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  1. Ivan III or Ivan Fyodorovich ( Russian: Ива́н Фёдорович) was the Grand Prince of Ryazan (1427–1456) and younger son of Grand Prince Fyodor II of Ryazan. During his reign, he retained good diplomatic relationships with both the Grand Duchies of Lithuania and Moscow. He signed treaties with both Vytautas of Lithuania and Vasily II ...

    • Sofia Dmitriyevna
    • Grand Duchess Anna
  2. In 1520 Ryazan’s annexing completed the unification of Russian lands. It was under Ivan III that Russia stopped paying the tribute to Mongols: the Mongol Yoke was over. Information about Grand Duchy of Russia. The transformation of Moscow Duchy into the united Russian state.

  3. Sep 27, 2020 · Ivan III was the first prince of Rus’ to style himself as the Tsar in the grand tradition of the Orthodox Byzantine Empire. Vasili III followed in his father’s footsteps and continued a regime of consolidating land and practicing domestic intolerance that suppressed any attempts to disobey the seat of Moscow. Terms. Muscovite Sudebnik.

  4. 1427–1456 Ivan III of Ryazan * his son, renounced his allegiance to Golden Horde; 1456–1483 Vasily III of Ryazan * his son, raised in the Moscow court, married to the sister of Ivan III of Russia, an ally of Moscow; 1483–1500 Ivan IV of Ryazan * swore allegiance to Ivan III of Russia

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  6. Apr 12, 2023 · 5 Ivan III – Consolidation of the State. 6 Ivan IV – The First Tsar. 7 Moscow as an Empire: More Land with the Same Problems. 8 More GeoHistories. Geohistory: the Foundations of Moscow and the Russian State. Moscow was officially founded in 1147 by Yuri Dolgoruki, the Grand Prince of Kyiv.

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  7. Russian leader Ivan III was a grand prince of the powerful state of Moscow (Muscovy) from 1462 to 1505. Nicknamed Ivan the Great, he subdued most of the Great Russian lands by conquest and recaptured parts of Ukraine from Poland-Lithuania.

  8. Ivan III (reigned 1462–1505) completed the unification of the Great Russian lands, incorporating Ryazan, Yaroslavl (1463), Rostov (northwest of Vladimir and southeast of Yaroslavl; 1474), Tver (1485), and Novgorod (1478) into the Muscovite principality.

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