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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › VytautasVytautas - Wikipedia

    According to the 16th century Bychowiec Chronicle, his first wife was Maria Łukomska, however, this is not confirmed by other sources. Depictions Vytautas and Kęstutis imprisoned by Jogaila. Painting by Wojciech Gerson. A sculpture for Vytautas is display on the Millennium of Russia monument in Veliky Novgorod.

    • 4 August 1392 – 27 October 1430
    • Birutė
  3. She probably was the first wife of Vytautas the Great, Grand Duke of Lithuania. Anna was mother of Sophia of Lithuania, the wife of Vasily I of Moscow. [1] She is best remembered for helping Vytautas to escape from a prison in Kreva in 1382 and thus probably saving his life.

    • disputed
    • Kęstutis (by marriage)
    • 4 August 1392 – 31 July 1418
  4. 1 day ago · In an effort to consolidate his position and widen his power, Jogaila married the 12-year-old Polish queen Jadwiga and was crowned king of Poland in Kraków on Feb. 15, 1386, as Władysław II Jagiełło. Vytautas then waged an intermittent struggle for power with Jogaila and on occasion sought further assistance from the Teutonic Order.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
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  6. Vytautas was the son of Kęstutis, Duke of Trakai, and his second wife Birutė from western Samogitian region of Lithuania. Prior to her marriage to Kęstutis, Birutė guarded an eternal flame in a pagan sanctuary on a hill near today's town of Palanga on the Baltic Sea coast. Vytautas was Birutė's oldest son.He was born about the year 1350 in ...

  7. Aug 15, 2023 · The first wife of Witold was Anna, the daughter of the Duke of Smolensk, Sviatoslav Iwanowicz (RUS) [13] [14] née Rurykowicz. The wedding with Anna took place around 1370 [13], at the latest in 1376 or 1377 [14]. Anna died on July 31, 1418 and was buried in the Vilnius cathedral.

    • Lithuania
  8. Catherine I (1684–1727) Lithuanian peasant who became the second wife of Tsar Peter the Great of Russia and succeeded him as empress of Russia from 1725 to 1727. Name variations: Catherine Skavronsky; Marta, Marfa, or Martha Skovoronski (Skavronska or Skavronskii, Skovortskii, Skowronska); Yekaterina Alexseyevna.

  9. Catherine was the first woman to rule Imperial Russia, opening the legal path for a century almost entirely dominated by women, including her daughter Elizabeth and granddaughter-in-law Catherine the Great, all of whom continued Peter the Great's policies in modernizing Russia.

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