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Vsevolod and Sviatoslav made no attempt to expel the usurper from Kiev. [11] Vsevolod supported Sviatoslav against Iziaslav. [12] They forced their brother to flee from Kiev in 1073. [12] Feodosy, the saintly hegumen or head of the Monastery of the Caves in Kiev remained loyal to Iziaslav, and refused lunch with Sviatoslav and Vsevolod. [3]
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. In 1097, her stepson Vladimir Monomakh besieged Sviatoslav Iziaslavych in Kiev.
Vsevolod IV Svyatoslavich the Red or Vsevolod Chermnyi [1] [a] (died August 1212) was Grand Prince of Kiev (1203; 1206; 1207; 1208–1212). [2] He was also Prince of Chernigov (1204–1206/1208) and Belgorod Kievsky (1205).
The Battle of the Alta River in 1068, as illustrated in the Radzivill Chronicle. The Battle of Alta River was a 1068 [1] clash on the Alta River between Cuman army on the one hand and Kievan Rus' forces of Grand Prince Iziaslav I of Kiev, Prince Sviatoslav of Chernigov, and Prince Vsevolod of Periaslavl on the other in which the Rus' forces were routed and fled back to Kiev and Chernigov in ...
Vsevolod Vladimirovich (c. 983–1013), Prince of Volyn', son of Vladimir I of Kiev; Vsevolod I of Kiev (Yaroslavich) (1030–1093), Grand Prince of Kievan Rus' Vsevolod Mstislavich (disambiguation) Vsevolod II of Kiev (Olegovich) (d. 1146), Grand Prince of Kievan Rus' Vsevolod III Yuryevich aka Vsevolod the Big Nest (1154–1212), Prince of ...
The Principality of Volhynia (Ukrainian: Волинське князівство) was a western Kievan Rus' principality founded by the Rurikid prince Vsevolod in 987 centered in the region of Volhynia, straddling the borders of modern-day Ukraine, Belarus, and Poland.
Yaroslav was the fourth son of Vsevolod the Big Nest and Maria Shvarnovna.. In 1200, he was sent by his father to rule the town of Pereiaslav near the Kypchak steppes. Six years later, he was summoned by boyars of Halych to rule their city but could not effectively claim the throne.
Vsevolod II Olgovich [a] (died August 1, 1146) was Prince of Chernigov (1127–1139) and Grand Prince of Kiev (1139–1146). [1] He was a son of Oleg Svyatoslavich , Prince of Chernigov. Family