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  1. Euphemia was the daughter of Grand Prince Vladimir II Monomakh of Kiev and his second wife, whose name and ancestry are unknown. She was married to King Coloman of Hungary around 1112. However, her husband, who had been suffering from a serious disease, caught her in adultery and immediately sent her back to Kiev.

  2. This page was last edited on 19 September 2020, at 21:58 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0; additional terms may apply.

  3. Eastern Orthodox. Portrait in the Tsarsky titulyarnik, 1672. Vladimir II Monomakh ( Old East Slavic: Володимѣръ Мономахъ, romanized: Volodiměrŭ Monomakhŭ; [a] Christian name: Vasily; [1] 26 May 1053 – 19 May 1125) was Grand Prince of Kiev from 1113 to 1125. [2] He is considered a saint in the Eastern Orthodox Church and ...

  4. Kyiv is the capital of Ukraine, as well as the country's largest and most vibrant city. Kyiv has about 2,950,000 residents. Mapcarta, the open map.

  5. Language Label Description Also known as; English: Euphemia of Kyiv. Hungarian queen

  6. Euphemia of Kiev (d. 1139) Queen of Hungary. Died April 4, 1139; dau. of Vladimir II (b. 1053), grand duke of Kiev; m. Koloman also known as Coloman (b. around 1070), king of Hungary (r. 1095–1114), 1104 (div. 1113); children: one daughter (name unknown). See also Women in World History.

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  8. Again in Kiev, Euphemia gave birth to a son, Boris [7, p. 649–672]. Some time later, a part of the Hungarian nobility, having suffered from the cruel reprisals of Béla II the Blind, would support Boris’s claims to the Hungarian throne and would explain Coloman’s divorce by the recklessness of the old king.

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