Euphrosyne (died before 1308) was Bulgarian empress consort (tsarina), first wife of tzar Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria.
The date of her birth is unknown. She was the daughter and heiress of the rich Manux[1] (Mankus[2]), who was a son of the Byzantine merchant from Crimea Pandoleon[3]. Pandoleon was a close friend of Nogai Khan[1], the effective leader of the Mongol Golden Horde. Georgios Pachymeres records that the birth name of Euphrosyne was Encona[3] or Enconen[2] but later she adopted the name of her god-mother Euphrosyne Palaiologina[1], the Byzantine wife of Nogai Khan, who was herself an illegitimate daughter of Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos.
Euphrosyne married Theodore Svetoslav of Bulgaria at the time when he was a hostage to Nogai Khan[1]. In about 1289 Theodore Svetoslav was sent by his father as hostage in the Golden Horede. Perhaps in connection with the same events, Theodore Svetoslav's unnamed sister married Nogai's son Chaka. During part of his exile, Theodore Svetoslav became impoverished and sought to improve his fortunes by marrying the rich Euphrosyne[1]. The marriage was arranged by the Euphrosene Palaiologina in order to improve the position of Svetoslav in the Mongolian court. The Khans's wife also sought to gain Mongolian support for Svetoslav against her cousin Smiltsena Palaiologina, who ruled in Tarnovo as regent of Ivan II.
The husband of Euphrosyne left obscurity in 1298 or 1299, when he accompanied his brother-in-law Chaka in an invasion of Bulgaria. The regency for Ivan II fled Tarnovo in 1299, and the gold of Theodore Svetoslav's wife convinced the Bulgarian nobility to open the city gate[1] and to accept Chaka as ruler. However, the armies of the new khan of the Golden Horde Toqta entered Bulgaria in pursuit of his enemy Chaka, and Theodore Svetoslav promptly organized a plot, deposing Chaka and having him strangled in prison in 1300. Theodore Svetoslav now became emperor of Bulgaria and sent Chaka's severed head as a present to Toqta, who withdrew his armies from the country.
After the ascension of Theodor Svetoslav on the Bulgarian throne Euphrosyne was proclaimed as the new empress consort (tsarina) of Bulgaria. According to the Bulgaria historian Plamen Pavlov, at this time Euphrosyne was the first crowned women in Medieval Europe, who belonged to the third estate[1].
Euphrosene and Theodore Svetoslav had at least one child - the future tsar George II of Bulgaria.
The date of the Euphrosene death is unknown, but it is known that in 1308 her husband married again for the Byzantine princess Theodora Palaiologina.
The memory of Euphrosene is honored in the Synodic of Bulgarian Church (Obituary of Borill):
“ | For Euphrosyne, the pious tsarina of tsar Svetoslav, may her memory live forever.[4] | ” |