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  1. Vladimir IV Rurikovich [a] (1187 – 3 March 1239) was Prince of Pereyaslavl (1206–1213), Smolensk (1213–1219) and Grand Prince of Kiev (1223–1235). He was the son of Rurik Rostislavich .

  2. Igor III: Iziaslavichi (Monomakh)?–? 1212: 1214 (second time) Mstislav III: Rostislavichi (Monomakh)?–1223: 1214: 1223: son of Roman I Vladimir IV Rurikovich: Rostislavichi (Monomakh) 1187–1239: 1223: 1235: brother of Rostislav II Iziaslav IV Vladimirovich: Siveria (Olgovichi) or Rostislavichi (Monomakh) 1186–? 1235: 1236: son of ...

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  5. Ivan III the Great, the first Grand Prince of Moscow. Ivan IV the Terrible, the first Russian tsar. 5. When and why did the rule of the Rurik dynasty end?

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  6. As a ruling dynasty, the Ruriks held its own in some part of Russia for a total of twenty-one generations in male-line succession, from Rurik (died 879) to Vasili IV of Russia (died 1612), a period of more than 700 years.

  7. Ivan III, portrait from A. Thenet, La Cosmographie universelle, Paris, 1575. Ivan III (ruled 1462–1505) consolidated from a secure throne the gains his father, Vasily II, had won. The “ gathering of the Russian lands ,” as it has traditionally been known, became under Ivan a conscious and irresistible drive by Moscow to annex all East ...

  8. Mar 13, 2024 · Vladimir IV Rurikovich (Владимир Рюрикович in Russian) (1187 – March 3, 1239), Prince of Pereyaslavl (1206–1213), Smolensk (1213–1219) and Grand Prince of Kiev (1223–1235). Son of Rurik Rostislavich. Became the Prince of Smolensk (князь Смоленский) in 1187. view all.

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