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・ List of Bulgarian football transfers summer 2013
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers summer 2014
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers summer 2015
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2010
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2010–11
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2011–12
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2012–13
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2013–14
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2014–15
・ List of Bulgarian football transfers winter 2015–16
・ List of Bulgarian generals from 1878 to 1946
・ List of Bulgarian inventors and discoverers
・ List of Bulgarian journalists
・ List of Bulgarian military bases
・ List of Bulgarian military equipment of World War II
List of Bulgarian monarchs
・ List of Bulgarian musicians and singers
・ List of Bulgarian painters
・ List of Bulgarian pop-folk singers
・ List of Bulgarian records in athletics
・ List of Bulgarian records in swimming
・ List of Bulgarian regents
・ List of Bulgarian sportspeople
・ List of Bulgarian submissions for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
・ List of Bulgarian television series
・ List of Bulgarian television shows
・ List of Bulgarian Turks
・ List of Bulgarian wine regions
・ List of Bulgarian women writers
・ List of Bulgarian writers


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List of Bulgarian monarchs : ウィキペディア英語版
List of Bulgarian monarchs

The monarchs of Bulgaria ruled the country, with interruptions, from the establishment of the First Bulgarian Empire in 681 to the abolition of monarchy in a manipulated〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://bnr.bg/en/post/100450616/1946-third-bulgarian-kingdom-ends-with-a-referendum )referendum held on 15 September 1946. The Bulgarian monarchy had two periods of foreign domination: one century and a half of Byzantine rule and almost five centuries of Ottoman rule. Early Bulgarian rulers possibly used the title ''khan'', later ''knyaz'' for a brief period, and subsequently ''tsar''.
The title ''tsar'', the Slavic form of the Latin caesar, was first adopted and used in Bulgaria by Simeon I, following a decisive victory over the Byzantine Empire in 913. It was also used by all of Simeon I's successors until the fall of Bulgaria under Ottoman rule in 1396. After Bulgaria's liberation from the Ottomans in 1878, its first monarch Alexander I adopted the title ''knyaz''. However, when de jure independence was proclaimed under his successor Ferdinand in 1908, the title was elevated to the customary ''tsar'' once more. The use of ''tsar'' continued under Ferdinand and later under his heirs Boris III and Simeon II until the abolition of monarchy in 1946.
While the title ''tsar'' was translated as "emperor" in the First and Second Bulgarian Empires, it was translated as "king" in modern Bulgaria.
In the few surviving medieval Bulgarian royal charters, the monarchs of Bulgaria styled themselves as "In Christ the Lord Faithful Emperor and Autocrat of all Bulgarians" or similar variations, sometimes including “... and Romans, Greeks, or Vlachs".
This list does not include the mythical Bulgar rulers and the rulers of Old Great Bulgaria listed in the Nominalia of the Bulgarian khans as well as unsuccessful claimants to the throne who are not generally listed among the Bulgarian monarchs.
== Table ==
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%;"
|- style="background:#D4F2CE;"
! style="background:#D4F2CE; width:8%;" | Image
! style="background:#D4F2CE; width:8%;" | Title
! style="background:#D4F2CE; width:12%;"| Name
! style="background:#D4F2CE; width:8%;" | Reign
! style="background:#D4F2CE; width:64%;" | Notes/Death
|-
| colspan="5" style="background: #9AB973; text-align: center;" |

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