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  1. 15 de mar. de 2024 · Ivan the Terrible (born August 25, 1530, Kolomenskoye, near Moscow [Russia]—died March 18, 1584, Moscow) was the grand prince of Moscow (1533–84) and the first to be proclaimed tsar of Russia (from 1547). His reign saw the completion of the construction of a centrally administered Russian state and the creation of an empire that included ...

  2. This category is located at Category:Andrey Ivanovich, Prince of Staritsa. Note: This category should be empty. Any content should be recategorised. This tag should be used on existing categories that are likely to be used by others, even though the "real" category is elsewhere. Redirected categories should be empty and not categorised themselves.

  3. Andrey of Staritsa: Youngest son of Ivan the Great by Sophia of Byzantium (1490 - 1537)

  4. Andrey Ivanovich (August 5, 1490 – December 11, 1537) was the youngest son of Ivan III of Russia the Great by Sophia Palaiologina of Byzantium. Since 1519, his appanages included Volokolamsk and Staritsa. When his elder brother Vasily III ascended the throne, Andrey was just 14.

  5. The only son of Andrey of Staritsa and Princess Evfrosinia Staritskaia née Khovanskaia, Vladimir spent his childhood under strict surveillance in Moscow. In 1542, he was reinstated in his father's appanages, Staritsa and Vereya. There he married and lived in peace until 1553, when the tsar fell mortally ill.

  6. This category is located at Category:Simeon Ivanovich, Prince of Kaluga. Note: This category should be empty. Any content should be recategorised. This tag should be used on existing categories that are likely to be used by others, even though the "real" category is elsewhere. Redirected categories should be empty and not categorised themselves.

  7. Ivan Ivanovich ( Russian: Иван Иванович) or Ioann Ioannovich ( Иоанн Иоаннович ), also known as Ivan the Young ( Russian: Иван Молодой, romanized : Ivan Molodoy; [1] 15 February 1458 – 6 March 1490), was the eldest son and heir of Ivan III of Russia from his first marriage to Maria of Tver. [1] In 1471, he ...