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  1. Elena was born in c. 1464–1466. Her parents were Stephen III ("the Great"), the sovereign prince of Moldavia, and his first (or second) wife Princess Evdochia of Kiev. [4] [5] Negotiations to marry her to Ivan Ivanovich ("the Young"), heir to the throne of Moscow, began in the late 1470s. [5] Elena married Ivan the Young on 12 January 1483 ...

    • 18 January 1505 (aged 39 or 41), Moscow
  2. Elena of Serbia 1530 four children: Illegitimate son of Stephen the Great. Stephen V Locust: 21 September 1538 – 20 December 1540 Chiajna before 1540 two children: Grandson of Stephen the Great. Alexandru Cornea the Evil: 21 December 1540 – 9/16 February 1541 Unmarried: Son of Bogdan III. Regency of Elena of Serbia (2/3 September 1546 - 30 ...

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  4. Elena Stefanovna of Moldavia ( Russian: Елена Стефановна, romanized: Yelena Stefanovna ), also known as Elena of Wallachia ( Russian: Елена Волошанка, romanized: Yelena Voloshanka; c. 1464–1466 – 18 January 1505), was a Moldavian princess as a daughter of Stephen III, who later became the grand princess consort ...

  5. Elena Voloshanka Stefanovna of Moldavia , was a Moldavian royal and daughter of Stephen III, who became Crown Princess of Grand Duchy of Moscow by her marriage to Ivan the Young. Elena married Ivan the Young in 1483, giving birth to Prince Dmitry Ivanovich. After the death of her spouse in 1490, her son was appointed the next heir to the throne. She actively participated in politics at court ...

  6. Contains records related to criminal investigations into war crimes and enemy collaboration in Moldova and Transnistria. The records refer to the Jewish mass extermination on the territory of the Republic of Moldavia and Ukraine during World War Second (1939-1945) System of arrangement

  7. The second Russo-Turkish War (1806–1812) also ended in defeat for the Ottoman Empire. The Ottomans signed the Treaty of Bucharest in 1812 which ceded full ownership of Christian Moldavia to the Russians, as well as trading rights on the Danube and the territory of Georgia to the east. For the next 106 years, Moldavia was called Bessarabia.

  8. At the end of the Crimean War, in 1856, by the Treaty of Paris, the southern parts of Bessarabia (including a part of Budjak) were returned to Moldavia, which organized the territory into the districts of Cahul, Bolgrad and Ismail.

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