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  1. Sviatopolk I Vladimirovich (also called Sviatopolk the Accursed or the Accursed Prince; Old East Slavic: Свѧтоплъкъ, romanized: Svętoplŭkŭ; [a] c. 980 – 1019) was Prince of Turov from 988 to 1015 and Grand Prince of Kiev from 1015 to 1019. He earned his sobriquet after allegedly murdering his brothers during his bid to take the throne.

  2. Sviatopolk I Vladímirovich (Sviatopolk el Maldito) (en ucraniano Святополк Окаяний, en ruso, Святополк Окаянный) (h. 980–1019) fue el knyaz de Turau (988-1015) y Veliki Knyaz (el Gran príncipe) de Kiev (1015-1019) cuya paternidad y culpa en el asesinato de sus hermanos son objeto de debate.

    • Свѧтопълкъ Володимѣровичь
    • c. 979
  3. Sviatopolk I Vladímirovich ( Sviatopolk el Maldito) (en ucraniano Святополк Окаяний, en ruso, Святополк Окаянный) (h. 980–1019) fue el knyaz ( príncipe) de Turau (988-1015) y Veliki Knyaz (el Gran príncipe) de Kiev (1015-1019) cuya paternidad y culpa en el asesinato de sus hermanos son objeto de debate.

  4. Sviatopolk I [Svjatopolk] (appellation: Okaiannyi [the Damned or the Accursed]), b 978, d 24 July 1019.Kyivan Rus’ prince; son of Volodymyr the Great.In actuality Sviatopolk was probably the son of Volodymyr's brother, Yaropolk I Sviatoslavych, whose widow, Predslava, Sviatopolk's Greek mother, Volodymyr took as his third wife; thus Sviatopolk is counted among Volodymyr's sons.

  5. Svyatopolk I. views 3,954,542 updated. SVYATOPOLK I. (c. 980 – 1019), grand prince of Kiev, replacing Vladimir Svyatoslavich, the Christianizer of Rus. The identity of Svyatopolk's father is uncertain.

  6. Svyatopolk. prince of Kyiv. Also known as: Svyatopolk the Accursed. Learn about this topic in these articles: history of Kyivan Rus. In Kievan Rus. …as Vladimir’s eldest surviving son, Svyatopolk the Accursed, killed three of his other brothers and seized power in Kiev.

  7. 10 de abr. de 2024 · Svyatoslav I (died 972) was the grand prince of Kyiv from 945 and the greatest of the Varangian princes of early Russo-Ukrainian history. He was the son of Grand Prince Igor, who was himself probably the grandson of Rurik, prince of Novgorod. Svyatoslav was the last non-Christian ruler of the Kyivan state.