Search results
Bogdan, who had been the voivode of the Vlachs in Maramureș, gathered the Vlachs in that district and "secretly passed into Moldavia", according to John of Küküllő's chronicle. [67] [68] Royal charters recorded that Bogdan had come into a conflict with János Kölcsei, the royal castellan of Visk (now Vyshkovo in Ukraine), in 1343, and with ...
Dec 28, 2021 · On his deathbed, he had urged his son and co-ruler, Bogdan, to continue to pay the tribute to the Sultan. FULL STORY: 1. Origins and Userper Peter. Stephen the Third, surnamed Stephen the Great was born in 1433 and died in 1504. Son of Bogdan II and Prince of Moldavia between 1457 and 1504, he ruled for 47 years, very uncommon at the time.
This is a List of rulers of Moldavia, from the first mention of the medieval polity east of the Carpathians and until its disestablishment in 1862, when it united with Wallachia, the other Danubian Principality, to form the modern-day state of Romania. Dynastic rule is hard to ascribe, given the loose traditional definition of the ruling family (on principle, princes were chosen from any ...
Dec 1, 2022 · Bogdan II was a prince of Moldavia from 1449 to 1451. The son of Alexandru the Good he married MariaOltea and was the father of Stephen the Great. In October 1451 he was invited to a wedding, but on the way was murdered in a conspiracy organized by his brother Petru Aron who took the throne.
Bogdan and his retainers left Maramureș for Moldavia between 1359 and 1365. Moldavia had been under the rule of Sas of Moldavia, a vassal of Louis I of Hungary, but the local Vlachs were opposed to the Hungarian suzerainty. Bogdan expelled Sas's son, Balc, by force and seized the throne. In retaliation, Louis I confiscated Bogdan's estates in ...
Bogdan II was a prince of Moldavia from October 12, 1449, to October 17, 1451.
Bogdan or Bohdan is a Slavic masculine name that appears in all Slavic countries as well as Romania and Moldova. It is derived from the Slavic words Bog/Boh, meaning "god", and dan, meaning "given". The name appears to be an early calque from Greek Theodore or Hebrew Matthew with the same meaning. The name is also used as a surname in Hungary. Bogdana is the feminine version of the name.