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  1. Feb 4, 2024 · Saint Vladimir Svyatoslavich the Great, also sometimes spelled Volodymyr Old East Slavic: Володимеръ Святославичь (c. 958 – 15 July 1015, Berestovo) was the grand prince of Kiev who converted to Christianity in 988[1], and proceeded to baptise the whole Kievan Rus.

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  2. May 1, 2022 · The daughter of Vladimir Svyatoslavich (-after 1018). The Primary Chronicle records that Vladimir and his wife Rogned had two unnamed daughters[106]. The Primary Chronicle records that Boleslav of Poland fled from Kiev in 1018 with Iaroslav's two sisters[107]. From the Russian Wikipedia page of her father, Vladimir Svyatoslavich:

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  4. When Volodymyr Svyatoslavich"The Great" Grand Prince of Kyiv was born in 0960, in Volyn, Ukraine, his father, Sviatoslav I Igorevich, was 17 and his mother, Malusha Malkovna de Lubeck Grand Duchess of Kiev, was 26. He married Princess Olava (Allogia) Eriksdottir of Norway, Weden and Bohemia,Grand Princess of Kiev about 0978, in Kyiv, Kiev Uyezd ...

    • Way to The Throne
    • Baptism of The Rus'
    • Later Years and Death
    • Legacy
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    Vladimir was the youngest son of Sviatoslav I of Kiev by his housekeeper Malusha, described in the Norse sagas as a prophetesswho lived to the age of 100 and was brought from her cave to the palace to predict the future. Malusha's brother Dobrynya was Vladimir's tutor and most trusted adviser. Hagiographic tradition also connects his childhood with...

    Valdimir's conversion

    Russian Primary Chronicle, a history of the Kievan Rus from around 850 to 1110, reports that in the year 987, Vladimir sent envoys to study the religions of the various neighboring nations whose representatives had been urging him to embrace their respective faiths. The result was described in legendary terms by the chronicler Nestor. According to this version, the envoys reported of the Muslim Bulgarians of the Volga there was no gladness among them, "only sorrow and a great stench," and tha...

    Alternate account

    Arabsources, both Muslim and Christian, present a more straightforward story of Vladimir's conversion. In this version, the Byzantine emperor Basil II faced a revolt in 987. Basil thus turned to the Rus' for assistance, even though they were considered enemies at that time. Vladimir agreed, but his price was the hand of the princess Anna. In return, he agreed to accept Orthodox Christianity as his religion and bring his people to the new faith. When the wedding arrangements were settled, Vlad...

    Returning to Kiev, Vladimir began the conversion of his people to Christianity. He formed a great council out of his boyars, and set twelve of his sons over his various principalities. He put away his former pagan wives and mistresses and destroyed pagan temples, statues, and holy sites. He built churches and monasteries and imported Greek Orthodox...

    Vladimir and his grandmother Olga are honored as the founders of Russian Christianity. After his death, he was immediately hailed my many as a saint and martyr. The various parts of his dismembered body were distributed among the numerous churches and monasteries he had founded and were venerated as relics. Many of these foundations remain key inst...

    Boiselair, Georges. Saint Volodymyr the Beautiful Sun: Grand Prince of Kiev, 958-1015. Ukrainian millenium. Winnipeg: Volodymyr Pub. House, 1988. ISBN 9780920739655.
    Breck, John, John Meyendorff, and E. Silk. The Legacy of St. Vladimir: Byzantium, Russia, America. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1990. ISBN 978-0881410785.
    Butler, Francis. Enlightener of Rusʹ: The Image of Vladimir Sviatoslavich Across the Centuries. Bloomington, Ind: Slavica, 2002. ISBN 9780893572907.
    Korpela, Jukka. Prince, Saint, and Apostle: Prince Vladimir Svjatoslavič of Kiev, His Posthumous Life, and the Religious Legitimization of the Russian Great Power. Veröffentlichungen des Osteuropa-...

    All links retrieved May 9, 2020. 1. St. Vladimir the Great. newadvent.org 2. St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary. svots.edu

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  6. Apr 15, 2024 · son Yaroslav the Wise. Vladimir I (born c. 956, Kyiv, Kievan Rus [now in Ukraine]—died July 15, 1015, Berestova, near Kyiv; feast day July 15) was the grand prince of Kyiv and the first Christian ruler in Kievan Rus. His military conquests consolidated the provinces of Kyiv and Novgorod into a single state, and his Byzantine baptism ...

  7. Sep 8, 2022 · Francis Butler, Enlightener of Rus’. The Image of Vladimir Sviatoslavich across the Centuries (Bloomington: Slavica, 2002). Liudmila V. Charipova, “Peter Mohyla and St Volodimer: Is There a Symbolic Link?,” The Slavonic and East European Review 80, no. 3 (July 2002): 439–458.

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