, found in the village of Agios Germanos The town gained great political significance after 971 when the capital of Bulgaria
Preslav was seized by the Byzantines during the
war against Sviatoslav of Kiev. A few years later, Prespa was one of the centers of the uprising of the
Cometopuli brothers, who kept the western Bulgarian lands out of Byzantine occupation. There are theories that the lake town was the residence of the eldest of the four brothers,
David, before he was killed in 976. Later it became the residence of
Samuel who
de facto ruled the Bulgarian Empire after the murder of his brother
Aron in 976 or 986 and especially after the legitimate emperor
Roman was captured by the Byzantines in 991. Due to that fact, some authors suggest that Prespa became official capital of the empire. According to
Encyclopedia Bulgaria the town was capital between 973 and 996, according to the
Cyril and Methodius Encyclopedia it was capital at least to 1015 while others consider that Prespa was never an official capital of Bulgaria, unlike
Skopje and
Ohrid. After the conquest of
Larissa in
Thessaly in 983 The large island of the Little Prespa Lake was named after the saint. When Samuel was proclaimed Emperor in 997, the seat of the
Bulgarian Patriarchate was in Prespa Immediately after the disastrous defeat at the hands of the Byzantines in the
battle of Kleidion, his soldiers were blinded by order of the Byzantine emperor
Basil II. Emperor Samuel sought refuge in Prespa, where he died of a
heart attack on 6 October 1014. Prespa remained an Imperial residence for his successor
Ivan Vladislav. In 1016 the Serbian prince
Jovan Vladimir was murdered in Prespa by order of Ivan Vladislav. Prespa, including the Basilica of Saint Achilles and Samuel's palaces, was destroyed by
Latin mercenaries in 1073, in the aftermath of the suppression of the
Uprising of Georgi Voiteh, who attempted to restore the independence of Bulgaria. Prespa continues to be mentioned as an administrative center in 12th-century sources. It was ruled by the
Despotate of Epirus in the beginning of the 13th century, then by the
Second Bulgarian Empire and in 1259 was seized by the
Nicaean Empire during the campaign that led to the
Battle of Pelagonia. It is not mentioned in later sources. During excavations in 1969 the Greek archaeologist Nikolaos Moutsopoulos discovered a grave which is thought to be the burial place of emperor Samuel. ==Footnotes==