Omurtag sends emissaries to Constantinople to negotiate …
Years: 815 - 815
February
Omurtag sends emissaries to Constantinople to negotiate the peace in the beginning of 815.
The signing ceremony is a solemn event and performed in the presence of numerous people.
The agreement envisages that the Emperor must vow according to the pagan Bulgarian customs and Omurtag's emissaries according to the Christian laws.
The Byzantine historians, outraged by the emperor's actions, recorded that the "most Christian" ruler had to pour out water on the ground from a cup, to personally turn round horse saddles, to touch triple bridle and to lift grass high above the ground.
Another historian added that Leo V had to even cut up dogs as witnesses to his vow.
The treaty of 815 between the Empire and Bulgaria determines the boundary between the two countries and provides a thirty-year peace.
Although the treaty is in Bulgaria's favor, it is a welcome respite for Constantinople, which has had to regroup its forces after successive defeats, and which faces another round of internal turmoil because of the revival of iconoclasm.
Locations
People
Groups
- Polytheism (“paganism”)
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Bulgarian Empire (First)
- Bulgarians (South Slavs)
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Non-dynastic
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- Commerce
- Symbols
- Labor and Service
- Conflict
- Faith
- Government
- Custom and Law
- Technology
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- Theology
- Christology
