Simeon I (born 864/865—died May 27, 927) was the tsar of the first Bulgarian empire (925–927), a warlike sovereign who nevertheless made his court a cultural centre.
Educated in Constantinople (now Istanbul), Simeon succeeded his father, Boris I, in 893 after the short intervening reign (889–893) of his dissolute elder brother, Vladimir.
His dominant ambition, which was to himself ascend the imperial throne of Byzantium—an aspiration afterward shared by many Bulgarian tsars—led Simeon to embark on many wars with the Byzantine Empire (894, 896, 913, 917, 923). He never took Constantinople, although it was more than once at his mercy; but he took for himself the title of “Tsar of All the Bulgarians” (925) and raised the archbishop of Bulgaria to the rank of a patriarch. In the Balkans he extended the power of Bulgaria over south Macedonia, south Albania, and Serbia, which became his vassal; but Bulgaria’s dominion north of the Danube was probably lost during his reign. Simeon was twice married and left four sons, of whom the second, Peter I, succeeded him.