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  1. Dorothea of Bulgaria ( Bulgarian: Доротея, Serbo-Croatian: Doroteja, Доротеја; died c. 1390), also called Doroslava ( Cyrillic: Дорослава ), was the first Queen of Bosnia. Daughter of the Bulgarian tsar Ivan Sratsimir, Dorothea was held hostage by King Louis I of Hungary, who married her off to Ban Tvrtko I of Bosnia in ...

  2. Media in category "Dorothea of Bulgaria" This category contains only the following file. Porodično stabloKotromanića.jpg 3,699 × 5,088; 820 KB. ... In Wikipedia ...

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  4. Dorotheus ( Bulgarian: Доротей) was a Patriarch of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church in the beginning of the 14th century. His name is known only from the medieval Book of Boril where he is listed as the seventh Patriarch presiding over the Bulgarian Church from Tarnovo, the capital of the Bulgarian Empire. [1] [2] Dorotheus led the ...

  5. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Dorothea of Bulgaria has received more than 35,895 page views. Her biography is available in 17 different languages on Wikipedia. Dorothea of Bulgaria is the 611th most popular nobleman (up from 654th in 2019), the 87th most popular biography from Bulgaria (up from 107th in 2019) and the most popular ...

  6. Dorothea of Bulgaria (Bulgarian: Доротея, Serbo-Croatian: Doroteja, Доротеја; died c. 1390), also called Doroslava (Cyrillic: Дорослава), was the first Queen of Bosnia. Daughter of the Bulgarian tsar Ivan Sratsimir, Dorothea was held hostage by King Louis I of Hungary, who married her off to Ban Tvrtko I of Bosnia in 1374. She became queen in 1377 and may have been the ...

  7. Dorothea's sister died soon, while Dorothea herself fell in favour of the King. King Louis I gave her in marriage to his cousin-in-law, ban Tvrtko I of Bosnia. Dorothea married ban Tvrtko I in Saint Ilija (today's Ilinci, near Šid) on 8 December 1374 and became Banness of Bosnia. On 26 October 1377 her husband was crowned King and she took the ...

  8. Bulgaria is a country situated in Southeast Europe that occupies the eastern quarter of the Balkan peninsula, being the largest country within its geographic boundaries. It borders Romania to the north, Serbia and North Macedonia to the west, Greece and Turkey to the south, and the Black Sea to the east. The northern border with Romania follows ...

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