The term is used when referring to an
apocryphalapocalyptic chronicle written in Bulgaria in the late eleventh or early twelfth century.[1][2]
This work is also known as the "apocryphal Bulgarian chronicle".[3]
Such chronicles were relatively common in Bulgaria and
Byzantium of that period, and their defining characteristic was that they purported to come from a
prophet, delivering God's message and announcing that the Apocalypse is near.[1]
15th century
Several sources refer to an early 15th-century work of that name.[4][5][6][7]
According to Khristov this work is focused on the
Ottoman invasion of the Balkans.[4] Imber, however, is more critical of its coverage of that time period. According to him that work provides a narrative from 1296 to the death of Sultan
Bayezid I in 1403 and only has a few brief and rather inaccurate entries focusing on the Ottoman civil war.[8] This work has been identified it as one of the two important Slavonic literary histories for that time and place.[8] Due to the relatively undescriptive name, it is possible that Khristov and Imber discuss two different works.
Göyünç, Kreiser and Neumann discuss the work of that name noting that it reaches the year 1417 and that has been "identified as an Old-Bulgarian translation of the Byzantine chronicle of
John Chortasmenos.[9] Another work uses this term to refer to a chronicle covering years 1296–1413.[10] For the reasons mentioned above, it is not certain whether the scholars in question are discussing a single chronicle, ending in the early 15th century, or several different ones.
^
abKhristo Angelov Khristov; Dimitǔr Konstantinov Kosev (1963).
A short history of Bulgaria. Foreign Languages Press. p. 128. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
^United Center for Research and Training in History; Edinen t︠s︡entŭr za nauka i podgotovka na kadri po istorii︠a︡ (1987).
Revue bulgare d'histoire. Pub. House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. p. 93. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
^Research Programme for Macedonian Studies (New Delhi, India) (1991).
Macedonian studies. Research Programme for Macedonian Studies. p. 60. Retrieved 10 November 2011.