Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dmitry Ivanovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 10 October 1483 – 14 February 1509), [1] also known as Dmitry the Grandson ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович Внук ), was Grand Prince of Moscow from 1498 to 1502. He was the only surviving son of Ivan Ivanovich, the eldest son of Ivan III of Russia . Following the death ...

    • Dmitry ‘The Grandson’ Ivanovich, Grandson of Ivan III
    • Fyodor Godunov
    • Ivan Dmitriyevich, False Dmitry II’s Son
    • Ivan VI, The ‘Russian Iron Mask’
    • Tsarevich Alexey Nikolayevich

    During his life, Dmitry was an heir to Moscow’s throne, but died in prison. Dmitry Ivanovich was born in 1483. He was a son of Ivan the Young, a crown prince of Moscow and grandson to Ivan III, the Grand Prince of Moscow and the founder of the Moscow state. In Russian history, he is known as ‘Dmitry Vnuk’, literally ‘Dmitry the Grandson’. In 1490, ...

    Fyodor was the son of Boris Godunov. Boris was the brother of Tsarina Irina, wife of Tsar Fyodor Ioannovich, son of Ivan the Terrible. Tsar Fyodor wasn’t much involved in the politics and the ruling process, while Boris Godunov was, in fact, regent of the state. So, after Fyodor Ioannovich died in 1598, the Russian Zemsky Sobor (Assembly of the Lan...

    In 1608, another impostor tsar, False Dmitry II, publicly married Polish noblewoman Marina Mniszech, who was the wife of False Dmitry I, the previous impostor tsar. Although False Dmitry I was evidently murdered and his body on display in Red Square, Marina “recognized” her “miraculously saved” husband. They all just wanted to pass as the Moscow ru...

    Ivan VI had very vague rights to the Russian throne. He was born a great-grandson to Ivan V, co-ruler with Peter the Great, while Russia was ruled by Anna Ioannovna(1693-1740), Ivan V’s daughter. Anna wanted to keep the throne within the hands of her relatives, so Ivan VI, her niece’s son, was declared the next Emperor in Anna’s will. Soon after An...

    Tsarevich Alexey, son of Nicholas II, was Russian Empire’s last heir, murdered by the Bolsheviks in Yekaterinburg on July 18, 1918. Since his early childhood, it became apparent that Alexey was ill with hemophilia, a blood disease he inherited from his mother. The heir’s illness made his parents search for help not only among professional doctors, ...

  2. Ivan's son with Maria of Tver, Ivan Ivanovich, whom he had designated as his heir and was made co-ruler in 1471, died in 1490, leaving from his marriage with Elena of Moldavia an only child, Dmitry Ivanovich. Ivan attempted to secure his title for his successor, and the latter was crowned as successor by his grandfather on 15 February 1498, but ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Feb 8, 2023 · The two gave birth to a son, Tsarevich Vasili Ivanovich, who tragically died three months after his birth. When Maria died in 1569, Ivan married his third wife, Marfa, on October 28, 1571. Marfa died on November 13, 1571, and was believed to have been poisoned by Ivan the Terrible. Ivan married his fourth wife, Anna K, in 1572.

    • Lauren Dillon
  5. Jan 30, 2024 · Aleksey Kivshenko (Public Domain) Ivan III of Russia (Ivan the Great) was the Grand Prince of Moscow and Russia from 1462 to 1505. Ivan III was born in 1440 to Grand Prince Vasily II of Moscow (r. 1425-1462) and his wife, Maria Borovsk (l. c. 1420-1485). He served as co-ruler for his blind father from 1450 until he became regent in 1462.

  6. Dmitry as a child. The first life of Dmitry Ivanovich, future Tsar of all Russia, began on the 19th October 1582 and ended on the 15th May 1591. He was the son of Ivan the Terrible, the greatest of all Russia’s Tsars and the first to take onto himself absolute power. His mother was the Tsar’s seventh wife, Maria Nagaya.

  7. The description of this ceremony origins in “The Order of Setting for Grand Princedom of Dmitry Ivanovich” – the first document of Old Rus committing the ceremony of the new tsar election. Grand Prince Ivan III decided to legalize publicly the right of his young grandson Dmitry, son of his eldest perished son Ivan, for the Russian throne.

  1. People also search for