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  1. Anna Polovetskaya [a] (died 1111) was the grand princess consort of Kiev during her marriage to Vsevolod I . Life. A daughter of a Cuman khan, she married Vsevolod I in 1068. In connection to the wedding, she converted from her original faith, Tengrism, to Christianity, and was given the name Anna. When she was widowed in 1093, she stayed in Kiev.

    • 1078 – 1093
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Vsevolod I of Kiev, ​ ​(m. 1068; died 1093)​
  2. In 1067, Vsevolod's Greek wife died and he soon married a Kypchak princess, Anna Polovetskaya. They had a son, who drowned after the Battle of the Stugna River, and daughters, one becoming a nun and another, Eupraxia of Kiev, marrying Emperor Henry IV. The Cumans again invaded Kievan Rus' in 1068.

    • First Marriage
    • Empress
    • Later Life
    • References
    • External Links

    Eupraxia was first married to Henry I the Long, count of Stade and margrave of the Saxon Northern March, who was the son of Lothair Udo II.Eupraxia and Henry had no children before his death in 1087.

    After her first husband's death, Eupraxia went to live in the convent of Quedlinburg, where she met Henry IV, who was then the Saxon king. He was greatly impressed by her beauty. After his first wife Bertha of Savoy died in December 1087, Henry became betrothed to Eupraxia in 1088. The couple married the following year on 18 August 1089 at Cologne....

    Eupraxia-Adelaide left Italy for Hungary, where she lived until 1099, when she returned to Kyiv.After Henry's death in 1106 she became a nun until her own death in 1109.

    G. Vernadsky, Kyivan Rus(New Haven, 1976).
    C. Raffensperger, ‘Evpraksia Vsevolodovna between East and West,’ Russian History/Histoire Russe 30:1–2 (2003), 23-34.
    C. Raffensperger, 'The Missing Russian Women: The Case of Evpraksia Vsevolodovna,' in Writing Medieval Women's Lives(ed. Goldy, Livingstone) (2012), pp.
    H. Rüß, ‘Eupraxia-Adelheid. Eine biographische Annäherung,‘ Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 54 (2006), 481–518
  3. Anna Polovtska (m. 7 de octubre de 1111) - Princesa polovtsiana, segunda esposa del Gran Duque de Kiev Vsevolod Yaroslavich.

  4. Anna (Yanka) Vsévolodovna (†3 de noviembre de 1112), monja. Segundo matrimonio con Ana (†1111), con la que tuvo cuatro hijos: Rostislav Vsévolodovich (1070–1093), ahogado durante la retirada de la batalla del río Stuhna contra los polovtsianos. Eufrasia de Kiev (1071 – 1109), esposa de Enrique IV del Sacro Imperio Romano Germánico.

  5. En 1067, la esposa griega de Vsevolod murió y pronto se casó con una princesa de Kypchak, Anna Polovetskaya. Ella le dio otro hijo, que se ahogó después de la batalla del río Stugna, e hijas, una que se convirtió en monja y otra, Eupraxia de Kiev, que se casó con el emperador Enrique IV.

  6. 15 de ene. de 2021 · Anna Polovetskaya (died October 7, 1111 ) - Polovtsian princess, the second wife of the Grand Duke of Kiev Vsevolod Yaroslavich . According to popular belief, she was the daughter of the Polovtsian Khan, which is not confirmed by sources, although probably from the point of view of the political situation of the late 1060s.