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  1. Bogdan II of Moldavia. Bogdan II (1409 – 17 October 1451) was a prince of Moldavia from October 12, 1449, to October 17, 1451. Family. According to some historians, he was the bastard of Alexander the Good, by an unknown mother. On the contrary, according to the others, he was the brother of Alexander the Good.

  2. The MoldavianPolish War of 1502–1510 was a conflict between the Kingdom of Poland and Moldavia and the Ottoman Empire supporting it. The war ended with a Polish victory under the Treaty of Kamieniec Podolski on January 22, 1510, in which Bogdan III the One-Eyed relinquished his claim to Pokuttia and his marriage plans to Elizabeth ...

    • 1502-22 January 1510
    • Polish victory
    • Pokuttia, Moldavia, Kingdom of Poland
  3. Bogdan I the Founder: c. 1359–1367 Maria three children: Deposed Sas Peter I: 1367 – July 1368 Unmarried: Grandson of Bogdan I, rule not universally accepted by modern historians. Lațcu: July 1368 – 1375 Anna before 1372 one child: Son of Bogdan I, deposed Petru I: Peter II: 1375 – December 1391 Sophia of Lithuania 1387 no children ...

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  5. About Bogdan Mușat. Bogdan II (1409-1451) was the Prince of Moldavia between October 12, 1449 and October 17, 1451, when he was assassinated by Petru Aron. The assassination put Moldavia into a civil war which lasted until his son Stephen gained the Moldavian throne in 1457.

    • "Bogdan Musat", "II"
    • October 15, 1451 (31-40)
    • circa 1415
    • Hospodar of Moldova (1449-51)
  6. Bogdan II (1409-1451) was the Prince of Moldavia between October 12, 1449 and October 17, 1451, when he was assassinated by Petru Aron. The assassination put Moldavia into a civil war which lasted until his son Stephen gained the Moldavian throne in 1457 .

  7. A deep crisis was to follow Alexandru's long reign, with his successors battling each other in a succession of wars that divided the country until the murder of Bogdan II and the ascension of Petru Aron in 1451.

  8. role in Moldavia. In Moldavia. …its independence under its prince, Bogdan. At its greatest extent, Moldavia included Bessarabia and was bounded on the north and northeast by the Dniester River, on the south by the Black Sea and Dobruja and Walachia, and on the west by Transylvania. Read More. Other articles where Bogdan is discussed: Moldavia ...

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