chroniclers. Although
less successful, the Jewish and the Muslim missionaries also conducted religious
propaganda during the first half of the 9th century.
The problem was not so much in the ethnic or language differences as in the
impossibility to have the population of the state observe only one consistent
law. According to medieval practices still valid in some Muslim countries, each
religious group acknowledged as its own basic law the code of moral and legal
norms, inherent to the respective religious doctrine. This led to mutual
contradictions between the various religious communities as well as between
their attitudes and the requirements of the centralized monarchy. This problem
confronted the Bulgarian political minds and demanded prompt resolution.

Megalith of Madara
