Category
page 1Sratsimir dynasty
Ivan Sratsimir of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar

Ivan Shishman of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Keratsa of Bulgaria
byzantine nun and empress
Joseph II of Constantinople
Patriarch of Constantinople
Helena of Bulgaria
Bulgarian princess
Dorothea of Bulgaria
Banness consort and first Queen consort of Bosnia
Constantine II of Bulgaria
Bulgarian ruler
Anna of Wallachia
Empress consort of Bulgaria

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
John Komnenos Asen
Despot of Valona as Serbian vassal and subsequently independent ruler
Maria-Irene Palaiologina
Byzantine princess and Bulgarian empress consort
Michael Asen IV of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar

Sratsimir dynasty
Bulgarian royal dynasty (1331-1422)

Sratsimir of Kran
Sratsimir (; 1324–31) was a Bulgarian magnate with the title of Despot, holding the territory of Kran. It is unclear when he received the governorship of Kran; he held it before and during the reign of his son, Ivan Alexander (r. 1331–71). He married Keratsa Petritsa, a member of the Shishman dynasty, with whom he had five children. He was the eponymous founder of the Sratsimir dynasty.
Ivan Asen V of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Ivan Asen IV of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar
Alexander
son of Ivan Shishman