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  1. Yuri I Vladimirovich ( Russian: Юрий Владимирович, romanized : Yury Vladimirovich; Old East Slavic: Гюрги Володи́мирович; c. 1099 – 15 May 1157), commonly known as Yuri Dolgorukiy (Russian: Юрий Долгорукий, romanized: Yury Dolgoruky, lit. 'Far-Reaching') or the Long Arm, was a Monomakhovichi ...

  2. Yury Vladimirovich Dolgoruky (1740–1830), a memoirist, served in the armies of the field in the Seven Years’ War (1756–63) and in two of the Russo-Turkish Wars (1768–74 and 1787–91). Ivan Mikhaylovich Dolgoruky (1764–1823), vice-governor of Penza (1791–97) and governor of Vladimir (1802–12), wrote lyric poetry,…

  3. Andrew I (born c. 1111—died June 1174, Bogolyubovo, near Vladimir, Russia) was a prince of Rostov-Suzdal (1157) and grand prince of Vladimir (1169), who increased the importance of the northeastern Russian lands and contributed to the development of government in that forest region.

  4. Yuri I Vladimirovich, commonly known as Yuri Dolgorukiy or the Long Arm, was a Monomakhovichi prince of Rostov and Suzdal, acquiring the name Suzdalia during his reign. Noted for successfully curbing the privileges of the landowning boyar class in Rostov-Suzdal and his ambitious building programme, Yuri transformed this principality into the ...

  5. Yuri Dolgorukiy is the 1,677th most popular politician (up from 1,951st in 2019), the 173rd most popular biography from Russia (up from 200th in 2019) and the 65th most popular Russian Politician. Yuri Dolgorukiy is most famous for founding the city of Moscow in 1147.

  6. Yury Dolgoruky is one of the most contradictory and turbulent figures in Russian history. The Prince of the Rurik Dynasty played an important role in the transition of political power from Kiev to Vladimir-Suzdal. Yury Dolgoruky is also considered the founder of Moscow.

  7. Dolgoruky family, Russian princely family who claimed descent from Rurik, the semilegendary founder of the first Russian state. The Dolgorukys produced well-known statesmen, military leaders, and men of letters. Yury Alekseyevich Dolgoruky (d. 1682) was a high-ranking nobleman and military.