The
name of Kardam is first encountered in the Byzantine sources in 791,
when Emperor Constantine VI embarked on an expedition against Bulgaria,
in retaliation for Bulgarian incursions in the Struma valley since 789.
Kardam pre-empted the Byzantine invasion and met the enemy near
Adrianople in Thrace. The Byzantine army was defeated and turned to
flight.
In 792 Constantine VI led another army against the Bulgarians and encamped at Marcellae (near Karnobat),
which he proceeded to fortify. Kardam arrived with his army on July 20
and occupied the neighboring heights. After some time passed with the
two forces sizing up, Constantine VI gave in to the reassuring advice
of a "false prophet" and ordered the attack. But the Byzantine forces
lost formation and once again were defeated and turned to flight, while
Kardam captured the imperial tent and the emperor's servants (battle of
Marcelae). After his return to Constantinople, Constantine VI signed a
peace treaty and undertook to pay an annual tribute to Bulgaria.
By
796 the imperial government was recalcitrant and Kardam found it
necessary to demand the tribute while threatening to devastate Thrace
if it were not paid. According to the chronicler Theophanes the
Confessor, Constantine VI mocked the demand by having dung sent instead
of gold as "fitting tribute" and promising to lead a new army against
the elderly Kardam at Marcellae. Once again the emperor headed north,
and once again it encountered Kardam in the vicinity of Adrianople. The
armies faced each other for 17 days without entering into battle, while
the two monarchs probably engaged in negotiations. In the end conflict
was averted and the peace resumed on the same terms as in 792.
The
reign of Kardam represents the restoration of order in Bulgaria, which
had suffered from a rapid turnover of rulers and had been repeatedly
defeated by the Byzantines in the third quarter of the 8th century.
Kardam not only stood his ground against Constantine VI (who was trying
to emulate his much more successful grandfather and namesake
Constantine V), but he may have succeeded in precipitating a crisis at
the Byzantine court, where Constantine VI's repeated failures
undermined the emperor's position and he was dethroned by his mother
Irene in 797. Kardam probably did not long survive his opponent, as he
is not heard of after 796 and was already dead in 803.
The 17th
century Volga Bulgar compilation Ja'far Tarikh (a work of disputed
authenticity) represents Karadžam (i.e., Kardam) as the brother of Azan
Tokta (i.e., Toktu), and as the grandson of Suvar (Sevar). The same
source represents his successor Korym (i.e., Krum), as his nephew. If
all this is correct, Kardam's accession signifies the final restoration
of the Dulo clan, which would have retained the throne until the death
of Roman in 997.
info: Wikipedia