First Tarnovo Uprising

These included the Archbishop of Tarnovo Dionysus Rallis, the noble Theodore Ballina from Nikopol, as well as the local merchants from Ragusa Pavel Đorđić[1] and the Sorkočević brothers, with the bishops Theophanes of Lovech, Jeremiah of Rousse, Spyridon of Shumen, and Methodius of Thrace, and other high-ranking religious figures also taking part in the organization.

[2] Đorđić established relations with the Habsburgs, the Transylvanian and Wallachian rulers, and a plan for the uprising was created in Vienna in 1597.

[3] The invasion of Wallachian forces under Michael the Brave in the northern Bulgarian lands in the autumn of 1598 provided good conditions for the uprising, as the fellow Christian army would support the insurrection according to the plan.

[4] However, the Ottoman authorities reacted immediately and quickly recaptured the city using a regular army, brutally suppressing the uprising.

It is unclear what the scale of the First Tarnovo Uprising was, but according to fragmentary information it may have included the regions of Ohrid,[5] where the local archbishop was killed, as well as Sofia and Niš,[5] where Austrian travellers mention seeing exposed dead bodies and severed human heads.

Theodore Ballina (19th century depiction)