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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Olga_of_KievOlga of Kiev - Wikipedia

    Equal to the Apostles, Blessed Princess; Born: c. 890–925 Pleskov or Vybuty , Kievan Rus' Residence: Kiev, Kievan Rus' Died: 11 July 969 Kiev, Kievan Rus' Venerated in: Eastern Orthodoxy Roman Catholicism: Canonized: Unknown, possibly 1284. Major shrine: Church of the Tithes: Feast: 11 July: Attributes: cross and church: Patronage ...

  2. 15 de abr. de 2022 · Updated June 7, 2022. Saint Olga of Kiev was the 10th-century princess of Kievan Rus who enacted bloodthirsty revenge on the tribe that killed her husband, the Grand Prince Igor I. Nikolay Bruni/Wikimedia Commons Saint Olga of Kiev, the princess who brutally tormented her enemies.

  3. 29 de mar. de 2024 · St. Olga (born c. 890—died 969, Kyiv; feast day July 11) was the princess who was the first recorded female ruler of the Rus and the first member of the ruling family of Kyivan Rus to adopt Christianity. She was canonized as the first Kyivan saint of the Orthodox Church and is the patron saint of widows and converts.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 11 de nov. de 2019 · By. Jone Johnson Lewis. Updated on November 11, 2019. Princess Olga of Kiev, also known as St. Olga, is sometimes credited as founding, with her grandson Vladimir, what has come to be known as Russian Christianity (the Moscow Patriarchate within Eastern Orthodoxy).

    • Jone Johnson Lewis
  5. Olga appears to have been aware of the potential threat to Kievan autonomy during her visit to Constantinople. Her hesitation is evinced by her clever refusal of the Byzantine Emperor's proposal of marriage. In this way Olga averted Byzantine conquest of Kiev through marriage.

  6. 28 de feb. de 2022 · St.Olga by Mikhail Nesterov. Saint Olga of Kyiv is Ukraine’s patron saint of both defiance and vengeance. Published: February 28, 2022 2:15pm EST. The past few days have seen a spate of...

  7. Santa Olga de Kiev (en ruso y ucraniano Ольга, m. Kiev, 969) fue una mujer de Pskov de origen varego que se casó con el futuro Ígor de Kiev, posiblemente en 903. Tras la muerte de Ígor, gobernó la Rus de Kiev como regente (945-969 [1] ) de su hijo, Sviatoslav I de Kiev.