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- Helena, possibly named after her great-grandmother Empress Helena Dragaš, was the eldest surviving child of Ivan III, Grand Prince of Moscow, and his second wife Sophia Palaiologina, niece of the last Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos. Helena was an older sister of Grand Prince of Moscow Vasili III of Moscow.
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Media in category "Helena of Smolensk, Grand Princess of Moscow" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total. Facial Chronicle - b.07, p.221 - Birth of Daniil Ivanovich of Moscow.jpg 427 × 788; 151 KB
Apr 26, 2022 · Genealogy for princess Elena Alexandrovna of Moscow (Rurikid) (c.1290 - 1331) family tree on Geni, with over 250 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.
- "Олена Оленина / в постриге Соломонида"
- Смоленск, Смоленское Княжество
- circa 1290
The Princess bowed before the Patriarch, saying, "Through thy prayers, Holy Father, may I be preserved from the crafts and assaults of the devil!" At her baptism she was christened Helena, after the ancient Empress, mother of Constantine the Great.
Ivan I Daniilovich Kalita of Moscow, b.1288, Moscow, Central District, Russia, son of Daniil Aleksandrovich of Moscow Grand Prince of Moscow + Maria Romanovna; + Helena Alexandrovna of Smolensk, b.abt 1295, Russia
Helena Ivanovna of Moscow ( Russian: Елена Ивановна; Lithuanian: Elena; Polish: Helena Moskiewska; 19 May 1476 – 20 January 1513) was daughter of Ivan III the Great, Grand Prince of Moscow, and an uncrowned Grand Duchess of Lithuania and Queen of Poland as she would not convert from Eastern Orthodoxy to Catholicism.
Mar 3, 2017 · In 1398 the icon was brought to Moscow by Princess Sophia, bride of Grand Prince Vasily I, son of Dmitry Donskoi. The icon remained in the Kremlin Annunciation Cathedral until 1456, when at the...
Aug 19, 2022 · Genealogy for princess Helena Yurievna of Smolensk (Rurikids of Smolensk) (c.1388 - c.1430) family tree on Geni, with over 240 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.