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  1. Andrey Ivanovich (Russian: Андрей Иванович; 5 August 1490 – 11 December 1537) was the youngest son of Ivan III of Russia by his second wife Sophia Palaiologina. From 1519, his appanages included Volokolamsk and Staritsa.

  2. hmn.wiki › es › Andrey_of_StaritsaAndrei de Staritsa

    Andrey Ivanovich (5 de agosto de 1490 - 11 de diciembre de 1537) fue el hijo menor de Iván III de Rusia la Grande de Sophia Paleologina de Bizancio. Desde 1519, sus pertenencias incluían Volokolamsk y Staritsa. Cuando su hermano mayor, Vasily III, ascendió al trono, Andrey tenía solo 14 años.

  3. Andrey Fedorovich Khovansky. Yefrosinya [a] Andreyevna Staritskaya ( Russian: Ефросинья Андреевна Старицкая; née Khovanskaya; 1516 – 20 October 1569) was a Russian noblewoman. She was married to Andrey of Staritsa, the younger brother of Vasili III and an uncle of Ivan IV .

  4. Andrey Ivanovich (5 de agosto de 1490-11 de diciembre de 1537) fue el hijo menor de Iván III de Rusia el Grande por Sophia Palaiologina de Bizancio. Desde 1519, sus apariciones incluyeron Volokolamsk y Staritsa. Cuando su hermano mayor Vasily III ascendió al trono, Andrey tenía solo 14 años.

    • Early Life
    • Reign
    • Legacy
    • Title
    • Marriages and Children
    • Bibliography
    • Further Reading

    Ivan Vasilyevich was born on 22 January 1440 into the family of Vasily II, the grand prince of Moscow, and Maria of Borovsk, the daughter of an appanage prince and a granddaughter of Vladimir the Bold. The first time Ivan is called heir and grand prince in treaties between his father and other Russian princes is in a treaty with Ivan Vasilyevich of...

    Territorial expansion and centralization

    Ivan's rule is marked by vastly expanding the territory and his control of Muscovy. As part of the successful "gathering of the Russian lands", Ivan brought the independent duchies of different Rurikid princes under the direct control of Moscow, leaving the princes and their posterity without royal titles or land inheritance. It was during Ivan's reign that the emergence of a centralized Russian state occurred following a period of feudal fragmentation, with Moscow at its center. Following a...

    Domestic policy

    The character of the government of Moscow changed significantly under Ivan III, taking on a new autocratic form, as Moscow increased its hegemony, but also to new imperial pretensions. After the fall of Constantinople, Orthodox canonists were inclined to regard the grand princes of Moscow, where the Metropolitan of Kiev moved in 1325 after the Mongol invasions, as the successors of the Byzantine emperors. Ivan himself appeared to welcome the idea, and he began to use the title of tsar in fore...

    Foreign policy

    Moscow played an increasingly visible role in international affairs as it established diplomatic relations with the Crimean Khanate and the Republic of Venice in 1474, the Kingdom of Hungary in 1482, the Holy Roman Empire in 1489, the Kingdom of Denmark in 1493, and the Ottoman Empire in 1496. The outline of Russian foreign policy for the next several generations was shaped during Ivan's reign, where his successors would continue to struggle with Poland and Lithuania over the territories of t...

    Ivan conquered or brought under his control the lands of "Great Russia", leading to Russian historians to call him the "gatherer of the Russian lands". Ivan therefore arguably became best known for his consolidation of Muscovite rule; his contemporaries and later historians saw Ivan as a skilled politician who was consistent and efficient in the co...

    In the 1480s, during his consolidation of territories, Ivan III had the following title: "By the Grace of God, the Great Sovereign of the Russian land, Grand Prince Ivan Vasilyevich, Tsar of all Russia, Vladimir, and Moscow, and Novgorod, and Pskov, and Yugorsk, and Vyatka, and Perm, and others".[note 4] At the beginning of the 1490s, he also had t...

    1.By Maria of Tver 1. Ivan Ivanovich (Ivan the Young)(15 February 1458 – 7 March 1490) 2.By Sophia Palaiologina 1. Anna (born 1474), died in infancy 2. Elena (born 1475), died in infancy 3. Feodosia (born 1475-?) 4. Helena (19 May 1476 – 20 January 1513), Grand Duchess of Lithuania and Queen of Poland 5. Vasily III (25 March 1479 – 3 December 1533)...

    Alef, Gustave (1983). Rulers and Nobles in Fifteenth-Century Muscovy. Surrey, England: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN 978-0860781202.

    Fennell, J. L. I. Ivan the Great of Moscow(1961)
    Grey, Ian. Ivan III and the unification of Russia(1964)
    Ostowski, Donald. "The Growth of Muscovy, (1462–1533)" in Maureen Perrie, ed., The Cambridge History of Russia(2006) vol. I pages 213–39
    Paul, Michael C. "Secular Power and the Archbishops of Novgorod up to the Muscovite Conquest," Kritika(2007) 8#2 pp:131–170.
  5. 26 de abr. de 2022 · About Prince Andrey Staritsky. Prince of Staritsa and Volokolamsk (1519-1537). nevers daughter (incl. Feodosia) of Andrey Starizki don't mentioned in Russian sources! So please don't attach [ Princess (???) Feodosia (Starizki???)] to Starizki family! view all. Prince Andrey Staritsky's Timeline.

  6. 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.