Category
page 1Bulgarian princes
Peter Delyan
Bulgarian emperor
Pressiyan II
Bulgarian prince, Byzantine general
Kardam, Prince of Tarnovo
Prince of Bulgaria (1962-2015)
Enravota
Saint Enravota () or Voin (Воин, "warrior") or Boyan (Боян) was the eldest son of Omurtag of Bulgaria and the first Bulgarian Christian martyr, as well as the earliest Bulgarian saint to be canonized.
Aron (Prince of Bulgaria)
Cometopuli dynasty
Alexius Slav
Bulgarian noble
Andronikos Asen
Bulgarian prince
Alusian of Bulgaria
Bulgarian and Byzantine noble
Kyril, Prince of Preslav
Bulgarian royal

Fruzhin
thumb|262px|The Şoimoş castle near modern Lipova, likely the seat of Fruzhin's Hungarian domains
thumb|262px|coat of arms on last bulgarian rulers Fruzhin and Konstantin II Asen in Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, München
Fruzhin (; also transliterated Fružin or Frujin; died ) was a 15th-century Bulgarian noble who fought actively against the Ottoman conquest of the Second Bulgarian Empire. A son of one of the last Bulgarian tsars, Ivan Shishman of the Tarnovo Tsardom, Fruzhin co-organized the so-called Uprising of Konstantin and Fruzhin along with Constantine II of Vidin, the last medieval Bulgar
Moses
Bulgarian noble
David
Bulgarian noble

Zvinitsa
thumb|Baptism of Zvinitsa's grandson Boris I of Bulgaria|Boris, through whom Zvinitsa was an ancestor of later rulers of Bulgaria
Kaloyan
Bulgarian prince
Michael Asen IV of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Mihail of Bulgaria
Bulgarian prince
Belaur
thumb|upright|right|Belaur
Belaur () (died 1336) was a Bulgarian noble and despot of Vidin and brother of the Bulgarian Emperor Michael Shishman (1323–1330). The son of Shishman of Vidin, he was among the most elaborate Balkan diplomats of his time. Plamen Pavlov interprets Belaur's name as stemming from the Hungarian personal name Béla and the title ur ("prince"). It may also come from Balaur, a mythical dragon in Vlach/ Romanian culture, the dragon was supposedly also revered in Cuman culture, cf. Kipchak "uran, ewren". Vlach-Cuman cultural interactions are known through the Cuman origin of
Ivan Asen IV of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Ivan Asen V of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Aaron of Bulgaria
younger son of the last tsar
Alexander
son of Ivan Shishman