Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Media in category "Rostislav III, Grand Prince of Kyiv" This category contains only the following file. Ростислав Мстиславич Смоленский.png 312 × 571; 367 KB

  2. Nov 25, 2004 · Rostislav Mstislavich (Russian: Ростислав Мстиславич) (c.1110-1167), Kniaz' (Prince) of Smolensk (1125-1160), Novgorod (1153) and Velikiy Kniaz (Grand Prince) of Kiev (1154, 1159-1167). He was the son of Mstislav I of Kiev. After Yaroslav II of Kiev was driven out of Novgorod, Rostislav was invited to become the ruler of ...

    • "Rostislav Mstislavitch Rurikid"
    • Киев, Киевское Княжество
    • 1108
  3. People also ask

  4. Rostislav Mikhailovich. Rostislav Mikhailovich ( Hungarian: Rosztyiszláv, [1] Bulgarian and Russian: Ростислав Михайлович) (after 1210 [2] / c. 1225 – 1262) [3] was a Rurikid prince and a dignitary in the Kingdom of Hungary. [1] He was prince of Novgorod (1230), of Halych (1236–1237, 1241–1242), of Lutsk (1240), and of ...

  5. May 18, 2022 · Prince of Smolensk 1238. d) ROSTISLAV Mstislavich. He claimed the vacant throne of Kiev after Mikhail Vsevolodich fled to Hungary in the face of the Mongol invasion, succeeding in 1239 as ROSTISLAV III Grand Prince of Kiev. He was expelled in his turn by Daniil Romanovich Prince of Volynia [543].

    • 1178
    • Ric Dickinson
    • May 18, 2022
  6. Rostislav Mstislavich [a] ( c. 1110 – 1167) was Prince of Smolensk (1125–1160), Novgorod (1154) and Grand Prince of Kiev (1154–1155; 1159–1161; 1161–1167). [1] He is the progenitor of the Rostislavichi of Smolensk. [2] He was the son of Mstislav I of Kiev and Christina Ingesdotter of Sweden .

  7. His cousin, Vsevolod, felt that Rurik's previous monastic vows rendered his authority invalid, and so attacked and briefly seized Kiev in 1206, 1207, and 1211. [citation needed] He succeeded in capturing Rurik, who died in captivity in Chernigov. [citation needed] Rurik was married to Anna of Turov; among their children was Rostislav II of Kiev.

  8. ROSTISLAV (d. 1167), grand prince of Kiev and the progenitor of the Rostislavichi, the dynasty of Smolensk. Source for information on Rostislav: Encyclopedia of Russian History dictionary.

  1. People also search for