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  1. Sophia Fominichna Palaiologina or Paleologue (Russian: София Фоминична Палеолог, romanized: Sofiya Fominichna Paleolog; born Zoe Palaiologina; Medieval Greek: Ζωή Παλαιολογίνα; c. 1449 – 7 April 1503) was a Byzantine princess from the Palaiologos imperial dynasty and the grand princess of Moscow as the second wife of Ivan III of Russia.

  2. Sophia Palaiologina began life as a Byzantine royal, ended as a Grand Princess of Moscow, and endured the fall of great empires and great men in her time. Yet nothing was as fearsome as Sophia herself. Cunning, ruthless, and ambitious, this 15th-century power player stopped at nothing to get to the top—and her darkest act was unforgettable.

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  4. Lived: 1440-1503. Zoe Palaiologina was the niece of the last Byzantine Emperor Constantinus XII. She spent her childhood in Rome, where her name was changed to Sophia. The pope offered her to marry Ivan III, whose first wife Maria of Tver had died. Ivan III saw an opportunity to strengthen his power with the dynastic ties to Byzantine Empire.

  5. medieval-princesses.spbu.ru › en › articlesSophia (Zoe) Palaiologina

    An account about Sophia’s appearance in the summer of 1472 has long attracted scholarly attention. The reason for this was a rather provocative description made by a Florentine humanist Luigi Pulci, who sketched an almost caricature portrait of Sophia depicting her as an extremely ugly woman [32, p. 58-59]. There are, however, other descriptions.

  6. Sophia Fominichna Palaiologina or Paleologue was a Byzantine princess from the Palaiologos imperial dynasty and the grand princess of Moscow as the second wife of Ivan III of Russia. Her father was Thomas Palaiologos, the despot of the Morea. Through her eldest son, Vasili III, she was the grandmother of Ivan IV, the first crowned tsar of all Russia.

  7. 1. Gain access to full-text copies of the Sophia Chronicles. 2. Determine if additional chronicles make further reference to Sofia. 3. Future research questions: •Were there aspects of the Byzantine court traditions prevalent in the Muscovite court before Sofia's arrival? •How, if at all, did Sofia’s role differ from that of the wives of ...

  8. Nov 28, 2023 · A forensic facial reconstruction of Sophia Palaiologina (Palaeologus) by Sergey Nikitin, 1994.

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