Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Browse Getty Images' premium collection of high-quality, authentic Evdochia Of Kiev stock photos, royalty-free images, and pictures. Evdochia Of Kiev stock photos are available in a variety of sizes and formats to fit your needs.

  2. Princess Evdochia of Kiev (Ukrainian: Євдокія Олельківна; also known as Evdokia; ? – 25 November 1467) was a Princess of Kiev by birth, and became Princess consort of Moldavia after her marriage to Prince Stephen III of Moldavia. She was the mother of Elena, Crown Princess of Moscow.

  3. People also ask

  4. From Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository. Media in category "Eudokia of Kiev" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total. 1465 - Evdochia de Kiev 1.png 437 × 580; 261 KB. Doamna Evdochia Olelkovici.JPG 233 × 390; 21 KB. Eudokia of Kiev.jpg 357 × 607; 72 KB. Categories: Moldavian consorts. Olelkowicz-Słucki family.

  5. Princess Evdochia of Kiev ( Ukrainian: Євдокія Олельківна; also known as Evdokia; ? – 25 November 1467) was a Princess of Kiev by birth, and became Princess consort of Moldavia after her marriage to Prince Stephen III of Moldavia. She was the mother of Elena, Crown Princess of Moscow. Evdochia of Kiev. Princess consort of ...

  6. Nov 28, 2016 · English: Princess Evdochia of Kiev the first wife of the Ştefan cel Mare, ruller of Moldova, 1465. The original is a fresco painting from the Probota Monastery, where supposedly was the tomb of Evdochia

  7. Eudoxia Iziaslavna of Kiev ( Ukrainian: Євдокія Ізяславна, Russian: Евдокия Изяславна, Polish: Eudoksja Izjasławówna; c. 1131 – c. 1187), was a Kievan Rus' princess member of the Izyaslavichi of Volhynia and by marriage Duchess of Greater Poland and since 1173 High Duchess of Poland . According to some ...

  8. medieval-princesses.spbu.ru › en › articlesEudoxia of Kiev (Evdokia)

    The supporters of this hypothesis justify their view basing on the accounts of Wincenty Kadłubek and Jan Dlugosz [I, p. 49; III, p. 131]. In the most detailed way, this hypothesis was developed by O. Baltzer [13, p. 292-295]. The scholar excluded all Kiev rulers who could not be Mieszko III’s father-in-law.

  1. People also search for