Ivan Asen II ( , ; also Йоан
Асен II, Yoan Asen II), in English sometimes known as John
Asen II, ruled as Emperor (Tsar) of Bulgaria
from 1218 to
1241, during the Second
Bulgarian Empire.
Early rule
He was a son of
Ivan Asen I of
Bulgaria and Elena (religious name Evgenija).
Elena, who survived
until after 1235, is sometimes alleged to be a daughter of Stefan Nemanja of Serbia
, but this
relationship is questionable and would have caused various
canonical impediments to marriages between various
descendants. Ivan Asen II's father was one of the two
founders of the
Asen dynasty and the
Second Bulgarian Empire.
Under Ivan Asen II's rule, the empire would become the dominant
force in the
Balkans for about a decade,
1230–1241.
After the death of his uncle
Kaloyan in 1207, Ivan Asen's cousin,
Boril, usurped the throne and
forced him to flee to the
Rus principality of
Galicia-Volhynia. With its support
Ivan Asen returned to Bulgaria in 1218 to successfully overthrow
his cousin and be crowned as emperor. Having established himself on
the throne, Ivan Asen II set about recovering the losses sustained
by Bulgaria during the reign of Boril.
Initial relations with neighbouring powers
The return of
Andrew II of
Hungary from the
Fifth Crusade in
1218 provided an opportunity to establish a marriage alliance and
to obtain (probably in 1221) the return of the disputed territories
around Belgrade on the Danube as the dowry of Princess
Anna Maria of Hungary.
Ivan Asen II also made
an alliance with Theodore Komnenos
Doukas of Epirus to his
south, although the latter had expanded his control over various
Bulgarian-inhabited territories, including Ohrid
. The
alliance was cemented with the marriage of Ivan Asen II's daughter
to Theodore's brother
Manuel.
After the death of the Latin Emperor
Robert of Courtenay in 1228, the barons
in Constantinople considered Ivan Asen II as a possible choice of
regent or guardian of the minor
Baldwin II.
By this time Theodore
of Epirus had reconquered Thessalonica
from the Latin Empire
in 1224, had himself crowned emperor there by the autocephalous
archbishop of Ohrid, had taken Adrianople
and was poised to strike at Constantinople
itself. Fearing Ivan Asen II's intervention in the Latin
Empire, Theodore diverted his army, including many western
mercenaries, northwards into Bulgaria in 1230. According to
tradition, Ivan Asen II had the text of the broken treaty carried
like a standard on a spear, and managed to decisively defeat and
capture Theodore in the
battle of
Klokotnitsa.
This victory allowed Ivan Asen II to sweep
into Theodore's lands and to conquer the Epirote possessions from
the Black
Sea
and Adrianople in the east to the Adriatic
and Durazzo
in the
west.
Further south Epirus proper and the region of Thessalonica were
left to Ivan Asen II's son-in-law Manuel, who governed from
Thessalonica with the title of despot. The success of Ivan Asen II
was due as much to his effective defeat of Theodore's army as to
his humane treatment of the prisoners of war (recorded by the
Byzantine historians), whom he released and allowed to return home
unharmed. This restraint made it possible to readily obtain the
submission of most of Theodore's fortresses.
Influence over Serbia and alliance with Nicaea
Elated by
his success, Ivan Asen II caused a memorial inscription to be set
up on a column in the Church of the Forty Martyrs
in his capital Tărnovo
, in which he
boasted of defeating and capturing Theodore with the help of the
martyrs, of conquering his lands, and of even acquiring the
obedience of the Latins of Constantinople. But this optimism
was rather hasty. By 1231 the Latin regency had finalized
negotiations with
John of Brienne,
the former king of Jerusalem, who was invited to step in as the
guardian and co-emperor of Baldwin II at Constantinople. This
action led to the breach of the alliance between Bulgaria and the
Latin Empire, and the creation of an alternate alliance with the
Empire of Nicaea.
In 1234 a Bulgarian-aided
coup
d'état in Serbia toppled
Stefan
Radoslav, a son-in-law of Theodore of Epirus, and replaced him
with his brother
Stefan Vladislav
I, a son-in-law of Ivan Asen II. This has been seen as the
extension of Bulgarian influence over Serbia, but the extent and
nature of that relationship remains unclear. The two governments
cooperated with each other and Stefan Vladislav did not long
survive his father-in-law's death, being overthrown by his younger
brother
Stefan Uroš I in 1242. In
1235 uncle of the Serbian king, the Archbishop of Serbia
Saint Sava died in Tarnovo, and in 1237 Ivan Asen
II allowed his nephew to transfer the prized body back to
Serbia.
Hungarian invasions and Bulgarian intervention in the Latin
Empire

The Bulgarian Empire during the reign
of Ivan Asen II.
The
alliance between Bulgaria and Nicaea, directed against the Latin
Empire, provoked reprisals by the papacy and
the kingdom of Hungary
.
In 1232
the Hungarians seized the Belgrade area and attacked Sredec
(Sofia
), but were defeated by Ivan Asen II's brother
Alexander. In 1233, under the leadership of the future
king Béla IV, the Hungarians
invaded again, this time seizing Little or Western Wallachia (Oltenia) and setting up the banate of
Severin
. It is unclear how long the Hungarians were
able to hold on to their conquests, but they had been recovered by
Ivan Asen II before the
Mongol invasion of
1240–1241. Both the Belgrade region and the banate of Severin were
reconquered by Hungary in 1246.
The new pro-Nicaean alignment of Bulgaria culminated with the
marriage between
Elena of Bulgaria
,Ivan Asen II's daughter, and the future
Theodore II Laskaris, the son of
Emperor
John III Doukas
Vatatzes of Nicaea. The dynastic union was celebrated in 1235
and coincided with the restoration of the Bulgarian patriarchate
with the consent of the eastern patriarchs. In the aftermath Ivan
Asen II and John III campaigned together against the Latin Empire
in Europe, effectively dividing its territories in Thrace. The
death of John of Brienne in 1237 gave Ivan Asen II new hopes of
intervention in the Latin Empire, to the point of projecting the
marriage of a daughter with Baldwin II and even abducting his own
daughter Elena, whom he had married to the heir to Nicaea.
However,
this change of policy came to naught the same year, when, while
besieging Nicaean Caenophrurion
in alliance with the Latins, Ivan Asen II received
news of the simultaneous deaths of his wife, one of his children,
and the Patriarch of Tarnovo. Taking these events as signs
of divine displeasure, Ivan Asen II broke off the siege and
returned home, sending his daughter Elena back to her husband in
Nicaea.
End of rule
The last years of Ivan Asen II's reign show unwillingness to fully
commit on either side in the continued struggle between the Latin
Empire and Nicaea. Although the Nicaean alliance was renewed, Ivan
Asen II allowed Cuman detachments and a 60-thousand strong western
army to cross his lands and reinforce the Latin Empire in
1240.
Following the death of his wife
Anna Maria of Hungary, Ivan Asen II
married Eirene, the daughter of Theodore of Epirus, who had
remained a prisoner in the Bulgarian court since his capture in
1230, and had been blinded for conspiracy. According to a Byzantine
author, Ivan Asen II loved Eirene "no less than
Antony loved
Cleopatra", and she may have been his
mistress for some years before their marriage in 1237. Marrying
Eirene, Ivan Asen II would have broken church canons, as his
daughter from a previous marriage was married to Eirene's uncle
Manuel of Thessalonica. There is moot evidence that the Bulgarian
church opposed the marriage and that a patriarch (called either
Spiridon or Visarion) was deposed or executed by the irate tsar.
The marriage resulted in the release of Theodore, who returned to
Thessalonica, chased out his brother Manuel (who retained control
of Thessaly), and imposed his own son John as despot.
The last recorded action of Ivan Asen II is his defeat of a column
of the Mongol army of
Batu Khan in the
course of its retreat from Hungary in 1241. This was not a decisive
defeat, and a new Mongol invasion in 1242 forced Bulgaria to become
tributary to the
Golden Horde. By this
time, however, Ivan Asen II was already dead, having died on 24
June 1241.
Overview
A golden coin of Tsar Ivan Asen II.
Ivan Asen II is considered, with good reason, one of the most
important and successful rulers of Bulgaria. His work included the
restoration of the autocephalous Bulgarian patriarchate in 1235
(after a long hiatus since 1018), the minting of the first
Bulgarian non-imitation coinage in both gold and copper, the
suppression of the centrifugal forces that had plagued his
predecessor's reign, and the expansion of Bulgaria's frontiers in
all directions.
Ivan Asen II had sought to bolster the
effectiveness of his state by providing for some level of
administrative control and concluding a commercial treaty with the
republic of Ragusa (modern
Dubrovnik
), a dependency of Venice
. He
showed restraint on the field of battle and sought to face
challenges through diplomatic solutions. However, his policies
exhibit considerable inconsistencies, especially in the
relationship towards Nicaea and the Latin Empire. It is possible
that Ivan Asen II could not decide which of these rivals was more
dangerous to him or more profitable as an ally. In the long run his
actions (including the victory over Theodore of Epirus and the
general preference for Nicaea) secured the position of Nicaea as
the Byzantine successor state best able to reconquer
Constantinople. Bulgarian influence over Serbia and Thessalonica
lapsed on his death. The rudimentary administrative apparatus he
left behind proved insufficient to cope with the challenges of two
successive minorities on the throne, and led to significant
territorial losses to Nicaea, Epirus, and Hungary in 1246, not to
mention Bulgaria's status as a tributary to the Golden Horde in
1242. It is difficult to say to what extent Ivan Asen II may have
been able to prevent these developments, but he may be credited
with presiding over a period of rare prosperity, internal peace,
and external hegemony for Medieval Bulgaria.
Family
Ivan Asen II was married three times.His first wife may be the Anna
(religious name Anisia) mentioned in the Synodik of the Bulgarian
Church. She may have been a concubine instead of a legitimate
spouse, and she may have been the mother of his two eldest
daughters:
- Maria (?), who married Manuel of Thessalonica.
- Beloslava (?), who married
Stefan Vladislav I of
Serbia.
His second wife was
Anna Maria of
Hungary, a daughter of King
Andrew II of Hungary. She died in 1237
and by her he had several children, including:
- Elena, who married Theodore II Doukas Laskaris of the
Nicaea.
- Thamar, at one point alleged to be engaged to the future
Emperor Michael VIII
Palaiologos.
- Kaliman Asen I, who
succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria 1241–1246.
- Peter, who died in 1237.
By his third wife, Eirene (religious name Xene) of Thessalonica, a
daughter of
Theodore of
Epirus and
Maria
Petraliphaina, he had three children:
- Anna , who
married the sebastokrator
Peter before 1253.
- Maria, who married
Mitso Asen, who succeeded as emperor of
Bulgaria 1256–1257.
- Michael Asen I, who
succeeded as emperor of Bulgaria 1246–1256.
Honour
Ivan Asen Point on Smith
Island
in the South Shetland Islands
, Antarctica
is named for Ivan Asen II.
Ivan Asen II's seal is depicted on the
reverse of the Bulgarian 2
lev banknote, issued in 1999 and 2005.
References
External links