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  1. She was a daughter of Yuri Konchakovich, Khan of the Cumans. Her people belonged to the Kipchaks, a confederation of pastoralists and warriors of Turkic origin. In 1214, Yaroslav married his second wife Rostislava Mstislavna. She was a daughter of Mstislav the Bold and another Cuman princess.

    • a daughter of Yuri Konchakovich, Rostislava Mstislavna, Fedosia Igorevna
    • Yurievichi
  2. Rostislava (baptized Feodosya) Mstislavna is the holy Grand Princess of Vladimir, the mother of Prince Aleksandr Nevsky (1220-1263), presumably the daughter of the Galician prince Mstislav Udalogo, the second wife of the Grand Prince of Vladimir-Suzdal Yaroslav Vsevolodovich of Chernigov (1139-1198), from whom she gave birth to the 9th ...

  3. 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
  4. Andrei II Yaroslavich of Vladimir, Grand Prince of Vladimir, Prince of Suzdal, was born 1222 to Yaroslav II Vsevolodovich of Vladimir (1191-1246) and Rostislava Mstislavna of Smolensk (c1202-1244) and died 1264 of unspecified causes. He married Ustyniya Daniilovna of Halych (c1232-c1279) 1250 JL .

  5. Rostislava Mstislavna. Fedosia Igorevna. Yaroslav II ( Яросла́в II Все́володович ), Christian name Theodor ( Феодо́р) (February 8, 1191 – September 30, 1246) was the Grand Prince of Vladimir (12381246) who helped to restore his country and capital after the Mongol invasion of Russia .

  6. When King of Kiev Mstislav Vladimirovish was born on 1 June 1076, in Kyiv, Ukraine, his father, Vladimir II Monomakh, was 23 and his mother, Gytha of Wessex, was 24. He married Christina Ingesdotter Princess of Sweden in 1095. They were the parents of at least 5 sons and 10 daughters.

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  8. Thus, Mstislavna became the second and last wife of Yaroslav and, accordingly, the mother of all his children [9, p. 175]. It should be admitted that these arguments can be challenged, which did D. Dombrowsky. The historian believes that Rostislava did not return to her husband, and the prince was forced to marry a third time.