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    • February 14, 1509February 14, 1509
  2. Dmitry Ivanovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 10 October 1483 – 14 February 1509), [1] also known as Dmitry the Grandson ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович Внук ), was Grand Prince of Moscow from 1498 to 1502. He was the only surviving son of Ivan Ivanovich, the eldest son of Ivan III of Russia .

    • The Unlawful Heir
    • Death of A Cruel Child
    • The Uglich Case
    • Why Dmitry Probably Wasn’T Killed

    Dmitry Ivanovich, the last son of Ivan the Terrible, was a full namesake of his first ever son, Dmitri Ivanovich (October 1552 – 26 June 1553), who was also the first ever Tsarevich (heir apparent) to the Russian throne. Naming your son after his dead half-brother was something Russians never did, in fear of bad luck. What reason could Ivan possibl...

    When Ivan died in 1584, Fyodor, who became the next Tsar, didn’t acknowledge Dmitry as the heir. He was treated as a tsar’s son born out of wedlock, or bastard. Dmitry and his mother were sent away from Moscow to Uglich. English diplomat Jerome Horsey wrote that “the ex-tsarina was accompanied by her retinue, and packed dresses, jewelry, food, hors...

    What ensued has become known as the ‘Uglich Case’. The commission interrogated over 150 people in the city, including those participating in the murder of the Moscow servicemen dispatched to watch over Dmitry. The committee’s main goal was to disproveMaria’s claim that Kachalov and the Bityakovskis were sent to kill Dmitry. Immediately after the in...

    This version remained the official one, and when in 1613 the Romanovs came to power, they accepted it also. However, Russian historians of the 19th and 20th centuries, including greats like Sergey Platonov and Ruslan Skrynnikov, argue that Dmitry wasn’t murdered and that the first investigation of 1591 was correct. The main reason to support this c...

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  4. Depiction of Palm Sunday procession with Ivan III and his family, including his son Vasili and grandson Dmitry, on a shroud belonging to Elena Voloshanka, c. 1498. The character of the government of Moscow changed significantly under Ivan III, taking on a new autocratic form, as Moscow increased its hegemony, but also to new imperial pretensions.

  5. Russian Orthodox. Dmitry of Uglich. the Wonderworker, Slain Crown Prince or Pious Crown Prince. Venerated in. Eastern Orthodox Church. Feast. May 15 / 28. Dmitry Ivanovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 29 October [ O.S. 19 October] 1582 – 15 May 1591) [1] was the youngest son of Russian tsar Ivan the Terrible.

  6. Jan 30, 2024 · published on 30 January 2024. Available in other languages: French. Ivan the Great Tearing the Khan's Letter to Pieces. Aleksey Kivshenko (Public Domain) Ivan III of Russia (Ivan the Great) was the Grand Prince of Moscow and Russia from 1462 to 1505.

  7. Dmitry Ivanovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 10 October 1483 – 14 February 1509), also known as Dmitry the Grandson ( Russian: Дмитрий Иванович Внук ), was Grand Prince of Moscow from 1498 to 1502. He was the only surviving son of Ivan Ivanovich, the eldest son of Ivan III of Russia.

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