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  1. Mstislav of Galicia and Mstislav Romanovich quarreled over who should command the joint Russian forces. As the most senior prince, Mstislav Romanovich demanded to be placed in command, while many other princes wanted to see the more experienced Mstislav of Galicia in charge.

  2. Roman Mstislavich (c. 4 April 1152 – 19 June 1205), also known as Roman the Great, was Prince of Novgorod (1168–1170), Volhynia (1170–1189; 1189–1205), and Galicia (1189; 1198/99–1205). He founded the Romanovichi branch of Rurikids, which would rule Galicia–Volhynia until 1340.

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  4. rusmania.com › history-of-russia › 13th-century13th Century | Rusmania

    'Kalka' by Pavle Ryzhenko. In 1223 Khan Kotyan Sutoevich of the Polovtsians appeared at the court of his son-in-law Prince Mstislav the Bold of Galicia saying that a fearsome enemy had appeared from the east and captured his lands and that if the Rus princes did not help, their land would be next.

  5. the son of Mstislav Romanovich, was able to conscript the forces of Polotsk to help him occupy Smolensk (see NPL, pp. 72, 281) indicates that the control of the princes of Smolensk over Polotsk, at the height of their power, must have been extensive.

  6. Mstislav of Galicia crossed the Kalka River with his army, along with his tributary Danilo of Volynia, determined to go alone on the march. Soon they were followed by Mstislav Sviatoslavovich with the army of Chernigov and Smolensk.

    • Periklis Deligiannis
  7. In 1221, Mstislav Mstislávich, son of Mstislav Rostislávich, liberated Galicia-Volhynia from the Hungarians, but it was Daniel of Galicia, son of Román, who reunified all the territories. Daniel defeated the Poles and Hungarians at the Battle of Yaroslav, and crushed their ally Rostislav Mikhailovich, son of the Chernigov prince in 1245.

  8. MSTISLAV. (1076 – 1132), Vladimir Monomakh's eldest son, grand prince of Kiev, and the progenitor of the dynasties of Vladimir in Volyn and of Smolensk. In 1088 Mstislav Vladmirovich's grandfather Vsevolod appointed him to Novgorod, but in 1093 his father (Monomakh) sent him to Rostov and Smolensk. In 1095 he returned to Novgorod where he ...

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