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・ Jacob Veldhuyzen van Zanten
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Jacob Svetoslav
・ Jacob Swoope
・ Jacob Söderman
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・ Jacob T. Schwartz
・ Jacob T. Walden Stone House
・ Jacob Taets van Amerongen
・ Jacob Talmon
・ Jacob Tamarkin
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Jacob Svetoslav : ウィキペディア英語版
Jacob Svetoslav

Jacob Svetoslav ((ブルガリア語:Яков Светослав), ''Yakov Svetoslav'') (ca. 1210s/1220s–1275 or 1276/1277) was a prominent 13th-century Bulgarian noble (''bolyarin'') of princely Russian origin. Bestowed the title of ''despot'', Jacob Svetoslav was the ruler of a widely autonomous domain of the Second Bulgarian Empire most likely located around Sofia. Seeking further independence and claiming the title of Emperor of Bulgaria, he twice changed allegiance from Bulgaria to the Kingdom of Hungary and vice versa, and the Hungarians recognized his Bulgarian royal rank as their vassal and ruler of Vidin (medieval ''Bdin'').
==Bulgarian despot==
Jacob Svetoslav's exact origin is not clear, though he is known to have been either a Russian noble himself or the son of one. Jacob or his father most likely arrived in Bulgaria with the wave of Russians fleeing the Mongol invasion of Rus' in the first half of the 13th century.〔Fine, p. 175.〕 Historian Plamen Pavlov theorizes that Jacob Svetoslav was a descendant of the princes (''knyaze'') of Kievan Rus', and estimates his birth date as being in the 1210s or 1220s.〔Павлов.〕 In the late 1250s, Jacob Svetoslav was already an influential noble. He married a daughter of Theodore II Laskaris from his marriage with Tsar Ivan Asen II's daughter Elena. By 1261, he had become a ''despot'', a high-ranking noble in the Bulgarian hierarchy. The title was awarded to him probably by his own suzerain, the ruler of Bulgaria, rather than a Byzantine emperor,〔 possibly Constantine Tih.〔 Jacob Svetoslav was close to the Bulgarian court and pledged loyalty to Constantine. Thus, the tsar made him the ruler of a domain usually considered to have been south of the Vidin region in the west of the Bulgarian Empire.〔 Byzantine sources indicate his possessions lay "near Haemus", thus close to Sofia,〔 between the Hungarian possessions to the north and Macedonia to the south.〔Златарски, p. 499.〕
In 1261, he commanded the Bulgarian forces in a war against Hungary near Severin (western Wallachia), and in 1262 he possibly fought against Byzantium, as a Byzantine army invaded his lands in the following year during an anti-Bulgarian campaign. Jacob Svetoslav's continuing ties to his Russian homeland are evidenced by his request to the Bulgarian patriarch. Jacob requested the making of a copy of the Nomocanon which was then sent to Cyril III, the Metropolitan of Kiev. It was supplemented by a letter from Jacob in which the noble calls the metropolitan "the bishop of the entire Russian land... of my ancestors". The copy finishes with a passage in which Jacob is called a "Bulgarian despot".〔Златарски, pp. 501–502.〕 He also minted his own coins bearing the imperfect images of Saint Demetrius of Thessaloniki or Jacob himself, dressed as a warrior wearing a helmet and holding a sword.〔

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