Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Maria Shvarnovna. Maria Shvarnovna (c. 1158 - 19 March/19 May 1205/1206) was the first wife of the Yurievichi grand prince of Vladimir Vsevolod III Big Nest, and gave birth to at least 14 children (hence Vsevolod's sobriquet of "Big Nest"). Four of her sons, Konstantin, George, Yaroslav and Sviatoslav, succeeded their father as Grand ...

  2. The Novgorod First Chronicle mentions her death under the year 1205, but does not give an exact day. Maria Shvarnovna was the first wife of Vsevolod III "Big Nest", and gave birth to at least 14 children.

  3. 31 de ene. de 2024 · Maria Shvarnovna (as Maria Vsevolzhaya) (10 August 1155-19 March 1205, Vladimir) - the first wife of Grand Prince Vsevolod III Yuryevich of Vladimir. She was canonized.

    • Киев / Kiev, Киевское Княжество
    • "St. Marfa Shvarne / Przemyslid ?"
    • Vsevolod-Dmitri Yurievich The Big Nest
    • August 10, 1155
  4. His Ossetian wife, Maria Shvarnovna, who devoted herself to works of piety and founded several convents, was glorified by the Russian church as a saint. By her Vsevolod had no fewer than fourteen children, thus earning for himself the sobriquet Big Nest. [citation needed] Death and succession.

  5. Su mujer, María Shvárnovna, que se dedicó a obras de piedad y fundó diferentes conventos, fue glorificada por la Iglesia ortodoxa rusa como santa. Con ella Vsévolod tuvo no menos de doce hijos, razón por la cual recibió el sobrenombre de Gran Nido.

    • Большое Гнездо
    • Vladímir
  6. Mariya Shvarnovna of Ossetia was born 10 August 1155 to Prince of Ossetia and died 19 March 1205 Vladimir, Vladimir Oblast, Russia of unspecified causes. She married Vsevolod III Yuryevich of Vladimir (1154-1212) . Maria Shvarnovna (as Maria Vsevolzhaya) (10 August 1155-19 March 1205, Vladimir...

  7. The Knyaginin Convent was first mentioned in 1200 and was founded around this time by Maria Shvarnovna who was the first wife of Grand Prince Vsevsolod the Big Nest of Vladimir. Its name is derived from the Russian word for princess ('knyagina') and the Russian word for the Dormition ('Uspenie') of the Virgin Mary, to which is it dedicated.