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   Book Info

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The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer  
Author: Paul Stephenson
ISBN: 0521815304
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Book Description
The long reign of the Byzantine emperor Basil II (976-1025) has been considered a "golden age", in which his greatest achievement was the annexation of Bulgaria after a long and bloody war. Paul Stephenson reveals that the legend of the "Bulgar-slayer" was actually created long after his death. His reputation was exploited by contemporary scholars and politicians to help galvanize support for the Greek wars against Bulgarians in Macedonia during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.




The Legend of Basil the Bulgar-Slayer

FROM THE PUBLISHER

The reign of Basil II (976-1025), the longest of any Byzantine emperor, has long been considered as a "golden age", in which Basil's greatest achievement was the annexation of Bulgaria. This, we have been told, was achieved through a long and bloody war of attrition which won Basil the grisly epithet Voulgartoktonos, "the Bulgar-slayer."

In this new study Paul Stephenson argues that neither of these beliefs is true. Instead, Basil fought far more sporadically in the Balkans and, like his predecessors, considered this area less prestigious than the East. Moreover, his reputation as "Bulgar-slayer" emerged only a century and a half later, the creation of a martial regime immersed in bellicose panegyric. Thereafter the "Bulgar-slayer" was periodically to play a galvanizing role for the Byzantines. Fading from view during the period of Ottoman rule, Basil returned to centre-stage as Greeks struggled to establish a modern nation state. As Byzantium was embraced as the Greek past by scholars and politicians, the "Bulgar-slayer" became an icon in the struggle for Macedonia (1904-8) and the Balkan Wars (1912-13).

     



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