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  1. Career. The two decided to seal the alliance by arranging a betrothal between the future Ivan III and Maria of Tver in 1452. lieutenant appears that she died from poisoning in 1467. However, if one is to believe Joseph Volotsky, she had been suffering from "infirmity" since childhood. She gave birth to Ivan the Young in 1458. Maria Borisovna of ...

  2. Dempués de la muerte de la so primer esposa, María de Tver (1467), siguiendo la suxerencia de papa Paulo II (1469), qu'esperaba de tal manera arreyar Rusia a la Santa Sede, Iván III casó a Sofía Paleóloga (tamién conocida sol so nome griego y ortodoxo orixinal de Zoe), fía de Tomás Paleólogu, el déspota de Morea, que demandó'l tronu de Constantinopla como hermanu de Constantino XI ...

  3. Maria Borisovna of Tver (Russian: Мария Борисовна) (1442 - 1467) was the first wife of Grand Prince Ivan III and daughter of Boris Alexandrovich of Tver and of his first wife Anastasiya Andreyevna Mozhaisky. When Vasili II (Ivan III's father) was getting ready to attack Dmitri Shemyaka, he found an ally in the person of Boris of Tver.

  4. 11 de feb. de 2019 · Birthplace: Of a, Pskov, Gorod Pskov, Pskov Oblast, Russia (Russian Federation) Death: March 17, 1397 (63-72) Immediate Family: Daughter of Prince of Tver Alexander, Rurikid and Anastasia, princess of Halych. Wife of Simeon "The Proud" of Moscow. Mother of Daniil Simeonovich, Prince; Ivan Simeonovich, Prince; Mikhail Simeonovich, Prince and ...

  5. Definition. Ivan III of Russia (Ivan the Great) was the Grand Prince of Moscow and Russia from 1462 to 1505. Ivan III was born in 1440 to Grand Prince Vasily II of Moscow (r. 1425-1462) and his wife, Maria Borovsk (l. c. 1420-1485). He served as co-ruler for his blind father from 1450 until he became regent in 1462.

  6. 1 de abr. de 2023 · Ivan's son with Maria of Tver, Ivan the Young, died in 1490, leaving from his marriage with Helen of Moldavia an only child, Dmitry the Grandson. The latter was crowned as successor by his grandfather in 1497, but later Ivan reverted his decision in favour of Sophia's elder son Vasily who was ultimately crowned co-regent with his father (April 14, 1502).

  7. After the death of his first consort in 1467, Maria of Tver, and at the suggestion of Pope Paul II in 1469, who hoped thereby to bind Moscow to the Holy See, Ivan III wedded Sophia Palaiologina (also known under her original name Zoe) in 1472, daughter of Thomas Palaeologus, despot of Morea, who claimed the throne of Constantinople as the brother of Constantine XI, the last Byzantine emperor.