Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Yaropolk II (1132 – 1139) Vsevolod II (1139 – 1145) Izyaslav II (1145 – 1154) Yuri I Dolgoruky (1154 – 1157) The Grand Dukes of Russia until 1263. Andrei Bogolyubsky (1157 – 1174) Mstislav II (1167 – 1169) Mikhail I (1174 – 1178) Vsevolod III The Big Nest (1178 – 1212) Konstantin (1216 – 1219) Yuri II (1219 – 1238)

  2. Yaropolk was the younger son of Yaroslav Vsevolodovich (who was the prince of Starodub or Chernigov when Yaropolk was born), by his wife Irene. [1] In 1196, prince Vsevolod Yurevich of Suzdalia refused to grant the citizens of Novgorod their request to replace his appointee Yaroslav Vladimirovich with his son or some other prince. [1]

  3. YAROPOLK I. (d. 980), son of Svyatoslav and the grandson of Igor and Olga; fourth grand prince of Kiev. The date of Yaropolk Svyatoslavich's birth is unknown, but the Primary Chronicle reports that in 968 he and his two brothers were under Olga's care. In 970 their father Svyatoslav gave Kiev to Yaropolk, the Derevlyane lands to Oleg, and ...

  4. 19 de jul. de 2022 · MSTISLAV Vladimirovich, son of VLADIMIR Vsevolodich "Monomakh" Grand Prince of Kiev & his first wife [Gytha of England] (1076-Kiev 14 Apr 1132). The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Mstislav, son of Vladimir, grandson of Vsevolod, in 1076. Morkinskinna records that “Haraldr Valdimarsson” was the son of “Valdimarr” and “Edith the ...

  5. 12 de feb. de 2024 · Birthplace: Of, Pereyaslavl, Kiev, Ukraine. Death: February 18, 1139 (56-57) Kieve,Kiev,,Ukraine. Immediate Family: Son of Vladimir II Monomakh and Gytha of Wessex, Grand Princess consort of Kievan Rus. Husband of Ossetian princess Yasynya Elena, Princess Of Ossetian. Father of Vasilko Yaropolkovich, Prince of Mikhailovsk.

  6. Yaropolk II of Kiev. Yaropolk II Vladimirovich (_ru. Ярополк II Владимирович) (1082 - 18 February, 1139), Prince of Pereyaslav (1114-1132), Velikiy Kniaz (Grand Prince) of Kiev (1132-1139), son of Vladimir II Monomakh and Gytha of Wessex. He fought in several campaigns against the Polovtsy (Cumans), once in 1103 and again in ...

  7. Neither Mstyslav nor his brother and successor in Kyiv, Yaropolk II Volodymyrovych (1132–9), was able to prevent the dynastic rivalry for the title of ‘grand prince of Kyiv and all Rus’.’ The Kyivan Rus’ federation continued to disintegrate and Kyiv itself lost its primacy: the city was sacked several times by feuding princes, most notably in 1169 by Andrei Bogoliubskii of Vladimir ...