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  1. Ярослав Владимирович (Ярослав I Мудрой) "Yaroslav the Wise, Yaroslav Vladimirovich the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev" Рюрикович formerly Kiev aka of Kiev, Rurik. Born 0978 in Kiev, Kyiv, Kievan Rus. Ancestors. Son of Владимир Святославич (Рюриковичи) Рюрикович of Kiev ...

  2. Igor Yaroslavich was one of the younger sons of Yaroslav the Wise from the Rurikid dynasty of Kievan Rus’. He was baptized as George. The date of his birth is unsure. Some historians consider him to be born in 1034–35, while others think that he was born after Yaroslav moved to Kiev in 1036. Upon the death of his father Iziaslav I of Kiev ...

  3. 3 de ene. de 2012 · This page was last edited on 6 April 2017, at 11:36. Files are available under licenses specified on their description page. All structured data from the file namespace is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; all unstructured text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  4. When Yaroslav the Wise was born in 0978, in Kyiv, Ukraine, his father, Vladimir Svialoslavich, "The Great", Prince Novgorod, and Grand Prince of Kiev, Saint Rurik, was 20 and his mother, Rogneda of Polotsk, was 22. He married Anna Ingegerd Olofsdotter in 1019, in Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden. They were the parents of at least 7 sons and 5 daughters ...

  5. 19 de abr. de 2015 · File:Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise 1st 2nd and 3rd Class of Ukraine.png. Size of this preview: 800 × 220 pixels. Other resolutions: 320 × 88 pixels | 640 × 176 pixels | 2,000 × 550 pixels. Original file ‎ (2,000 × 550 pixels, file size: 6 KB, MIME type: image/png)

  6. Sviatoslav II Iaroslavich or Sviatoslav II Yaroslavich ( Old East Slavic: Ст҃ославь Ӕрославичь; [a] 1027 – 27 December 1076) [1] was Grand Prince of Kiev from 1073 until his death in 1076. [3] He was a younger son of Yaroslav the Wise, the grand prince of Kiev. He is the progenitor of the Sviatoslavichi branch of Rurikids.

  7. Yaroslav's Court is named after Yaroslav the Wise who, while prince of Novgorod in 988–1015, built a palace there. The Novgorodian veche often met in front of Yaroslav's Court and in 1224 several pagan sorcerers were burned at the stake there.