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  1. Genealogy for prince Vsevolod Konstantinovitch Ярославский (1210 - 1238) family tree on Geni, with over 245 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.

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    Foundation of Yaroslavl

    Although there is archaeological evidence of Viking settlements dating from the 8th or 9th centuries in the area of modern day Yaroslavl, the city is officially considered to have been founded by Prince Yaroslav the Wise in 1010, making it the first Russian city on the Volga. This is based on the fact that it is known from chronicles that the city was founded by Yaroslav the Wise when he was prince of Rostov Veliky where he reigned from 988 to 1010. The city was founded on the cape known as t...

    Throughout the 12th century, Yaroslavl was a small fortified town on the border of the Rostov-Suzdal lands and as such was occasionally subjected to raids. In 1149, the city's surrounding area was raided by Novgorodians and in 1152the Volga Bulgars laid siege to the city. However, the siege was unsuccessful and eventually relived by troops from Ros...

    Yaroslavl Principality

    Grand Prince Konstantin Vsevolodovich of Vladimir and Rostov died in 1218 and left the grand throne to his brother Yuri, however, he also left smaller principalities to his sons. In such way, the Yaroslavl Principality was established and Vsevolod Konstantinovich became its first prince. Prince Vsevolod continued the building work started by his father in Yaroslavl and during his reign Yaroslavl's Dormition Cathedral and the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery's Holy Transfiguration Cathedral were...

    Mongol-Tatar Invasion of Rus

    Like many other Russian cities, Yaroslavl was sacked by the Mongol-Tatars in 1238. Prince Vsevolod of Yaroslavl led his troops to join forces with the grand prince of Vladimir and subsequently met his end at the Battle of the River Sit in 1238 fighting the Mongols. Vsevolovod was succeeded by his sons, firstly Vasili Vsevolodovich, who reigned until 1249, and then Konstantin Vsevolodovich. In 1257, censuses were conducted by the Mongol-Tatars to better enable the recruitment of soldiers and c...

    Prince Fyodor the Black of Yaroslavl

    The male Yaroslavl line of Ryurikids died out with Prince Konstantin Vsevolodovich and so Anastasia Vasilievna (daughter of Prince Vasili Vsevolodovich of Yaroslavl) and her mother Ksenia informally ruled as regents. In 1260/1261 Anastasia married Fyodor Rostislavich the Black, son of the Grand Prince of Smolensk, and upon the marriage Fyodor became prince of Yaroslavl. Shortly afterwards Fyodor was called to the Golden Horde where he fought in the wars of Khan Mengu-Timur, who held him favou...

    Our Lady of Tolga Icon

    In 1314 Bishop Propkhor (also known as Trifon) of Rostov founded the Tolgsky Monastery on the banks of the River Volga in the village of Tolga which has since been incorporated into Yaroslavl. It was founded at the site where an icon of the Virgin Mary and the infant Christ miraculously appeared. This icon is now known as the Our Lady of Tolga Icon and was said to be wonder-working. In the following centuries, the monastery would grow rich from donations from people who claimed to have been c...

    Prince Vasili the Terrible Eyes of Yaroslavl

    After Prince Fyodor the Black's death, his sons David and Konstantin ruled Yaroslavl, perhaps jointly until David's death in 1321 (Konstantin presumably died earlier). Both sons were canonised along with their father. David was succeeded by his son Vasili Davidovich known as Terrible Eyes. This was a time when the Moscow Principality was becoming more and more powerful and its leader Grand Prince Ivan I Kalita proposed his daughter Yevdokia as a wife for Vasili. The marriage took place in the...

    Dissolution of the Yaroslavl Principality

    In around 1380 Prince Vasili died and his throne was then occupied by two of his sons, firstly Ivan until he succumbed to plague in 1426 and then Fyodor until 1434. Fyodor’s son Aleksandr Bryukhaty became the last prince of Yaroslavl in 1434. During the Moscow Civil War, Prince Aleksandr of Yaroslavl sided with Grand Prince Vasili II of Moscow and met Vasili Kosoy in battle outside Yaroslavl in 1435. Vasili Kosoy defeated. Later Aleksandr and his wife were captured by troops from Vyatka comin...

    Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery

    In 1501 a great fire practically destroyed the city including the Dormition Cathedral and the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery. The Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery’s Transfiguration of the Saviour Cathedral was rebuilt in 1516 and painted with frescos in 1563 and 1564 which have been preserved to this day and are the oldest in the city. Tsar Ivan the Terrible often visited Yaroslavl to prayer at the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery and the Tolgsky Monastery and made valuable donations whilst there...

    Time of Troubles

    As a major trading and agricultural city Yaroslavl was strategically important during the Times of Troubles and played a significant role. After the First False Dmitri was overthrown in 1606, his widow Maryna Mniszech and her father Jerzy fled to Yaroslavl and remained there until 1608. Later in 1608 after their failed siege of Moscow, the Second False Dmitri and his army took Yaroslavl as the city’s military governor surrendered and provided support to the pretender to spare the city. The ci...

    Golden age

    During the unrest of the Times of troubles much of the city was destroyed and many of its citizens lost their lives, but the city was able to recover over the rest of the 17th century. Yaroslavl's development was thanks to its location on the Volga which meant it was a centre of trade from both the west (via Arkhangelsk) and the East. The city also became a centre for leather and textiles and the production of metal and clay wares. In 1646 the Dormition Cathedral was built once more in the kr...

    After the foundation of St Petersburg, Yaroslavl was connected to the new capital via the Volga and the Vyshnevolotskaya Water System. In 1708 Yaroslavl was made part of the St Petersburg Governorate, then in 1719 it became the centre of the Yaroslavl Province in the St Petersburg Governorate. As St Petersburg became a new port for trade with the w...

    Development

    During Napoleon's Invasion of Russia in 1812, Yaroslavl served as an important support base for the Russian war effort. Yaroslavl continued to grow and develop its industry throughout the 19th Century and it became a centre of textile, tobacco, chemical and metalworking industries. Communications with the city were also improved. In 1812 a bridge over the Kotorosl was built. In 1860 Yaroslavl was linked via a telegraph and in 1870 the Moscow-Yaroslavl railroad was completed.

    Yaroslavl Uprising

    Soviet power was established in 1917 but was briefly overthrown in the 1918 Yaroslavl Uprising. The rebellion was organised by Boris Savinkov's anti-Bolshevik Union for the Protection of the Motherland and Freedom and was successful in capturing strategic buildings in the city and arresting Bolsheviks stationed there. The uprising was supressed by the Red Army who surrounded the city, cut its supplies and started bombarding it with artillery and air fire, heavily damaging many of the city's l...

    Second World War

    In 1929 the Yaroslavl Governorate was dissolved and Yaroslavl found itself as part of the Ivanovo Industrial Region. However the Yaroslavl Region was later seperated from this region in 1936 with Yaroslavl as its centre. Yaroslavl was not occupied by the Nazis during the war however it was bombed in air raids as it was a strategic location for the Soviets due to its status as a transport hub and a crossing on the Volga. Many citizens were killed in these raids and many buildings damaged. In a...

  2. Jul 3, 2021 · Right-believing Princes Basil and Constantine Vsevolodovich of Yaroslavl. Commemorated on July 3. In their youth, holy Princes Basil and Constantine Vsevolodovich lost their father, Vsevolod, who fell in battle with the Tatars (Mongols). Saint Basil, the elder brother, succeeded to the throne.

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  4. Dec 25, 2023 · Konstantin Vsevolodovich (Russian: Константи́н Все́володович) (May 18, 1186, Rostov – February 2, 1218) was the eldest son of Vsevolod the Big Nest and Maria Shvarnovna. In 1206 and 1207, he was the prince of Novgorod. In 1207, his father sent him to rule the towns of Rostov and Yaroslavl.

  5. Vsevolod Konstantinovich of Yaroslavl, Prince of Yaroslavl, was born 18 June 1210 in Rostov, Rostov Rayon, Yaroslavl Oblast, Russia to Konstantin Vsevolodovich of Rostov (1186-1218) and Mariya Mstislavna of Smolensk (c1187-1220) and died 4 March 1238 Battle of the Sit River (1238) of battle...

  6. Media in category "Vsevolod Konstantinovich, Prince of Yaroslavl" The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. Pilgrim of Konstantin, his wife Agafia of Kiev, their children Vasilko, Vsevolod and Vladimir, and courtesans.jpg 399 × 494; 263 KB

  7. Princess Helen of Serbia. Prince Vsevolod Ivanovich of Russia (20 January [ O.S. 7 January] 1914 – 18 June 1973) was a male line great-great-grandson of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia and a nephew of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia. He was the last male member of the Romanov family born in Imperial Russia. [1]

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