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  1. Dmitry Mikhailovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Михайлович; 1298 – 15 September 1326), nicknamed the Fearsome Eyes or the Terrible Eyes ( Грозные Очи ), [1] was Prince of Tver from 1318 and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1322 until his death in 1326, when he was executed in Sarai by the Mongols. [2] He was a son of Mikhail of ...

  2. DMITRY MIKHAILOVICH. (1299 – 1326), Prince of Tver and grand prince of Vladimir. Dmitry Mikhailovich ("Terrible Eyes") was born on September 15, 1299. Twelve years later he led a campaign against Yury Danilovich of Moscow to capture Nizhny Novgorod. But Metropolitan Peter, a supporter of Moscow, objected. Dmitry therefore cancelled the attack.

  3. An observatory of human collective memory. Dmitry of Tver. Dmitry Mikhailovich (Russian: Дмитрий Михайлович; 1298 – 15 September 1326), nicknamed the Fearsome Eyes or the Terrible Eyes (Грозные Очи), was Prince of Tver from 1318 and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1322 until his death in 1326, when he was executed in Sarai by the Mongols.

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  5. Grand Prince of Vladimir Dmitri avenging the death of his father in the ordo (palace) of Uzbeg Khan, killing Yury.Dmitry Mikhaylovich of Tver (Russian: Дми́трий Миха́йлович Тверcко́й) (1299 – 15 September 1326), nicknamed The Fearsome Eyes (Гро́зные О́чи), was a Grand Prince of Tver (from 1318 to 1326) and Grand Prince of Vladimir (from 1322 to 1326).

  6. His son and successor, Dmitry of Tver, was executed in the Golden Horde in 1326, and another son and also a prince of Tver, Aleksandr Mikhailovich of Tver, was executed there in 1339 as well together with his son Fyodor. In 1327, there was an anti-Tatar uprising in the Principality of Tver, which was suppressed. The city of Tver was burned down ...

  7. Dmitry "the Fearsome-Eyed" of Tver (1299-15 September 1326) was the Grand Duke of Tver from 1318 to 1326 and the Grand Duke of Vladimir from 1322 to 1326. He launched a rebellion against the Mongol Empire's Golden Horde, but it was brutally suppressed in 1318. The son of Mikhail of Tver and Anna of Kashin, Dmitry of Tver assumed the title of Grand Duke of Tver in 1318. He continued his father ...

  8. The Prince of Tver ( Russian: Князь тверской) was the title of the ruler of the Principality of Tver. The princes of Tver descended from the first prince, Yaroslav Yaroslavich ( r. 1247–1271 ). [1] [2] In 1485, Tver was formally annexed by Moscow and became an appanage .

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