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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Vasily_KosoyVasily Kosoy - Wikipedia

    Vasiliy Yuryevich Kosoy (the Squint) (Russian: Василий Юрьевич Косой; ca. 1401–1448) was prince of Zvenigorod from 1421. He continued his father's claim on the title of Grand Prince of Moscow in 1434.

  2. Fue sucedido por su hijo mayor, Vasili Yuryevich o Vasili Kosoy (Vasili el Bizco). En ese momento, Basilio II estaba en Nizhni Nóvgorod y se preparaba para viajar a la Horda de Oro para dejar una queja ante el kan.

    • Background
    • First Period
    • Second Period
    • Third Period
    • Assessment
    • Bibliography

    The Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus' of 1236–1241 left the Rus' principalities subjugated by the Golden Horde. In the 13th–15th centuries, the Khan of the Golden Horde appointed the Great Prince, who in the 14th century resided in Moscow.[clarification needed] In the 13th century the medieval Rus' consisted of a set of relatively small and weak princ...

    Vasily died in 1425 and left several children. Allegedly, he appointed his oldest son Vasily Vasilyevich, as the next Grand Prince (known as Vasily II). Yury challenged this appointment, arguing that he should have received the crown because of the provisions written in Donskoy's will.[b] In 1425, Yuri and Vasily agreed to present their succession ...

    The brothers of Vasily Yuryevich — Dmitry Shemyaka and Dmitry Krasny — refused to lend him any support. Anticipating that Vasily would not be able to keep Moscow for long, they preferred to ally with Vasily II so that eventually they could get additional lands from him. Indeed, Vasily gave Rzhev and Uglich to Dmitry Shemyaka and Bezhetsky Verkh to ...

    In the early 1440s Vasily II was mostly busy with the wars against the Khanate of Kazan. The Khan, Ulugh Muhammad, besieged Moscow in 1439. Dmitry Shemyaka, despite being under the oath of allegiance, failed to appear in support of Vasily. After the Tatars left, Vasily chased Shemyaka, forcing him to flee to Novgorod again. Subsequently, Shemyaka r...

    Halperin (2001) observed: 'During the Muscovite civil war both sides simultaneously sought the assistance of the Khan, and excoriated their opponents for doing exactly the same thing.' In 1977, Halperin had observed that the Muscovite War of Succession weakened Muscovy so much that its old rival, the Principality of Tver, once again felt strong eno...

    Alef, Gustave (1956). A history of the Muscovite civil war: the reign of Vasili II (1425–1462) (PhD). Retrieved 5 February 2023– via ProQuest.
    Alef, Gustave (1983). "The Battle of Suzdal' in 1445. An Episode in the Muscovite War of Succession (1978)". Rulers and nobles in fifteenth century Muscovy. Part II. London: Variorum Reprints. pp....
    Halperin, Charles J. (1987). Russia and the Golden Horde: The Mongol Impact on Medieval Russian History. p. 222. ISBN 9781850430575.(e-book).
    Halperin, Charles J. (2001). "Text and Textology: Salmina's Dating of the Chronicle Tales about Dmitrii Donskoi". Slavonic and East European Review. 79 (2): 248–263. Retrieved 17 May 2023.
  3. El peculiar sistema de sucesión de hermano a hermano de la Rusia medieval. por Jorge Álvarez 2 Abr, 2020. Sofía de Lituania insultando a Vasily Kosoy durante un banquete de bodas, cuadro de Pavel Chistyakov (1861) / foto dominio público en Wikimedia Commons.

  4. Vasili Yuryevich of Zvenigorod nicknamed Kosoy (the cross-eyed) (c1405-1448), Prince of Zvenigorod (1421-1448), Grand Prince of Moscow (1434) was, the eldest of the four sons of Grand Duke Yuri Dmitriyevich of Zvenigorod.

  5. By his wife, Anastasia, the daughter of Yury of Smolensk, Yury had three sons — Vasily Kosoy, Dmitry Shemyaka, and Dmitry Krasny. The marriage to Anastasia made him the brother-in-law of Švitrigaila , Grand Duke of Lithuania .

  6. Vasiliy Kosoy (1421–1448) had been Grand Prince of Moscow in 1434–35.LifeVasily Kosoy was the son of Yury Dmitrievich and Anastasia of Smolensk. His grandfat...