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  1. Sviatoslav reluctantly returned and drove the Pechenegs, who already had been repelled from the city, back to the steppe. After Olha's death he consolidated his control of Kyivan Rus’ and appointed his sons as viceregents: Yaropolk I Sviatoslavych in Kyiv, Oleh Sviatoslavych in the Derevlianian land, and Volodymyr the Great in Novgorod the Great.

  2. La Medalla Conmemorativa del 800.º Aniversario de Moscú es una medalla conmemorativa estatal de la Unión Soviética establecida por decreto del Presídium del Sóviet Supremo de la URSS el 20 de septiembre de 1947 y otorgada a destacados ciudadanos y veteranos de guerra soviéticos en conmemoración del 800.º aniversario de la primera referencia rusa a la ciudad de Moscú, que data de 1147 ...

  3. Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk es un baloncestista ucraniano que pertenece a la plantilla de los Detroit Pistons de la NBA. Con 2,01 metros de estatura, juega en la posición de escolta.

  4. 5 de abr. de 2019 · Sviatoslav Nikolai Olegovich was born about 1090. He was married to MARIA (Ekaterina) Novgorodskaya, they gave birth to 1 child. He died on February 15, 1164. This information is part of Family Tree Welborn by Marvin Loyd Welborn on Genealogy Online.

  5. Sviatoslav I of Kiev (East Slavic: Святослав, ca. 942 – 972) was the warrior prince (or konung) of Kievan Rus'.The son of Igor of Kiev and Olga, Sviatoslav is famous for his incessant campaigns in the east and south, which precipitated the collapse of two great powers of Eastern Europe–Khazaria and the First Bulgarian Empire; he also subdued the Volga Bulgars, the Alans, and ...

  6. 5 de ago. de 2023 · Sviatoslav Olgovich (died Feb. 14, 1164) was the Prince of Novgorod (1136 - 1138), Novgorod - Seversky (1139), Belgorod Kievsky (1141 - 1154), and Chernigov (1154 - 1164). He was the son of Oleg Sviatoslavich, Prince of Chernigov (c. 1052 - 1115) daughter of Asaduk, Khan of the Cumans. After the death of his older brother, Vsevolod II (Grand ...

  7. Sviatoslav Ólgovich, padre de Ígor, se casó en dos ocasiones. Su primer matrimonio, en 1108, fue con la hija del kan cumano (polovetsiano) Ayepa, [2] bautizada probablemente con el nombre de Anna. Su segundo matrimonio, en 1136, en Nóvgorod, causó un escándalo.