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      • Yury (Georgy) Danilovich [a] (Russian: Юрий (Георгий) Данилович; 1281 – 21 November 1325) was Prince of Moscow from 1303 to 1325 and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1318 to 1322.
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  2. Yury (Georgy) Danilovich [a] ( Russian: Юрий (Георгий) Данилович; 1281 – 21 November 1325) was Prince of Moscow from 1303 to 1325 and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1318 to 1322. [2] Biography. Early life. Yury was the oldest son of Daniel of Moscow, the first prince of Moscow and progenitor of the Daniilovichi. [3] .

  3. Encyclopedia of Russian History. YURI DANILOVICH (d. 1325), grand prince of Vladimir and the prince of Moscow who initiated the rivalry for supremacy between Moscow and Tver in northeastern Russia.

    • Konchaka. This wedding was out of the ordinary – in 1317, Moscow Prince Yuri Danilovich married Konchaka, the sister of the Khan of the Golden Horde, Uzbek Khan.
    • Söyembikä (Suyumbike) Legend has it that it took seven days for Ivan the Terrible to conquer Kazan and, in honor of each day, a tier of the seven-story Söyembikä tower was built in the Kazan Kremlin.
    • Kucheney. Ivan the Terrible could not take Söyembikä as a wife primarily because, by that time, he was already married – since 1547, to Anastasia Romanovna, who died suddenly in 1560.
    • Fatima Soltan. In the city of Kasimov, the capital of the Qasim Khanate, lived a family of Alyanchikovs, merchants by trade. They said that their last name comes from the word ‘alyan’ - ‘stubborn’ in one of the Tatar dialects.
  4. Yuri Danilovich (1281-1325) was the eldest son of the Prince of Moscow, Daniil Alexandrovich, and the grandson of the great Alexander Nevsky. At first he ruled in Pereslavl-Zalessky, and then in Moscow, from 1303. During his reign, he waged a continuous struggle with Tver for the unification of Russia under his command. Struggle for the ...

  5. YURI III DANILOVICH (1281- 1325) He was born about 1281 the son of Daniil Aleksandrovich, appanage prince of Moscow and his mother's name is not known. His first wife's name is not known. Then he married around 1317 with Agrafia (formerly Konchaka), sister of Khan Ozbeg.

  6. Mar 7, 2022 · As he had no children, Yuri’s heir could only be his brother: Ivan Danilovich (Kalita). Thus, the assumption first expressed by the American scholar George Vernadsky—that Monomakh’s Cap belonged to Uzbek khan —has a solid foundation.

  7. Yuriy Danilovich, also known as Georgiy Danilovich (Юрий Данилович in Russian) (1281 – November 21, 1325) was Prince of Moscow (1303–1325) and Grand Prince of Vladimir (from 1318). Yury was the oldest son of Daniel, the first prince of Moscow. His first official action was to defend Pereslavl-Zalessky against Grand Duke Andrew III.