maximum test » Iziaslav Dmitri Yaroslavich Rurikids (1024-1078)

Persönliche Daten Iziaslav Dmitri Yaroslavich Rurikids 

  • Er wurde geboren im Jahr 1024Вели́кий Но́вгород (Great Novgorod)
    Новгородская земля (Land of Novgorod) Ки́евская русь (Kievan Rus, within present Russia).
  • Er wurde getauft in Kiev-aka Izhaslav/Isiaslav.
  • Er wurde getauft.
  • Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 3. März 1931.
  • Alternative: Fetauft (im Alter von 8 Jahren oder später) von der Priestertumsvollmacht der HLT-Kirche am 9. Juni 1993.
  • Titel: Grand Prince of Kiev
  • Er ist verstorben am 3. Oktober 1078 in Нежатина Нива (Fields of Nezhatin), er war 54 Jahre altЧернигов (Chernigov/Chernihiv)
    Черниговское княжество (Principality of Chernigov) Ки́евская русь (Kievan Rus, within present Ukraine).
  • Er wurde beerdigt rund 9. Oktober 1078 in Десятинная Церковь (Church of the Tithes or Dormition of the Virgin)Киев (Kiev/Kyiv)
    Земля киевская (Land of Kiev) Ки́евская русь (Kievan Rus, within present Ukraine).
  • Ein Kind von Iaroslav Vladimirovich the Wise the Wise und Ingegerd Olofsdotter
  • Diese Information wurde zuletzt aktualisiert am 22. Januar 2019.

Familie von Iziaslav Dmitri Yaroslavich Rurikids

Er ist verheiratet mit Gertruda Mieszkówna.

Sie haben geheiratet rund 1043 in Krakow, Krakow, Poland.


Kind(er):



Notizen bei Iziaslav Dmitri Yaroslavich Rurikids

GIVN Izyaslav I Dmitrij,
SURN Kiev
AFN 952M-P3
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:34
GIVN Izyaslav I Dmitrij,
SURN Kiev
AFN 952M-P3
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:34
Name Prefix: Grand Prince Name Suffix: I, Of Kiev
Name Prefix: Duke Name Suffix: I, Of Poland
Hertug. Født 1043. Død 1102.
Hertug av Polen 1081 - 1102.
Hertug av Polen 1080 - 1102.
Vladislaw [Ladislaus] overtok regjeringen i 1080 efter at hans bror Boleslaus II hadde blitt jaget
bort.
Da hans første hustru, Judith, døde kort tid etter Boleslaus III's fødsel, ble forholdet til Böhmen
bittert, og Polen måtte senere betale tributt. Han søkte da støtte hos keiser Heinrich IV.
Senere inngikk han ekteskap med keiserens søster, Jutta, men ekteskapet ble barnløst.
Heldigst var han i sine tog mot Pommern 1081-90 og 1092-99, men ellers var hans styre urolig.
Den opprørske adel innkalte hans uekte sønn Zbigniev mot ham. I kampen seiret Vladislaw,
og Zbigniev ble en tid holdt fanget.
I 1097 ble landene delt i tre, hvorav han selv beholdt de viktigste borgene, men han ga
Zbigniev og sin ekte sønn, Boleslaus, hver en del.
Ettter hans død seiret Boleslaus III over Zbigniev og blindet ham.
Storfyrste av Kijev [Kiev] 1054-68, 1069-73 og 1076-78.
Izyaslav [Yziaslav] levde som landflyktig i Polen i 1068-69 og 1073-76.
Han ble drept i 1078.
Familien var en av de mest ansette slekter i Øvre Schwaben og var i slekt med
Hohenstauferne.
Deres navneborg reiste seg over landsbyen syd for Ehingen. De haadde greve- og
herskapsbesittelser i Berg (Ehingen) og Schelklingen, uten tvil også i Wartstein, og fikk i
begynnelsen av det 13. århundre også det statelige markgrevskapet Burgau.
Familiens sikre genealogi begynner med Poppo. I Zweifalten klosters nekrolog som antagelig
ble påbegynt i Popos sønns eller sønnesønns tid, kalles han greve av Berg.
Han er med sin hustru begravet i klostret.
Wladislaus I Herman of Poland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Wladislaus I Herman (Polish: Wladyslaw I Herman, also seen as Ladislaus, Ladislas or Vladislav) (1040-1102), duke of Poland, was the son of Casimir I of Poland, duke of Poland. He was the brother of Boleslaus II, the Bold, King of Poland.

He took the Polish throne in 1079 when Boleslaus II died, but resigned the royal title and supported Henry IV in a bid to restore peace.

Wladislaus Herman was first married to Judith of Bohemia, then to Judith of Swabia, the daughter of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.

Wladislaus and Judith of Swabia had a daughter named Agnes of Gandersheim.
Iziaslav of Kiev
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Jump to: navigation, search
Iziaslav Yaroslavich (1024-1078), Kniaz' (Prince) of Turaw, Velikii Kniaz (the Grand Prince) of Kiev (since 1054), the oldest son of Yaroslav I the Wise. Iziaslav was one of the authors of "Pravda Yaroslavichey" - a part of the first Russian legal code called Russkaya Pravda.

In 1043 his father Velikii Kniaz (Grand Prince) Yaroslav made an agreement with King Casimir I of Poland that recognized Cherven as part of Kiev. The agreement was sealed with a double marriage—Casimir to Dobronega, Yaroslav's sister; and Iziaslav to Gertrude, Casimir's sister. From this marriage was born Iziaslav's son Yaropolk. His other son, Sviatopolk, was illegitimate.

As a result of the popular uprising in 1068, Iziaslav was deposed and fled to Poland. In 1069 he retook Kiev with the help the Polish army, however, he was ousted again by his brothers in 1073. Iziaslav turned to German emperor, Polish king and the Pope for help on several occasions. In 1077 he succeeded in retaking Kiev once again, but soon died in an internecine war against princes Oleg Svyatoslavich and Boris Vyacheslavich.

Preceded by:
Yaroslav I Prince of Kiev and Turaw
{{{years}}} Succeeded by:
Vseslav of Polotsk

Preceded by:
Vseslav of Polotsk Prince of Kiev and Turaw
{{{years}}} Succeeded by:
Sviatoslav II of Kiev

Preceded by:
Sviatoslav II of Kiev Prince of Kiev and Turaw
{{{years}}} Succeeded by:
Vsevolod I of Kiev
[edit]
Sources
Martin, Janet. Medieval Russia, 980-1584 (Cambridge Medieval Textbooks)
[From "The Great Dynasties", retrieved 13 Aug 07]
Boleslaw was expelled in a later revolt and replaced by his weak brother, Wladyslaw Herman (b. 1043; d. 1102), ruled 1079 - 1102. Wladyslaw distanced himself from any involvement in the east and it is during this period that the Ruthenians colonised the lands of the Dniester and the San and we see the growth of Halicz.
He was deposed 1068-1069, 1073-1076.
The Laurentian Chronicle describes Izyaslav thusly: He "was a man fair of appearance and imposing in stature, not malicious in temper, but a hater of injustice and a lover of rectitude. In him there was no guile, for he was a simple man who did not render evil for evil." His reign was one of the most troubles of all the Yaroslavichi in Kyiv. He was driven from the city twice, regaining his throne each time with the aid of other's troops. Finally, he was the only one of the Rurikid princes to die in battle with his relatives. The menacing clouds of an imminent storm were gathering on the horizon of the Asiatic steppes. The Polovtsi came up into the Pereyaslavl region in 1055 but Prince Vsyevolod Yaroslavich came to terms with them and they threatened Russia only in 1061. The Chronicle derides the morays of the Polovtsi; they ate raw meat, drank the blood of the freshly slaughtered herds, and also drank the mare's milk. In 1061 under the command of their Prince Sekala, they suddenly burst into regions of Russia, attacked Vsyevolod, thrashed him and returned to the Don with their loot. From this event begins the period of misery. The people's attention was focused on a comet and many other unexplained occurrences.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Iziaslav Yaroslavich (1024-1078), Prince of Turaw, Grand Prince ofKiev (since 1054), the oldest son of Yaroslav I the Wise. Iziaslav wasone of the authors of "Pravda Yaroslavichey" - a part of the firstRussian legal code called Russkaya Pravda. As a result of the popularuprising in 1068, Iziaslav was deposed and fled to Poland. In 1069 heretook Kiev with the help the Polish army, however, he was oustedagain by his brothers in 1073. Iziaslav turned to German emperor,Polish king and the Pope for help on several occasions. In 1077 hesucceeded in retaking Kiev once again, but soon died in an internecinewar against princes Oleg Svyatoslavich and Boris Vyacheslavich.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Wladislaus I on Jan Matejko's paintingWladislaus I Herman (PolishWladyslaw I Herman, also seen as Ladislaus, Ladislas or Vladislav)(1040-1102), duke of Poland, was the son of Casimir I of Poland, dukeof Poland. He was the brother of Boleslaus II, the Bold, King ofPoland.

He took the Polish throne in 1079 when Boleslaus II died, but resignedthe royal title and supported Henry IV in a bid to restore peace.

Wladislaus Herman was first married to Judith of Bohemia, then toJudith of Swabia, the daughter of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.

Wladislaus and Judith of Swabia had a daughter named Agnes ofGandersheim.
Iziaslav is also styled as Kniaz (Prince) of Turaw, Veliki Kniaz (theG rand Prince) of Kiev (since 1054), the oldest son of Yaroslav I the Wi se. Iziaslav was one of the authors of "Pravda Yaroslavichey" - a par t of the first Russian legal code called Russkaya Pravda. In 1043 hisf ather Veliki Kniaz (Grand Prince) Yaroslav made an agreement with Kin g Casimir I of Poland that recognized Cherven as part of Kiev. The agr eement was sealed with a double marriage—Casimir to Dobronega, Yarosla v's sister; and Iziaslav to Gertrude, Casimir's sister. From this marr iage was born Iziaslav's son Yaropolk. His other son, Sviatopolk, wasi llegitimate.

As a result of the popular uprising in 1068, Iziaslav was deposed andf led to Poland. In 1069 he retook Kiev with the help the Polish army,ho wever, he was ousted again by his brothers in 1073. Iziaslav turnedto German emperor, Polish king and the Pope for help on several occasions . In 1077 he succeeded in retaking Kiev once again, but soon died in a n internecine war against princes Oleg Sviatoslavich and Boris Viaches lavich.
GIVN Izyaslav I Dmitrij,
SURN Kiev
AFN 952M-P3
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:15:34
GIVN Wladyslaw I (Herman)
SURN von Polen
NSFX Duke of Poland
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #3804
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #3804
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
_PRIMARY Y
REPO @REPO80@
TITL World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
AUTH Brøderbund Software, Inc.
PUBL Release date: July 1, 1997
ABBR World Family Tree Vol. 11, Ed. 1
Customer pedigree.
Source Media Type: Family Archive CD
PAGE Tree #3804
DATA
TEXT Date of Import: 18 Dez 1998
DATE 9 SEP 2000
TIME 13:17:48
{geni:about_me} http://genealogics.org/getperson.php?personID=I00027058&tree=LEO


Ben M. Angel's summary:

Relationships:

Parents:

Father: Ярослав Владимирович "Мудрий" (Yaroslav I "The Wise"), Grand Prince of Kiev (1019-1054)

Mother: Ингегерда (Ingegerd Olofsdotter), Grand Princess of Kiev (1019-1050)

Half-Sibling:

1. Ilya Yaroslavich, Prince of Novgorod (1015-1020)

Siblings:

2. Vladimir Yaroslavich (b.1020, d. 1052), possibly married to Oda von Stade (famously unverified)

3. Anastasiya Yaroslavna (b. c1023, d. 1074/1096), wife of King Andras I of Hungary

5. Yeliziveta Yaroslavna (d. 1066), wife of King Harald III "Hardråde" of Norway

6. Svyatoslav Yaroslavich (b. 1027, d. 1076), Prince of Chernigov after 1054, successor to Izyaslav as Grand Prince of Kiev (1073-1076)

7. Vsevolod Yaroslavich (b. 1030, d. 1093), Prince of Pereyaslavl after 1054, successor to Svyatoslav as Grand Prince of Kiev (1076-1093)

8. Vyacheslav Yaroslavich (b. 1033/1036, d. 1055/1057), Prince of Smolensk (1054-1055/1057)

9. Anna Yaroslavna (b. 1036, d. 1075/1078), wife of King Henri I of France

10. Igor Yaroslavich (b. 1036 d. 1060), Prince of Volynia (1054-1060), Prince of Smolensk (1057-1060)

Spouse:

Gertruda of Poland (Гертруда Польская), (b. 1025, d. 1108)

Children:

1. Mstislav Izyaslavich (d.1069), Prince of Novgorod (1066/1067), Prince of Polotsk (1069)

2. Yaropolk Pyotr Izyaslavich (d. 1086), Prince of Volynia and maybe Turov (1078-1086), husband of Kunigunde von Weimar

3. Svyatopolk II Mikhail Izyaslavich (b. 1050, d. 1113) Prince of Polotsk (1069-1093), Grand Prince of Kiev (1093-1113)

4. Eudokhia Izyaslavna (d. 1089), wife of Mieszko of Poland

Basic information and justifications:

Birth: 1024 - Russian Wikipedia favors Novgorod.

Death: 3 October 1078 - Battle of Nezhatin Niva, outside of Chernigov (died in battle - pierced in the shoulder by a spear)

Burial: Десятинная Церковь, Church of the Tithes or Dormition of the Virgin (Desyatina Tserkva) on Starokiev Hill (Старокиевськой горе) in Kiev

Wedding: c.1043 - location unknown

Occupation: Prince of Turov to 1052, Prince of Novgorod (1052-1054), Grand Prince of Kiev (20 February 1054-1073, 27 December 1076-3 October 1078)

--------------------

From the Foundation of Medieval Genealogy page on Russia Rurikid (covering his birth family):

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm#IziaslavIaroslavichdied1078A

IAROSLAV I 1019-1054

IAROSLAV Vladimirovich, son of VLADIMIR I "Velikiy/the Great" Grand Prince of Kiev & his first wife Rognoda of Polotsk ([978]-Vyshgorod 20 Feb 1054, bur Kiev Church of St Sophia).

Prince of Rostov 988-1010.

Prince of Novgorod 1013-1015.

He rebelled against his father and refused to pay tribute from Novgorod in 1014. Challenged by his cousin Sviatopolk I Grand Prince of Kiev, following the latter's accession in Kiev, he defeated Sviatopolk at Liubech [1016] and forced him to flee to Poland, succeeding as IAROSLAV I "Mudriy/the Wise" Grand Prince of Kiev.

Sviatopolk returned in Jul 1018 with an army led by his father-in-law, Bolesław I King of Poland, and defeated Iaroslav at the Western Bug and forced him to retire to Novgorod. Sviatopolk entered Kiev again 14 Aug 1018 and resumed his rule. After King Bolesław returned to Poland, Iaroslav advanced once more on Kiev. Sviatopolk fled south to raise another force with the Pechenegs but was finally defeated by the river Alta in 1019, when Iaroslav resumed power in Kiev[140].

In 1024, his half-brother Mstislav Prince of Tmutorokan moved his headquarters north to Chernigov to challenge Iaroslav, whom he defeated at Listven. The half-brothers agreed a division of territories, Iaroslav taking the land on the western bank of the Dnieper including Kiev and Novgorod. While Iaroslav was absent in Novgorod, the Pechenegs laid siege to Kiev, but were defeated after Iaroslav returned with a formidable army to relieve the siege[141]. He succeeded in the territories of his half-brother Mstislav on the latter's death in 1036, becoming sole ruler or "Autocrat of the land of the Rus"[142].

His greatest project was the conquest of Constantinople but his armies were defeated in decisive battles in 1043[143].

He supervised the rapid expansion of the city of Kiev, modelled on Constantinople. His law code Rus'ka Pravda also contributed to the development and consolidation of his administration especially in the area around Kiev, although it appears to have had little impact in the north[144].

The Primary Chronicle records the death of Iaroslav 19 Feb 1054 at Vyshgorod aged 76 and his burial place[145]. He left a testament dividing his territories between his sons, the substance of which is recorded in the Primary Chronicle[146] although no original text has survived.

[m firstly ---. The fact of Iaroslav´s first marriage is indicated by the chronology of his oldest son, although as noted below no primary source has yet been identified which refers to this oldest son. Nevertheless, Iaroslav´s birth date, if accurate as shown above, does suggest that an earlier marriage is likely.]

m [secondly] (1019) INGIGERD Olafsdottir of Sweden, daughter of OLOF "Skotkonung" King of Sweden & his wife Estrid of the Obotriten ([1000/03]-10 Feb 1050).

Adam of Bremen names "filius Iacobus et filia Ingrad" as the children of "Olaph rex Sueonum" & his wife Estred, specifying that Ingrad married "rex sanctus Gerzlef de Ruzzia"[147]. Her birth date range is estimated based on the birth of her oldest child in 1020, and her youngest known child in [1036]. Morkinskinna names “Queen Ingigerđr the daughter of King Óláfr the Swede” as wife of “King Yaroslav [of] Russia”[148]. Snorre records the betrothal of "Ingegerd the king's daughter" and "King Jarisleif…from Russia"[149].

Her birth date range is estimated based on the birth of her oldest child in 1020, and her youngest known child in [1036]. The Historia Norwegie records the marriage of "sororem Olaui Sueonensis…Margaretam" and "rex Iarezlafus de Ruscia" at her brother's instigation, after her betrothal to Olav of Norway was terminated[150]. It is more probable that she was the daughter rather than sister of King Olof if it is correct that she had ten children by her husband.

She is referred to as IRINA in Russian sources[151].

The Primary Chronicle records the death of "the Princess wife of Yaroslav" 10 Feb [1048/50][152].

Grand Prince Iaroslav & his first wife had one child:

1. [ILIYA Iaroslavich (-1020).

Baumgarten names him but cites only one secondary source in support[153]. He is not named in the Primary Chronicle.

Prince of Novgorod 1015.]

Grand Prince Iaroslav & his second wife had ten children:

2. VLADIMIR Iaroslavich (1020-Novgorod 1052, bur Novgorod Church of St Sophia).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Vladimir son of Iaroslav in 1020[154]. Snorre names "Valdemar, Vissivald and Holte the Bold" as the children of "King Jarisleif" & his wife[155].

His father installed him in 1043 as Prince of Novgorod. He subjugated the Finnic tribe of Yam to secure Novgorod's control over the Gulf of Finland[156].

Psellos records that Vladimir led an attack on Constantinople in [1045], apparently in revenge for the death of some Scythian noble in a brawl, but was defeated and forced to retreat[157].

The Primary Chronicle records the death of Vladimir "Yaroslav's eldest son" at Novgorod in 1052 and his place of burial[158]. As he predeceased his father, his descendants were ignored in the latter's testament and were subsequently considered ineligible to succeed as Grand Princes of Kiev.

m --- ([1022]-1066). The name of Vladimir´s wife is not known. Baumgarten identifies the wife of Vladimir as Oda, daughter of Luitpold Graf von Stade & his wife Ida von Elstorf [Brunswick][159]. This is based partially on the Annales Stadenses which name "Odam sanctimonialem de Rinthelen" as daughter of "Lippoldo filio domiine Glismodis" and "Ida [de Elsthorpe]", specifying that she married "regi Ruzie" by whom she had a son "Warteslaw", returned to Saxony with her son after her husband died[160].

Vladimir & his wife had one child, Rostislav, Prince of Rostov, Novgorod, and Volynia (1056-1064), Prince of Tmutorokan (1064-1065).

3. ANASTASIA Iaroslavna ([1023]-[1074/1096], bur Admont Abbey).

Baumgarten names the second wife of King András and gives her origin but only cites one secondary source in support[163]. The primary source which confirms her parentage and marriage has not yet been identified.

After her husband's death in 1060, she and her sons took refuge at the court of Heinrich IV King of Duitsland but, leaving her elder son there, she and her younger son went to Austria[164]. The Annals of Lambert record that "regina Ungariorum, mater Salomonis regis" presented the sword of "rex Hunnorum Attila" to "duci Baioriorum Ottoni" after her son was restored as king of Hungary[165].

She became a nun at Admont in 1074 as AGMUNDA.

m ([1039]) as his second wife, ANDRÁS of Hungary, son of VÁSZOLY [Vazúl] Prince of Hungary Duke between March and Gran & --- of the Bulgarians ([1014]-Zirc autumn 1060, bur Tihany, Abbey of St Anian). He succeeded in 1047 as ANDRÁS I "the Catholic" King of Hungary.

---

4. ''' IZIASLAV Iaroslavich (1024-killed in battle Nezhatinaia Niva 3 Oct 1078 bur Kiev).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Izyaslav "a second son" to Vladimir in 1024[166].

He succeeded in 1054 as IZIASLAV I Grand Prince of Kiev.'''

---

5. IELIZAVETA Iaroslavna (-after 25 Sep 1066).

Snorre records the marriage of King Harald and Elisabeth "called by the Northmen Ellisif" daughter of "King Jarisleif", specifying in a later passage that "the Swedish king Olaf…was brother of [her] mother"[167]. Morkinskinna records the marriage of “Haraldr Sigurdarson” and “King Yaroslav and Queen Ingigerdr…daughter…Elisabeth, the Norsemen call her Ellisif”[168]. Snorre records that "Queen Ellisif came from the West…with her stepson Olaf and her daughter Ingegerd" after her husband was killed[169].

m (1044) HARALD Sigurdson, son of SIGURD Syr King of Ringeringe & his wife Asta Gudbrandsdatter (1015-killed in battle Stamfordbridge 25 Sep 1066). He succeeded in 1047 as HARALD III "Hardråde" King of Norway.

6. SVIATOSLAV Iaroslavich (1027-27 Dec 1076, bur Chernigov, Church of the Saviour).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Svyatoslav "a third son" to Vladimir in 1027[170]. He succeeded in 1054 as Prince of Chernigov, and in 1073 as SVIATOSLAV II Grand Prince of Kiev.

7. VSEVOLOD Iaroslavich (1030-13 Apr 1093, bur Kiev St Sofia).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Vsevolod "a fourth son" to Vladimir in 1030[171]. Snorre names "Valdemar, Vissivald and Holte the Bold" as the children of "King Jarisleif" & his wife[172].

He succeeded in 1054 as Prince of Pereyaslavl, and in 1076 as VSEVOLOD I Grand Prince of Kiev.

8. VIACHESLAV Iaroslavich ([1033/36]-Smolensk [1055/57]).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Vyacheslav son of Vladimir in [1034/36][173]. In accordance with the terms of his father's testament, he succeeded in 1054 as Prince of Smolensk. The Primary Chronicle records the death of Vyacheslav son of Yaroslav at Smolensk in [1056/57][174].

m ---. The name of Viacheslav´s wife is not known.

Viacheslav & his wife had one child, Boris, Prince of Chernigov (1077) and Prince of Tmutorokan (1077-1078)

9. ANNA Iaroslavna (1036-5 Sep ([1075/78], bur Abbaye Villiers near La-Ferté-Alais).

The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum records the marriage of "filiam regis Russorum Annam" with King Henri[176]. The Chronicle of Alberic de Trois-Fontaines names "Anna filia Georgii regis Sclavonum" as wife of King Henri[177].

She was consecrated Queen Consort at Reims on her wedding day.

Queen Anna caused a scandal in France by her second marriage and was forced to leave the court, although she returned after his death in 1074[178]. The Liber Modernorum Regum Francorum records the marriage of "Anna, Henrici relicta" and "Rodulfo comitis"[179]. "Rodulphus…Ambianensis comes" donated property to Sainte-Marie d'Amiens, with the consent of "Simon filius meus et Gualterus, Gualteri Tyrelli natus", by charter dated 1069, subscribed by "Anna uxor eius"[180].

m firstly (Reims 19 May 1051) as his second wife, HENRI I King of France, son of ROBERT II "le Pieux" King of France & his third wife Constance d'Arles [Provence] ([end 1009/May 1010]-Palais de Vitry-aux-Loges, forêt d’Orléans, Loiret 4 Aug 1060, bur église de l'Abbaye royale de Saint-Denis).

m secondly ([1061]) as his third wife, RAOUL III “le Grand” Comte de Valois, son of RAOUL II Comte de Valois & his wife Aliénor de Champagne (-Péronne 23 Feb or 8 Sep 1074, bur Montdidier, later transferred to Crépy-en-Valois, église collégiale Saint-Arnoul).

10. IGOR Iaroslavich ([1036]-1060).

In accordance with the terms of his father's testament, he succeeded in 1054 as Prince of Volynia.

He succeeded his brother Viacheslav in 1057 as Prince of Smolensk.

The Primary Chronicle records the death of Igor son of Yaroslav in 1060[181].

m ---. The name of Igor´s wife is not known.

Igor & his wife had two children: David, Prince of Volynia (1085-1086, 1087-1113), Prince of Dorogobuzh (1100-1113).

---

From the Foundation of Medieval Genealogy page on Russia Rurikid (covering his family by marriage):

http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm#IziaslavIaroslavichdied1078B

C. GRAND PRINCES of KIEV, descendants of IZIASLAV I Grand Prince of Kiev (third son of IAROSLAV I)

Although Iziaslav was his father's oldest surviving son, and succeeded as Grand Prince of Kiev in 1054 in accordance with his father's testament, only one of his sons, Sviatopolk II, succeeding as Grand Prince and none of his grandsons. In accordance with the family tradition, all later descendants were thereby effectively excluded from the succession.

IZIASLAV I 1054-1078

IZIASLAV Iaroslavich, son of IAROSLAV I "Mudriy/the Wise" Grand Prince of Kiev & his [second] wife Ingigerd Olafsdottir of Sweden (1024-killed in battle Nezhatinaia Niva 3 Oct 1078, bur Kiev Church of the Holy Virgin).

The Primary Chronicle records the birth of Izyaslav "a second son" to Vladimir in 1024[192].

Prince of Turov.

He succeeded on the death of his older brother in 1052 as Prince of Novgorod. In accordance with the terms of his father's testament, he succeeded in 1054 as IZIASLAV I Grand Prince of Kiev. It is also likely that his territories included Novgorod and Pskov[193].

He was deposed in Kiev by a mob which, dissatisfied with his refusal to attack the Kuman [Cumans], released Vseslav Prince of Polotsk from prison and proclaimed him Grand Prince of Kiev in Sep 1068, forcing Iziaslav to flee to Poland[194].

Iziaslav I was restored in 1069 with the help of Bolesław II King of Poland[195].

He was deposed again in Kiev in 1073 by his younger brother Sviatoslav, restored again in 1077 after Sviatoslav died.

He answered the call from his brother Prince Vsevolod for military support against their nephew Oleg Sviatoslavich, whom they defeated 3 Oct 1078 at Nezhatin Meadow near Chernigov. The Primary Chronicle records the death of Izyaslav son of Iaroslav in battle on the meadow of Nezhata 3 Oct 1078 and his place of burial[196].

m ([1043]) GERTRUDA of Poland, daughter of MIESZKO II LAMBERT King of Poland & his wife Richeza [Ezzonen] ([1020]-4 Jan 1107).

Baumgarten names the wife of Grand Prince Iziaslav and gives her origin, citing primary sources in support[197]. The Primary Chronicle records that "the Princess, Svyatopolk's mother" died 4 Jan 1107[198].

Grand Prince Iziaslav I & his wife had four children:

1. MSTISLAV Iziaslavich (-1069).

The Primary Chronicle names Mstislav son of Izyaslav, recording that his father established him as Prince of Polotsk in 1069 but that "he soon died"[199].

He was installed as Prince of Novgorod by his father.

He was expelled from Novgorod by Vseslav Prince of Polotsk in [1066/67]. He was not restored in Novgorod when his father returned from exile in Poland, but was replaced by Gleb Sviatoslavich.

m ---. The name of Mstislav´s wife is not known.

Mstislav & his wife had one child, Rostislav.

2. IAROPOLK PIOTR Iziaslavich (-murdered 22 Nov 1086).

The Primary Chronicle names Iaropolk, son of Izyaslav, recording that he and his father attacked Chernigov together in 1078[201].

He was installed as Prince of Volynia and, maybe, Turov by his uncle Vsevolod Grand Prince of Kiev in 1078, but was expelled in 1085 by his cousin Vladimir "Monomakh" and found refuge in Poland. He was restored the following year but murdered soon after.

m ([1073]) as her first husband, KUNIGUNDE von Weimar, daughter of OTTO Graf von Weimar Markgraf of Meissen & his wife Adela de Louvain (-8 Jun 1140). The Annalista Saxo names (in order) "Odam, Cunigundam, Adelheidam" as the three daughters of Markgraf Otto & his wife, specifying that Kunigunde married firstly "regi Ruzorum", secondly "Cononi comiti de Bichlingge, filio ducis Ottonis de Northeim", and thirdly "Wipertus senior"[202]. The primary source which identifies her first husband more precisely has not yet been identified.

Baumgarten records her first marriage but cites only one secondary source in support[203]. She married secondly Kuno von Northeim Graf von Beichlingen and thirdly (1110) as his second wife, Wiprecht [II] von Groitsch.

Iaropolk & his wife had four children: Anastasia, wife of Gleb, Prince of Minsk; Yaroslav (died imprisoned); Unknown Daughter, wife of Gunther I, Graf von Schwarzburg; and Vyacheslav.

3. SVIATOPOLK MIKHAIL Iziaslavich (1050-16 Apr 1113).

The Primary Chronicle names Svyatopolk son of Iziaslav, recording that his father established him as Prince of Polotsk in 1069 after the death of his brother Mstislav[208].

He succeeded his uncle in 1093 as SVIATOPOLK II Grand Prince of Kiev.

4. [EUDOXIA] Iziaslavna (-1089).

The Annales Capituli Cracoviensis record that in 1088 "Mesko uxorem duxit" without naming his wife[209]. Baumgarten records the parentage of the wife of Mieszko and suggests that her name was Eudoxia, citing primary sources in support[210].

m (1088) MIESZKO Prince of Poland, son of BOLESŁAW II "Szczodry/the Liberal" King of Poland & his wife Vizeslava Sviatoslavna of Kiev (1069-1089).

References:

[140] Franklin & Shepard (1998), pp. 186-87.

[141] Franklin & Shepard (1998), p. 207.

[142] Franklin & Shepard (1998), p. 187-88.

[143] Chirovsky (1973), pp. 144-5.

[144] Chirovsky (1973), p. 145.

[145] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1054, p. 143.

[146] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1054, p. 142.

[147] Adami, Gesta Hammenburgensis Ecclesiæ Pontificum II.37, MGH SS VII, p. 319.

[148] Andersson, T. M. and Gade, K. E. (trans.) (2000) Morkinskinna (Cornell), 1, p. 89.

[149] Snorre, Saga of Olaf Haraldson Part III, 95.

[150] Ekrem, I. and Mortensen, L. B. (eds.) Fisher, P. (trans.) (2003) Historia Norwegie (Copenhagen) XVIII, p. 104.

[151] Franklin & Shepard (1998), p. 202.

[152] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1048-1050, p. 139.

[153] Baumgarten (1927), p. 8, citing Karamzine Histoire de Russie, T. II note 20.

[154] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1020, p. 134.

[155] Snorre, Saga of Olaf Haraldson Part III, 95.

[156] Chirovsky (1973), p. 54.

[157] Mikhael Psellos, Chronographia: Sewter, E. R. A. (trans.) (1966) Fourteen Byzantine Rulers, the Chronographia of Mikhael Psellos (Penguin Books), p. 200, footnote 1, and p. 203.

[158] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1052, p. 142.

[159] Baumgarten (1927), p. 9, citing Baumgarten, N. de Oda de Stade et son fils Rostislaw, no page reference cited.

[160] Annales Stadenses 1112, MGH SS XVI, pp. 319 and 320.

[163] Baumgarten (1927), p. 9, citing Wertner, M. Az Arpadól czáládi törtenété, pp. 117-23.

[164] Hóman, Geschichte, p. 269, cited in Kerbl, R. (1979) Byzantinische Prinzessinnen in Ungarn zwischen 1050-1200 und ihr Einfluß auf das Arpadenkönigreich (VWGÖ, Vienna), p. 14.

[165] Lamberti Annales 1071, MGH SS V, p. 185.

[166] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1024, p. 135.

[167] Snorre, King Harald's Saga, 17 and 18.

[168] Morkinskinna, 9, p. 131.

[169] Snorre, King Harald's Saga Part II, 102.

[170] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1027, p. 136.

[171] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1030, p. 136.

[172] Snorre, Saga of Olaf Haraldson Part III, 95.

[173] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1034-1036, p. 136.

[174] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1056-1057, p. 143.

[176] Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 10, MGH SS IX, p. 388.

[177] Chronica Albrici Monachi Trium Fontium 1052, MGH SS XXIII, p. 789.

[178] Kerrebrouck, P. Van (2000) Les Capétiens 987-1328 (Villeneuve d'Asq), p. 66.

[179] Hugonis Floriacensis, Liber qui Modernorum Regum Francorum continet Actus 11, MGH SS IX, p. 389.

[180] Cartulaire du chapitre de la cathédrale d´Amiens, Tome I, Mémoires de la société des antiquaires de la Picardie, Tome XIV (Amiens, 1905) ("Amiens") I, 5, p. 9, and Labanoff de Rostoff, Prince A. (ed.) (1825) Recueil de pieces historiques sur la reine Anne ou Agnès épouse de Henri 1er roi de France et fille de Iarosslaf 1er grand duc de Russie (Paris) ("Anne de France") XV, p. 34.

[181] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1060, p. 143.

[192] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1024, p. 135.

[193] Chirovsky (1973), p. 77.

[194] Franklin & Shepard (1998), p. 253, and Novgorod Chronicle 1073, p. 5.

[195] Novgorod Chronicle 1069, p. 5.

[196] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1078, p. 165.

[197] Baumgarten (1927), p. 9, citing chron. russes. V 138, VII 361, IX 83, chron. de Danilewicz, p. 116, and Monum. Polon. (Martin Gall) I 419.

[198] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1107, p. 204.

[199] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1069, p. 150.

[200] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1092, p. 179.

[201] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1093, p. 179.

[202] Annalista Saxo 1062.

[203] Baumgarten (1927), p. 11, citing Baumgarten, N. de ´Cunégonde d´Orlamünde´, Chronique de la société généalogique russe (Moscow, 1908).

[204] Baumgarten (1927), p. 11, citing Chron. russes, I 128, II 8, 82, 292 and 305, VII 67, IX 213.

[205] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1102, pp. 199 and 200.

[206] Annalista Saxo 1062.

[207] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1103, p. 200, and 1104, p. 202.

[208] Russian Primary Chronicle (1973), 1069, p. 150.

[209] Annales Capituli Cracoviensis 1088, MGH SS XIX, p. 588.

[210] Baumgarten (1927), p. 11, citing Sommersberg, Silesiacarum Rerum Scriptores T. I, p. 300, Dlugosz Lib. IV, p. 312, and Monum. Polon. II 773, 796 and 874.

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From "Dynastic Burials in Kiev before 1240" by Martin Dimnik

http://www.history.org.ua/JournALL/ruthenica/7/5.pdf

Two years later, on 3 October 1078, Izyaslav was killed in battle fighting against Svyatoslav’s son Oleg and the Polovtsy. His body was brought to Kiev and laid to rest in the Tithe Church [35].

Izyaslav was the first of Yaroslav’s descendants to die in battle and whose body was brought from the field for burial in a church. In retrieving his brother’s body Vsevolod adopted the practice initiated with the burials of SS. Boris and Gleb whose bodies had also been collected from the spots where they had been murdered.

Izyaslav was not entombed in the Cathedral of St. Sophia that his father Yaroslav had built. As we shall see, Vsevolod, who succeeded Izyaslav to the throne of Kiev and was responsible for his burial, was probably reserving that honour for himself.

Even more surprisingly, however, Vsevolod did not inter Izyaslav in the Church of St. Dmitry, in the monastery that he had founded in his district of Kiev [36]. It has been suggested that Izyaslav’s Church of St. Dmitry was built of wood [37]. If this was the case it may explain why Vsevolod did not bury him there but in the Tithe Church which, being built of stone, was a more lasting structure. What is more, since it contained the remains of their grandfather Vladimir the Christianizer of Rus’, it was also the more prestigious edifice.

References:

35 PSRL 1: 201–202; PSRL 2: 193.

36 See under the year 1051, PSRL 1: 159; PSRL 2: 147. Karger points out that the Monastery of St. Dmitry was built by 1062 when Izyaslav appointed Abbot Varlaam to the institution (Karger, Drevniy Kiev, 2, 262). Concerning the location of the monastery, see Tolochko, Kiev i Kievskaya zemlya, 54–55, nr. 23.

37 Aseev, Arkhitektura drevnego Kieva, 93–94.

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From the Russian Wikipedia page (English below):

http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%98%D0%B7%D1%8F%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B2_%D0%AF%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%87







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In English:

Iziyaslav Yaroslavich (baptized as Dimitry, born in Novgorod in 1025, died October 3, 1078 in Nezhatina Niwa, near Chernihiv, Ukraine), was Grand Prince of Kiev 1054-1068, 1069-1073, and in 1077; and Prince of Novgorod in 1052-1054.

Son of Yaroslav

Iziyaslav was born in 1025 in Novgorod, where at the time his father was Prince Yaroslav the Wise and his mother was Irinia (Swedish princess Ingegerd). He was their second son, after Vladimir.

He received from his father a lordship in Turov (southern Belarus). After the death of his brother, Prince Vladimir of Novgorod in 1052, he succeeded him, and by dynastic rules, became heir to the throne of Kiev (even though Vladimir left behind a son) on February 20, 1054. After the death of his father, he was Grand Prince of Kiev, and he left as Prince of Novgorod his son Mstislav.

The Yaroslavich Triumvirate

Most of the reign of Iziyaslav was characterized by equal participation in the governance of the Grand Principality alongside his younger brothers - Prince of Chernigov Svyatoslav and Prince of Pereyaslav Vsevolod. The brothers together revised the legal code "Russkaya Pravda" (renaming it the "Yaroslavichskaya Pravda"), which required the brothers to jointly fill princely seats and set up separate Metropolitans in their principalities.

Historians call this the Yaroslavich Triumvirate. Together, they marched on the Torks after they raided Peryaslavl in 1055. The Torks were defeated, but the clash marked for the first time that the Rus confronted to Polovtsy Khan Bolusha - they forced him to sign a peace treaty to keep him outside of the borders, installing a 50 kilometer wide no-man's land between the neutral Rus and the Polovtsians.

In 1057, the Rus provided Byzantium with military assistance to protect Armenia from the Turkish Seljuks.

In 1058, Iziyaslav conquered the Baltic tribe of the Golyad on the Protva River.

In 1060, they marched against the Torks, and against the wizard Vseslav, Prince of Polotsk, in 1067.

The first overthrow

In 1068, Iziyaslav along with his brothers suffered a defeat in the Alta region, and were overthrown in a rebellion that probably started in a popular uprising in Kiev. Insurgent leaders were freed from dungeons (a cell built around the prisoner without a door), who were arrested earlier by Prince Iziyaslav. Vseslav of Polotsk was elevated to the throne of Kiev. Iziyaslav fled to Poland to the safety of his nephew Prince Boleslaw II. With the assistance of Polish troops, he returned in 1069. He sent ahead of him his son Mstislav, who brutally suppressed the instigators of the uprising, and had those who sent Iziyaslav into exile executed or blinded.

The Second Exile: Wandering through Europe

By 1073 (most likely somewhat earlier), the Yaroslavich Triumvirate disintegrated, as Iziyaslav's younger brothers Svyatoslav and Vsevelod conspired against him after reconciling with Vseslav of Polotsk.

In 1073, Svyatoslav of Chernigov captured Kiev, and Iziyaslav again fled to Poland where this time he was expelled by Polish authorities (who concluded an alliance with Svyatoslav and Vsevolod).

In exile, Iziyaslav went to Duitsland to the Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV and asked for help to fight against his brothers, along with a large amount of money. The Emperor, however, was facing internal struggles on his own, and could not help.

In 1075, Iziyaslav sent his son, Duke Yaropolk of Volhynia, to Rome where he visited Pope Gregory VII, an antagonist of Emperor Henry IV. The Pope limited himself to general exhortations addressed against the Russian princes.

Return and death

Iziyaslav's wanderings came to an end with the sudden death of Svyatoslav on December 27, 1076, leaving behind Vsevolod as sole successor. The new Grand Prince reconciled with his older brother and gave him back the Kiev principality, while he himself went to Chernigov.

In the next year, however, a civil war started. The son of Prince Svyatoslav, Oleg of Chernigov (claiming the Chernigov throne) and exiled Prince Borish Vyacheslavich, rose up against their uncles. In the battle of Nezhatina Niwa near Chernigov on October 3, 1078,, the Yaroslavich coalition won - Oleg was forced to flee and Boris was killed. However, before the end of the battle, Iziyaslavich also died when an enemy rider hit him with a spear on his shoulder.

Iziyaslav Yaroslavich was buried in the Sophia Cathedral in Kiev.

Marriage and children

It is known that Iziyaslav was married to Gertrude, daughter of Polish King Mieszko II Lambert.

Children:

1. Yaropolk, Prince of Volyn and Turovsky. It is known that Gertrude called Yaropolk in his prayer book (the so-called Code Gertrude) as his "only son." Nazarenko assumes that from him came the Vsevolodkovich rulers of the Principality of Hrodno.

Perhaps from another unknown mistress, perhaps wife, Iziyaslav had two more famous sons:

1. Svyatopolk II Iziyaslavich (1050-1113), Prince of Polotsk (1069-1071), Prince of Novgorod (1078-1088), Prince of Turov (1088-1093), and Grand Prince of Kiev (1093-1113). His descendants in the 12th and 13th centuries continued to reign in Turov.

2. Mstislav, Prince of Novgorod (1054-1067).

---


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Izyaslav Yaroslavich, Grand Prince of Kiev

1069 — 1073


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20 February 1054 - 1068

Predecessor: Yaroslav Vladimirovich "Mudriy/The Wise"

Successor: Vseslav Bryachislavich

1069 - 1073

Predecessor: Vseslav Bryachisalvich

Successor: Svyatoslav Yaroslavich

1077 - 3 October 1078

Predecessor: Vsevolod Yaroslavich

Successor: Vsevolod Yaroslavich

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Prince of Turov

? — 1052

-

To 1052

Title: New creation

Successor: Unknown

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Prince of Novgorod

1052 — 1054

-

Predecessor: Vladimir Yaroslavich

Successor: Mstislav Izyaslavich

---

Birth: 1025 - Novgorod

Death: 3 October 1078 - Nezhatina Niva, near Chernigov

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Dynasty: Rurikid

Father: Yaroslav Vladimirovich "Mudriy/The Wise"

Mother: Ingegerd

------------------------------

From the Russian Wikipedia page on the Battle of Nezhatin Niva:

http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%91%D0%B8%D1%82%D0%B2%D0%B0_%D0%BD%D0%B0_%D0%9D%D0%B5%D0%B6%D0%B0%D1%82%D0%B8%D0%BD%D0%BE%D0%B9_%D0%9D%D0%B8%D0%B2%D0%B5

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In English:

The Battle of Nezhatin Niva was fought in the vicinity of Chernigov in 1078. Grand Prince Izyaslav Yaroslavich died in that battle.

In 1078, the sons of Yaroslav the Wise, Grand Prince of Kiev Izyaslav and Prince of Chernigov Vsevolod, faced a rebellion by their nephews, Oleg Svyatoslavovich and Boris Vyacheslavich. The nephews first captured Chernigov from Vsevolod, who fled to Kiev.

Vsevolod turned to his brother for help. Four princes - Izyaslav, his son Yaropolk, Vsevolod, and his son Vladimir - collected an army and laid siege to Chernigov. Oleg and Boris were not in the city, but nonetheless, the city resisted capture. Vladimir invested the city.

Upon learning that his nephew Oleg was marching upon Chernigov, Izyaslav set out to meet him. Oleg did not expect to win against the army of the four princes, and advised his brother to join in peace talks. Boris replied: "Stay calm and watch me fight them." Boris was killed.

Izyaslav stood amongst his infantry as it was attacked, and an enemy rider hit him with a spear in the shoulder, inflicting a mortal wound on the Grand Prince. Oleg fled with a small number of men to Tmutarakan.

The battle was described in "Words about Igor's Campaign" ("Слове о полку Игореве").

External links:

Article in the encyclopedia "Words about Igor's Campaign" on the FEB (Fundamental Electronic Library) server:

http://feb-web.ru/feb/slovenc/es/es3/es3-3091.htm

"Nezhatina Niva" in the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron:

http://be.sci-lib.com/article071085.html

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From the Encyclopedic Dictionary of Brockhaus and Efron:

http://be.sci-lib.com/article071085.html

Nizhatina Niva:

Known as the site of a battle between the Russian Princes and the Polovtsy in 1078, during which fell Grand Prince Izyaslav Yaroslavich. It was probably on the Left Bank of the Dnieper River near Gorodets, a port from which the dead Grand Prince was brought back to Kiev by boat.

The city of Nezhatina was supposed to have been standing in the 12th century. The assumption that Nezhatina Neva was on the site of the present city of Nezhyn is not probable.

(No sources cited)

----------------

From the entry on "Words about Igor's Campaign" on the FEB (Fundamental Electronic Library) server:

http://feb-web.ru/feb/slovenc/es/es3/es3-3091.htm


In English:

Nezhatina Niva (Fields of Nezhatin) - located in the vicinity of Chernigov. In 1078, there was a battle there between an army under Oleg Svyatoslavich and Boris Vyacheslavich on one side, and a coalition of princes into which entered Izyaslav Yaroslavich Grand Prince of Kiev, his son Yaropolk, Vsevolod Yaroslavich, and lastly Vladimir Monomakh.

"And the opposing sides met on a field at a village near Nezhatin, and both sides inflicted great harm on the other" - informs the PVL (Primary Chronicle, C. 133). In this fight was lost Izyaslav Yaroslavich and Borish Vyacheslavich: "The first to die was Boris, son of Vyacheslav. Izyaslav stood his ground without waivering, and took a spear in his shoulder. Thus died Izyaslav, son of Yaroslavl" (at the same location).

Continuing to fight were significant forces, in the opinion of some researchers, basic participants of which included: Oleg Svyatoslavich, Boris Vyacheslavich, Vsevolod Yaroslavich, and Vladimir Monomakh, and the unnamed person who killed Izyaslav, whose body, according to texts that contradict the annals, was not carried to Kiev by Yaropolk and others, but rather by Svyatopolk Izyaslavich, his son. (Text in Slavonic or Old Russian follows.)

Researchers have tried to define the location of the fight. There were attempts to correlate this with the modern location of Nezhin (Gerbel), but already Maximovich has refuted this assumption because of the distance from Chernigov and the reference to Nezhin by an earlier name of Unezh.

In order to define the location of N.N., it helps to understand the C. and the lavr. let. before 1152 river Kanin (see Kanin), which flows near Chernigov. Kudryashov places it between Svinya and Chernigov, 2 kilometers east of Chernigov where the small river Desna runs. He considers that this geographical position is closely related to the Kanin annals: "By Nezhin, determined to be to the south of Chernigov over the Desna on a road to Nezhin, it is possible to imagine that the Nezhatin field was located between Nezhin and Kanin. (From Igor Seversky C. 55).

(Ben M. Angel notes: A close inspection by Google Earth shows none of these locations as I've translated them. Nizhyn/Nezhin is located 65 kilometers southeast of Chernihiv/Chernigov. The Desna flows about 2-3 kilometers from Chernihiv town center - it acts as a city border for part of its stretch. The closest towns east of Chernihiv are Enkiv, Anysiv, and Pidhirne, all located about 5-8 kilometers away.)

Лит./Sources:

Maximovich M. A. Zamechaniya on Pech about Igor's Campaign in poetic translation Gerbelya/Moscow 1855.

Solovyev. Political outlook.

Kudryashov K.V. 1) The Polovetskaya steppe.

About Igor Severskiy, about the Russian land.

Лихачев. Ист. и полит. кругозор. (Likhachev. Historical and Political Outlook) С. 12—13, 26

(то же: Лихачев. «Слово» и культура/also Likhachev. The "word" and culture. С. 86—87, 107);

Dmitriyev L.A. (comm.) // "Word" - 1952.

Meschersky N. A., Burykin A.A. (comm.) // "Word" - 1985.

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Regarding the location of Nezhatin Niva:

http://rubrikator.e-gloryon.com/8892192128

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Nizhin: A district center in the Chernihiv Oblast, located on the Osetr River. The city was first mentioned in the Chronicles in 1147 under the name Unezh. The title "Unezha" comes from the phrase "Nezhatina Niva", (Ben notes: U Nezha, or "By Nezha") where in 1078 was fought a battle between the Russian princes and the Polovtsian hordes, during which fell Grand Prince Izyaslav Yaroslavich. In the 13th century, the city was ravaged by Tatar hordes.

(No sources)

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Ben M. Angel notes: Another source says that it was near the town of Gorodets on the Left Bank of the Dnieper River, as it was from this port that the body of Izyaslav was transported back to Kiev.

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From the Encyclopedia of Ukraine (by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies), Volume 2 (1989):

http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkPath=pages\I\Z\IziaslavYaroslavych.htm

Iziaslav Yaroslavych [Iz'jaslav Jaroslavyč], b 1024, d 3 October 1078. Grand prince of Kyiv intermittently from 1054 to 1078; the eldest son of Yaroslav the Wise.

Before inheriting the throne of Kyiv from his father, Iziaslav Yaroslavych ruled Turiv. In the 1060s he brought most of the Rus’ territories west of the Dnieper River under his control.

For refusing them arms to fight invading Cumans, the inhabitants of Kyiv revolted in 1068 (see Kyiv Uprising of 1068–9). He fled to Poland and with the aid of his brother-in-law and cousin, Bolesław II the Bold, took Kyiv a year later from Vseslav Briachislavich of Polatsk.

When his brothers Sviatoslav II Yaroslavych and Vsevolod Yaroslavych of Chernihiv marched on Kyiv in 1073, its inhabitants refused to support Iziaslav Yaroslavych and he was forced to flee abroad. He sought help in 1075 from Emperor Henry IV of Duitsland and Pope Gregory VII, but his efforts were in vain.

In 1077, after Sviatoslav II Yaroslavych, who ruled Kyiv, died and was succeeded by Vsevolod Yaroslavych, Iziaslav Yaroslavych marched on Kyiv with Polish troops. Vsevolod Yaroslavych renounced his throne and retired to Chernihiv. Iziaslav Yaroslavych died in battle helping Vsevolod Yaroslavych recapture Chernihiv from Sviatoslav II Yaroslavych's son Oleh (Mykhail) Sviatoslavych and his Cuman allies.

(No sources cited.)

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From the Encyclopedia of Ukraine (by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies):

http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages\K\Y\KyivUprisingof1068hD79.htm

Kyiv Uprising of 1068–9. A popular uprising that took place in Kyiv after the defeat of the forces of Grand Prince Iziaslav Yaroslavych of Kyiv and his brothers Sviatoslav II Yaroslavych of Chernihiv and Vsevolod Yaroslavych of Pereiaslav by the Cumans at the Alta River in September 1068.

When Kyiv's commoners asked Iziaslav Yaroslavych to give them horses and arms to repel the Cumans, he refused, fearing the consequences of arming the population. The incensed populace turned against Kyiv's patricians, freed the inmates of Kyiv's prisons, including Prince Vseslav Briacheslavych of Polatsk, whom Iziaslav Yaroslavych had imprisoned in 1067, and elected Vseslav as their ruler. Iziaslav Yaroslavych's palace was plundered and he was forced to flee to Poland.

In April 1069 he returned with the forces of his nephew Prince Bolesław II the Bold of Cracow. Vseslav fled to Polatsk, and Iziaslav Yaroslavych and his son Mstyslav Iziaslavych brutally suppressed their opponents.

(No sources cited.)

----------------

From the Encyclopedia of Ukraine (by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies), Volume 5 (1993) page on Vsevolod:

http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages\V\S\VsevolodYaroslavych.htm

Fighting between the princes started in 1073, when Vsevolod rose up against Iziaslav at Sviatoslav’s bidding. Iziaslav then fled abroad, Sviatoslav emerged as the grand prince of Kyiv, and Vsevolod took the throne of Chernihiv.

Upon Sviatoslav's death in 1077, Iziaslav returned to Kyiv, but he died the following year while helping Vsevolod to defend Chernihiv from their nephew, Oleh (Mykhail) Sviatoslavych. Vsevolod Yaroslavych then ascended the Kyivan throne (1078) and placed his own son, Volodymyr Monomakh, in Chernihiv.

(No sources cited.)

---------------

From the Encyclopedia of Ukraine (by the Canadian Institute of Ukrainian Studies):

http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages\O\L\OlehMykhailSviatoslavych.htm

Oleh (Mykhail) Sviatoslavych [Svjatoslavyč], b ca 1050 [in Chernihiv?], d 6 or 24 August 1115 in Novhorod-Siverskyi. Son of Sviatoslav II Yaroslavych and father of Vsevolod Olhovych and Ihor Olhovych.

After his father's death in 1076, Oleh inherited Chernihiv, but the new grand prince, Oleh's uncle Iziaslav Yaroslavych, gave Chernihiv to another uncle, Vsevolod Yaroslavych. Instead Oleh ruled Volodymyr-Volynskyi, but he was driven out in 1078 by Iziaslav and sought refuge with his brother, Roman (d 1079), in Tmutorokan.

In 1078 Oleh and his cousin Borys Viacheslavych tried, with Cuman help, to regain his patrimony in Chernihiv, but they were defeated by Iziaslav and Vsevolod's army at Nezhatyna Nyva. Oleh returned to Tmutorokan, where he was captured by the Khazars in 1079 and handed over to the Byzantines. He lived in exile on Rhodes until 1083, when he returned to Tmutorokan and regained it from his cousin Davyd Ihorovych.

(No sources cited.)

----------------------

From the English Wikipedia page on Iziaslav I of Kiev (some parts contradict the Russian page - these parts may be inaccurate):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Izyaslav_Yaroslavich

Iziaslav Yaroslavich (1024-3 October 1078), Kniaz' (Prince of Turov), Veliki Kniaz (the Grand Prince) of Kiev (from 1054).

Biography

Iziaslav was the oldest son of Yaroslav I the Wise by his second wife Ingigerd Olafsdottir.

Iziaslav succeeded his father, after Yaroslav's oldest child, Valdimir (the only child by Yaroslav's first wife), had predeceased his father. Iziaslav was one of the authors of "Pravda Yaroslavichiv" - a part of the first legal code of Rus, called Ruska Pravda.

He is also credited with the foundation of the Kiev Pechersk Monastery. Prince Iziaslav I of Kiev ceded the whole mountain to Antonite monks who founded a monastery built by architects from Constantinople.

According to the Primary Chronicle, in the early 11th century, Antony, a Greek Orthodox monk from Esphigmenon monastery on Mount Athos, originally from Liubech of the Principality of Chernigov, returned to Rus' and settled in Kiev as a missionary of the monastic tradition to Kievan Rus'. He chose a cave at the Berestov Mount that overlooked the Dnieper River and a community of disciples soon grew.

In 1043 his father Veliki Kniaz (Grand Prince) Yaroslav made an agreement with King Casimir I of Poland that recognized Cherven as part of Kiev. The agreement was sealed with a double marriage—Casimir to Dobronega, Yaroslav's sister; and Iziaslav to Gertrude, Casimir's sister. From this marriage were born three children: Iziaslav's son Yaropolk, Mstislav and Sviatopolk.

As a result of the popular uprising in 1068, Iziaslav was deposed and fled to Poland. In 1069 he retook Kiev with the help of the Polish army; however, he was ousted again by his brothers in 1073. Iziaslav turned to the German emperor, the Polish king and the Pope for help on several occasions.

In 1076 he succeeded in retaking Kiev once again, but soon died in an internecine war against Princes Oleg Sviatoslavich and Boris Vyacheslavich.

Sources

Martin, Janet. Medieval Russia, 980-1584 (Cambridge Medieval Textbooks)

External links

Holy Dormition Kiev-Pechersk Lavra - Official site (Russian)

http://www.lavra.ua/

Iziaslav I Yaroslavich

Rurikovich Dynasty

Born: 1024 Died: 1078

Regnal titles

Prince of Turov reestablished 1042-1078

Succeeded by Yaropolk Izyaslavich

Grand Prince of Kiev 1054-1073

Preceded by Yaroslav I

Succeeded by Sviatoslav II

--------------------

Izjaslav I (1024–lokakuu 1078) oli Kiovan Venäjän ruhtinas. Lisäksi hänellä oli hallinnassaan pieniä ruhtinaskuntia. Izjaslav nousi valtaan vuonna 1054 Jaroslav I Viisaan jälkeen. Hän hallitsi Kiovaa 19 vuotta, kunnes vuonna 1073 luopui vallasta. Izjaslav nousi uudelleen valtaan kolme vuotta myöhemmin ja hallitsi maata vuoteen 1078, jolloin kuoli sodassa. Vuosina 1068–1069 Izjaslavin kanssahallitsijana oli Vsevlav.

http://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Izjaslav

--------------------

Storfyrste Isjaslav I av Kiev. Født 1025. Død 03.10.1078. Han var sønn av Storfyrste Jaroslav I den Vise av Novgorod. Født omkring 988. Død 20.02.1054 i Vyshorod, og Fyrstinne Ingegjerd Olavsdatter. Død 10.02.1050 i Vyšhorod ved Kiev.

Isjaslav giftet seg omkring 1043 med Gjertrud av Polen. Født omkring 1025. Død 04.01.1107. De hadde sønnen, Storfyrste Sviatopolk II Michel av Novgorod. Født 1050. Død 16.04.1113.

Isjaslav var Storfyrste av Kiev 1054 - 1068, 1069 - 1073 og 1076 - 1078.

Isjaslav levde som landflyktig i Polen i 1068 - 69 og 1073 - 94.

Han ble drept i 1078. 1)

1). N. de Baumgarten: Généalogie et Mariage occidenteaux des Rurikides Russes du Xe au XIII Siècle. Mogens Bugge: Våre forfedre, nr. 186. Bent og Vidar Billing Hansen: Rosensverdslektens forfedre, side 18, 90.

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From the English Wikipedia page on Anthony of Kiev (covering some of the issues involving Izyaslav and the emerging Pecherska Lavra):

Anthony of Kiev (c. 983-1073) was a monk and the founder of the monastic tradition in the Kievan Rus'. Also called Anthony of the Caves (Russian: Антоний Печерский, Ukrainian: Антоній Печерський) he, together with Theodosius of Kiev, co-founded Kiev Pechersk Lavra (Kiev Monastery of the Caves).

St. Anthony is venerated as a saint and the founder of monasticism in Rus. His feast day falls on July 10. Since the Russian Orthodox Church follows the Julian Calendar, the day on which his feast is celebrated is currently July 23 on the modern Gregorian Calendar. His relics have never been found.

Early life

He was born in Lyubech in Chernigov Principality and was baptized with the name "Antipas". He was drawn to the spiritual life from an early age and, when he was of age, left for the Greek Orthodox Esphigmenou Monastery on Mount Athos to live as a hermit. He lived in a secluded cave there overlooking the sea, which is still shown to visitors. In circa 1011, the abbot gave Anthony the job of expanding monasticism in his native Kiev, which had only recently begun its conversion to Christianity.

Return to Kiev

Anthony returned to Kiev, and founded several monasteries on the Greek model on the order of local princes. These monasteries were not as austere as Anthony was used to from his time on Mount Athos. He instead chose to live in a small four-yard cave which had been dug by the presbyter Hilarion.

In 1015, his peaceful austerity was interrupted by the death of Vladimir I of Kiev, and the subsequent fratricidal war for the throne between Vladimir's sons Yaroslav and Sviatopolk, and Anthony returned to Mount Athos. When the conflict ended, the abbot sent Anthony back to Kiev, prophesying that many monks would join him on his return.

Establishment of Kiev Pechersk Lavra

On his return, Anthony found a small 4-yard cave which Hilarion had dug before his elevation as the first native Metropolitan of Kiev. Anthony became well known in the area for his strict asceticism. He ate rye bread every other day and drank only a little water. His fame soon spread beyond Kiev, and several people began to ask for his spiritual guidance or blessing. Soon, some people even offered to join him. Eventually, Anthony accepted the company of a few of them. The first was a priest named Nikon. The second was Theodosius of Kiev.

The new monastery enjoyed royal favor almost from the beginning, although there were occasional problems. When Iziaslav I of Kiev demanded that the son of a wealthy boyar and one of his own retainers be told to leave the monastery, Nikon said he could not take soldiers away from the King of Heaven. This did nothing to placate Iziaslav's anger, and Anthony decided that it might be expedient for him to leave. Anthony returned after Iziaslav's wife requested his return.

Shortly thereafter Anthony had gained twelve disciples. Anthony, devoted to the model of the solitary hermit set by his namesake Anthony the Great, left his cave for a nearby mountain so he could continue to live the solitary life. There he dug another cave for himself and lived in seclusion there. This cave became the first of what would later be known as the Far Caves.

In time, the first official abbot of the monastery, Barlaam of Kiev, was called by Iziaslav to head a new monastery, St. Demetrios, which had been built at the gates of the city. The monks requested Anthony to name the replacement, and he named Theodosius.

As the number of monks grew and crowding became a problem, Anthony requested that Iziaslav give them the hill in which the caves were located. He did so, and the monks built a wooden church and some cells there, encircling the area with a wooden fence. Theodosius continued to consult Anthony in the guidance of the community and, as the monastery grew, so did Anthony's reputation.

[edit]Exile and return

When Iziaslav and his brothers were facing a popular uprising involving the Cumans, they came to Anthony for his blessing. They did not get it. Anthony foretold that because of their sins they would be defeated, and that the brothers would be buried in a church they would build. Shortly thereafter Iziaslav left because of the rebellion. He suspected Anthony of sympathizing with the opposition and arranged to banish Anthony upon his return. Before he could do so, Iziaslav's brother, Sviatoslav, arranged for Anthony to be secretly taken to Chernigov. Anthony dug himself a cave there. The Eletsky Monastery there is said by some to be built on the site of Anthony's cave. Eventually Iziaslav was again reconciled to Anthony and asked that he return to Kiev.

On his return, Anthony and Theodosius decided to build a larger stone church to accommodate the ever increasing number of monks. Anthony himself did not live to see the church completed. He died in 1073, shortly after blessing the foundation of the new church, at 90 years old. Shortly before his death he called the monks together and consoled them about his coming death. He also asked them that his remains be hidden away forever. The monks carried out his request. He was reportedly buried in his cave, but no relics have ever been found. Many however have subsequently come to the cave to pray and many of them have reported being healed there.

References

Attwater, Donald and Catherine Rachel John. The Penguin Dictionary of Saints. 3rd edition. New York: Penguin Books, 1993. ISBN 0-140-51312-4.

Anthony of Kiev article in Encyclopædia Britannica

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/27412/Anthony-of-Kiev

The Fathers of Russian Monasticism at roca.com

http://www.roca.org/OA/78/78g.htm

Saint Anthony of Pechersk on the official Kiev Caves Lavra Website (English)

(Outdated link): http://www.lavra.kiev.ua/en/main.php?t=nearcaves

External links

Venerable Anthony of the Kiev Far Caves, Founder of Monasticism in Russia Orthodox icon and synaxarion

http://ocafs.oca.org/FeastSaintsViewer.asp?SID=4&ID=1&FSID=101994

--------------------------

From the Kievan Rus database maintained by Bonnie Smyre:

http://www.unc.edu/~smyre/rus/Monastery_Monastery_of_the_Caves.html

Monastery: Monastery of the Caves

Relations with princes:

Regular intercourse was established between the Monastery and the prince's court.

From the moment of its foundation the monastery supported Yaroslav's efforts to secure the independence of the Church.

Izyaslav Yaroslavich was wont to come to the monastery with his men-at-arms to ask Anthony for his prayers and blessing before taking any steps of political importance.

The monastery and probably Anthony himself participated in the uprising of of the people of Kiev against Izyaslav Yaroslavich in 1068.

When Izyaslav, with the help of Polish feudal lords, regained the Kiev throne, Anthony, fearing the prince's wrath, was compelled to leave the city by night. He was taken away by Sviatoslav Yaroslavich.

Feodosij likewise did not remain passive, although his attitude towards Izyaslav Yaroslavich was different. He recognized Izyaslav, but he was uneasy about Izyaslav's attraction to Catholicism and Poland.

Feodosij was a very staunch defender of Izyaslav's rights to the Kiev throne when it was occupied by his brother Sviatoslav. Relations between Feodosij and the court were almost severed.

Sviatoslav was on the point of imprisoning Feodosij. Feodosij was saved by the intervention of the notables and the brethren. Feodosij made his peace with Sviatoslav and allowed him to be mentioned in the church services, but only after Izyaslav.

12th Century: The death of Gleb Vseslavich's widow was marked, the chronicle reveals, by an enormous contribution of land and money to Pechera Monastery. Her father, Yaropolk Izyaslavich, who died in 1087, gave the monastery the volosts of Nebl, Derevskaya and Lutsk, and those "near Kiev."

--------------------------

Unsure why this is included, but in case it is the result of a mistaken merge, the material is saved (Izyaslav is not Vladislav i Herman):

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Władysław_I_Herman

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Född omkring 1043. Död 1102-06-04. Vladislav I Herman, född cirka 1043 i Polen, död 4 juni 1102, kung av Polen. Son till Kasimir I av Polen och Dobronega av Kiev. Gift 1080 med Judyta av Böhmen Barn Boleslav III av Polen, född 1085-08-20. Dotter. G m hertig Jaroslaw I Swjatopolkowitsch. Agnes, född 1090 cirka Abbedissa i Gandersheim.

------------------------------

Władysław I Herman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reign 1079–1102

Born c. 1044

Birthplace Poland

Died June 4, 1102 [aged 58]

Place of death Płock, Poland

Buried Masovian Blessed Virgin Mary Cathedral, Płock, Poland

Predecessor Bolesław II the Bold

Successor Bolesław III Wrymouth

Wives Przecława (Prawdzic?)

Judith of Bohemia

Judith of Swabia

Offspring With Przecława:

Zbigniew

With Judith of Bohemia:

Bolesław III Wrymouth

With Judith of Swabia:

Sophia, Princess of Vladimir-Volynia

Agnes, Abbess of Gandersheim and Quedlinburg

Adelaide, Countess of Vohburg

A daughter, Polish Lady

Royal House Piast

Father Casimir I the Restorer

Mother Maria Dobroniega of Kiev

---

From the English Wikipedia page on Wladyslaw I Herman (Forrás / Source):

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W%C5%82adys%C5%82aw_I_Herman

Władysław I Herman (b. ca. 1044[1] - d. 4 June 1102), was a Duke of Poland from 1079 until his death.

He was the second son of Casimir I the Restorer by his wife Maria Dobroniega, daughter of Vladimir the Great, Grand Duke of Kiev.

Biography

As the second son, Władysław was not destined for the throne. However, because of the flight from Poland of his older brother Bolesław II the Bold in 1079, he was elevated to the rank of Duke of Poland.

Opinions vary on whether Władysław played an active role in the plot to depose his brother or whether he was handed the authority simply because he was the most proper person, being the next in line in the absence of the king and his son Mieszko Bolesławowic.

...

Marriages and Issue

Before Władysław took the title of Duke of Poland, probably during the 1070s, he had a relationship with certain Przecława, whose exact origins are unknown, although some sources stated that she belonged to the Prawdzic clan.[6] Her status is also a matter of dispute among the historians: some believed that she only was Władysław's mistress and others asserted that she was his wife, but this union was performed under pagan rituals and in consequence not recognized by the Church as a valid marriage.

By 1080, one year after Władysław ascended to the Polish throne, Przecława either died or was sent away; it's believed by some sources that after she was dismissed by the Duke, Przecława took the veil under the name of Christina (Polish: Krystyna) and died around 1092.[7] This union produced a son, Zbigniew (b. ca. 1070/73 - d. ca. 1112/14), who was considered illegitimate.

In 1080 Władysław married firstly with Judith (b. ca. 1056 - d. 25 December 1086), daughter of Duke (and since 1085 King) Vratislaus II of Bohemia. They had one son:

-1. Bolesław III Wrymouth (b. 20 August 1086 – d. 28 October 1138).

In 1089 Władysław married secondly with Judith (b. ca. 1054 - d. 14 March ca. 1105), daughter of Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor and widow of King Solomon of Hungary. They had four daughters:

-1. Sophia (b. ca. 1089 - d. bef. 12 May 1112), married bef. 1108 to Yaroslav I, Prince of Vladimir-Volynia.

-2. Agnes (b. ca. 1090 - d. 29 December 1127), Abbess of Quedlinburg (1110) and Gandersheim (1111).

-3. Adelaide (b. ca. 1091 - d. 25/26 March 1127), married bef. 1118 to Dietrich III, Count of Vohburg and Margrave of the Northern March.[8]

-4. A daughter (b. ca. 1092 - d. bef. 1111), married ca. 1111 with a Polish lord.

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From Darryl Lundy's Peerage page on Wladislaw I Herman (Forrás):

http://thepeerage.com/p11458.htm#i114577

Wladislaw I Herman, Duke of Poland (1)

M, #114577, b. 1043, d. 1102

Last Edited=30 Jul 2005

Wladislaw I Herman, Duke of Poland was born in 1043. (1) He was the son of Casimir I, Duke of Poland and Dobronega Maria of Kiev. (1) He married, firstly, Judith of Bohemia, daughter of Vladislav I, Duke of Bohemia, circa 1080. (1) He married, secondly, Judith Salian, daughter of Heinrich III, Holy Roman Emperor and Agnes de Poitou, circa 1089. (1) He died in 1102. (19

Wladislaw I Herman, Duke of Poland was a member of the House of Piast. (2) He succeeded to the title of Duke of Poland in 1080. (1)

Children of Wladislaw I Herman, Duke of Poland and Judith of Bohemia

-1. Zbigniew, Duke of Poland d. 1107 (2)

-2. Boleslaw III, Duke of Poland+ b. 1085, d. 1138 (1)

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Prince of Turov, Prince of Novgorod 1052-54, Great Prince of Kiev 1054-68 + 1069-73 + 1077-78. Killed in battle

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ukraine _Long live the Ukraine! _Es lebe die Ukraine! _Elagu Ukraina! _Lai dzīvo Ukraina! _Tegyvuoja Ukraina! Niech żyje Ukraina! Éljen az ukrán! _Ať žije na Ukrajině! Nech žije na Ukrajine! Trăiască Ucraina! *1.3.2014*
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http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm


IZIASLAV [Vladimirovich], son of [545]VLADIMIR I "Velikiy/the Great" Grand Prince of Kiev & his first wife Roa of Polotsk (-1001). Prince of Polotsk. The Primary Chronicle records the death of Izyaslav in 1001[546].
m ---. The name of Iziaslav´s wife is not known.
Iziaslav & his wife had two children:
--------------------


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http://genealogy.euweb.cz/russia/rurik1.html#IP

Rurik, konung of Novgorod and Ladoga (862-879), +879 (for his identity see NOTE); m.Efanda/Sfandra/Ingrid of Norway, sister of Helgu/Oleg (+912), konung of Novgorod and Kiev; They had issue:
* A1. Ingvar/Igor "the Old", konung of Novgorod and Kiev (912-945/6), *877, +killed nr Iskorosten 945/946; m.St.Helga/Olga of Pskov (*ca 903 +969), regent in Kiev (945-964)), she was baptised in Constantinople and received the name Elena
** B1. Svyatoslav I, konung of Novgorod and Kiev (945/6-972), *ca 942, +killed by Pechenegs 972; 1m: Predslava (a Bohemian woman); 2m: Malusha (*ca 944 +1002), a household servant of his mother
*** C1. [1m.] Yaropolk I, Pr of Kiev (972-980), *961, +murdered in Kiev 980; m.NN, a Greek nun
**** D1. Svyatopolk I "the Accursed", Pr of Turov, Great Pr of Kiev (1015)+(1017-19), *980, +on the way to Poland, after the battle on Alta River 1019; m.ca 1013 N, dau.of Boleslav I of Poland
*** C2. [1m.] Oleg, Pr of Iskorosten (972-977), +k.a.977
*** C3. [2m.] Saint Vladimir I "Velikiy" "the Great", Pr of Novgorod (972-980), Great Pr of Kiev (980-1015), *ca 958, +Berestovo 15.7.1015; 1m: in Scandinavia btw 977-980 Olava (Eiriksdottir?) of Sweden; 2m: ca 977 (div 986, from 989 a nun) Rogneda/Ragnheid Ragnvaldsdottir of Norway (*ca 956 +1002 as a nun), dau.of Pr Rogvolod of Polotzk; 3m: Malfrida N (+1002) a Bohemian woman; 4m: Adela N, Bulgarian woman; 5m: Crimea 988 Anna Porphyrogeneta of Byzantium (*13.3.963, +1011); 6m: 1012 N (+1019), dau.of Duke Konrad I of Swabia by Rechlind of Duitsland
**** D1. [1m./4m.] Vysheslav, Pr of Novgorod (988-1010), +1010
**** D2. '''[2m.] Izyaslav, Pr of Polotzk (988-1001), *980/981, +1001'''; for his descendants see HERE
**** D3. [2m.] Vsevolod, Pr of Vladimir-Volynsk (988-995), +ca 995
**** D4. [2m.] Yaroslav I "Mudriy" "the Wise", Pr of Rostov (988-1010), Pr of Novgorod (1013-15), Great Pr of Kiev (1015-17)+(1019-54), *ca 986, +20.2.1054, bur St.Sophia Cathedral; 1m: Saint Anna (+1018, bur St.Sophia Cathedral); m.1019 Pss Ingigerd Olafsdottir of Sweden (+10.2.1050, bur St.Sophia Cathedral)
**** ...
**** D5. [2m.] Premyslava, +1015; m.Laszlo of Hungary (+1029)
**** D6. [2m.] Predslava; m.Duke Boleslav III of Bohemia (+1035), other sources say she was a concubine of Boleslaw I of Poland
**** D7. [3m.] Svyatoslav, Pr of Iskorosten (988-1015), +k.a.after 15.7.1015
**** D8. [4m.] Mstislav I "the Brave", Pr of Tmutarakan (988-1024), Great Pr of Chernigov (1024-36), *978, +1036; m.Maria N
***** E1. Yevstafiy, +young 1033
**** D9. [4m.] Saint Boris, Pr of Rostov (1010-15), *ca 990, +murdered 24/25.7.1015; he may have married Aestrid, sister of king Canute I the Great of England, Denmark and Norway
**** D10. [4m.] SaintGleb, Pr of Murom (1010-15), *ca 984, +murdered 5.8.1015
**** D11. [mother uncertain] Stanislav, Pr of Smolensk (978/1010-15), +before 1015
**** D12. [mother uncertain] Sudislav, Pr of Pskov, imprisoned 1035-59, +as a monk in Kiev 1063
**** D13. [6m.] Agafia (Agatha), +as a nun at Newcastle-upon-Tyne ca 1093; for her parentage see notes; m.1038/43 Edward (II) of England (*1016 +1057)
**** D14. [6m.] Dobronega-Maria, *after 1012, +1087; m.1038/42 King Kazimir I of Poland (*25.7.1016 +19.3.1058

http://genealogy.euweb.cz/russia/rurik2.html

'''Izyaslav, inherited Polotsk from his mother - Pr of Polotzk (988-1001), *ca 980, +1001'''; He had issue:
* A1. Vseslav, Pr of Polotzk (1001-03), +1003
* A2. Bryachislav, Pr of Polotzk (1003-44), Pr of Vitebsk (1021-44), *ca 997, +1044; m.N ("a witch")
** B1. Vseslav "the Sorcerer", Pr of Polotsk (1044-69)+(1071-1101), Gr Pr of Kiev (IX.1068-IV.1069), *ca 1030, +14.4.1101, bur St.Sophia Cathedral, Polotsk
*** C1. Roman, Pr of Polotzk (1101-16), +1116
*** C2. Gleb, 1st Pr of Minsk (1101-19), Pr of Polotsk (1116-19), +in prison Kiev 1119; m.1090 Anastasia of Turov and Lutsk (*1074, +I.1158)
**** D1-D4
*** C3. Boris, Pr of Polotsk (1119-27), Pr of Drutsk (1101-19), +1127/28
**** D1-D3
*** C4. Rogvolod, Pr of Polotsk (1127-28), +1128
**** D1-D3
*** C5. Davyd, Pr of Polotsk (1128-29), imprisoned with his nephews by Mstislav I and sent to Constantinople in 1129
**** D1-D2
*** C6. Sviatoslav, Pr of Vitebsk (1101-29); m.Sofia of Kiev
**** D1-D4
*** C7. Rostislav, fl 1140
**** D1...
--------------------

http://magister.msk.ru/library/history/solov/solv01p7.htm
859747688. Hertug Vladislav I HERMANN av Polen was born in 1043. He was a Hertug between 1081 and 1102 in Polen. He died in 1102. He was married to Judith WRATISLAVSDTR av Bøhmen in 1083.
867789524. Grev Poppo N.NSON av Berg-Schelkingen (20728) died on 11 Jul. (20729) He was a Greve in Berg-Schelkingen. (20730) Han hørte til de mest ansette slekter i Øvre Schwaben og stod særlig i slektsforbindelse med Hohenstauferne. Deres navnborg reiste sig over landsbyen syd for Ehingen. De hadde greve- og herskapsbesiddelser i Berg (Ehingen) og Schelkingen, uten tvil også Wartstein, og fikk i beg. av det 13. årh. også det statelige markgrevskap Burgau. Denne familiens sikre genealoi begynner med Poppo. I Zweifaltens klosters nekrolog som tør være påbegynt i hans sønns eller sønnesønns tid, kalles han greve av Berg. han er med sin hustru begravet i klostret. He was married to Sofie N.NSDTR.
[large-G675.FTW]

See Europäisch Stammtafeln Bund II tafel 90.
Line 6742 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Wladislaw I Herman, Prince Of /POLAND/
Data From Lynn Jeffrey Bernhard, 2445 W 450 South #4, Springville UT 84663-4950
email - (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Line 3135 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Izyaslav I Dmitrij Grand Duke Of /KIEV/
SOURCE NOTES:
Bu186 http://www.algonet.se/~tngaard/middelalder/2573.htm
RESEARCH NOTES:
Grand Duke of Kiev "Was landflyktig in Poland in to perioder."
867789532. Storfyrste Isiaslav I N.NSON Kiev (20736) was born in 1025. (20737) He was a Storfyrste in 1054 in Kiev. (20738) He died 3.10.1078 drept.(20739) Landflyktig i Polen 1068-69 og 1073-74. He was married to Gertrud N.NSDTR av Polen about 1043.(20740)
GRAND PRINCE OF KIEV AND NOVGOROD 1054-1068, 1069-1073, 1077-1078
OR "VLADISLAV""HERMAN"; KNOWN AS "THE CARELESS"; KING/DUKE OF POLAND
Most of the information on Kings & Queens of Scotland, Ireland, Wales, England and other parts of the British Isles & Europe and on the various Royal & Noble families in this family tree has come from one or more of the following sources:BURKE'S Genealogical and Heraldic History of the PEERAGE BARONETAGE AND KNIGHTAGE.
Edited by Peter Townend. Burke's Peerage Limited, London
"Burke's Peerage" popular name.

Also information from
Burke's Landed Gentry
Burke's Peerage Limited, London

Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage,
ISBN: 0312125577
Debrett's Peerage Ltd
86/88 Edgware Road
London W2 2YW
For further information on Debrett's
e-mail (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Phone # +44 (0)171 916 9633.
http://www.debretts.co.uk/index.html

Directory of Royal Genealogical Data (Edinburgh Mirror)
http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/~bct/public/genealogy/royal/
Version: 29 Jul 99 Author: Brian TompsettBack: Royal and Noble genealogy Copyright (c) 1994 - 1999This is part of Royal and Noble Genealogical Data on the Web at
http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/gedcom.html,

Royal Genealogies -- Menu
http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html
Denis R. Reid
149 Kimrose Lane
Broadview Heights, Ohio 44147-1258
Internet Email address: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
(216) 237-5364

Burke's possibly now published or distributed by
Almanach De Gotha Ltd,
9 Cork Street,Mayfair,
London, W1X 1PD
United Kingdom.
Tel (UK) 0181 404 2489
(International) +44(0) 181 404 2489
http://www.almanachdegotha.com/main_page.htm

Most of the information on Kings & Queens of Scotland, Ireland, Wales, England and other parts of the British Isles & Europe and on the various Royal & Noble families in this family tree has come from one or more of the following sources:BURKE'S Genealogical and Heraldic History of the PEERAGE BARONETAGE AND KNIGHTAGE.
Edited by Peter Townend. Burke's Peerage Limited, London
"Burke's Peerage" popular name.

Also information from
Burke's Landed Gentry
Burke's Peerage Limited, London

Debrett's Peerage and Baronetage,
ISBN: 0312125577
Debrett's Peerage Ltd
86/88 Edgware Road
London W2 2YW
For further information on Debrett's
e-mail (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
Phone # +44 (0)171 916 9633.
http://www.debretts.co.uk/index.html

Directory of Royal Genealogical Data (Edinburgh Mirror)
http://www.tardis.ed.ac.uk/~bct/public/genealogy/royal/
Version: 29 Jul 99 Author: Brian TompsettBack: Royal and Noble genealogy Copyright (c) 1994 - 1999This is part of Royal and Noble Genealogical Data on the Web at
http://www.dcs.hull.ac.uk/public/genealogy/gedcom.html,

Royal Genealogies -- Menu
http://ftp.cac.psu.edu/~saw/royal/royalgen.html
Denis R. Reid
149 Kimrose Lane
Broadview Heights, Ohio 44147-1258
Internet Email address: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX)
(216) 237-5364

Burke's possibly now published or distributed by
Almanach De Gotha Ltd,
9 Cork Street,Mayfair,
London, W1X 1PD
United Kingdom.
Tel (UK) 0181 404 2489
(International) +44(0) 181 404 2489
http://www.almanachdegotha.com/main_page.htm
Line 3135 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long:
NAME Izyaslav I Dmitrij Grand Duke Of /KIEV/
He ruled from 1054 to 1078.
He ruled from 1054 to 1078.

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