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      • Upon Aleksandr's death in 1263, his young son Dmitry became prince of Pereslavl-Zalessky and although he would go on to be prince of Novgorod and grand prince of Vladimir in 1276 he is often referred to as Dmitry of Pereslavl-Zalessky as that city served as his base where he fled to during his troubled reign at a time of Mongol-Tatar intervention and internecine wars.
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  2. Dmitry of Pereslavl. Dmitry Alexandrovich ( Russian: Дмитрий Александрович; 1250–1294) [1] [2] was Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1276 to 1281, and again from 1283 until 1293. [3] Biography. Dmitry was the second son of Alexander Nevsky. When his elder brother Vasily died young, Dmitry remained the chief heir to his illustrious father.

  3. Dmitry was the second son of Alexander Nevsky. When his elder brother Vasily died young, Dmitry remained the chief heir to his illustrious father. As early as 1259, he was left by Alexander in charge of Novgorod. Upon Alexander's death in 1264, however, the Novgorodians expelled Dmitry to his native

  4. Apr 30, 2021 · Archaeologists from the Institute of Archaeology, of the Russian Academy of Sciences have identified the royal tombs of the Pereslavl princes Dmitry Alexandrovich and Ivan Dmitrievich, the descendants of Alexander Nevsky, the legendary Rus’ prince, and saint of the Russian Orthodox Church.

  5. Between 1175 and 1302, Pereslavl was the seat of a principality; in 1302, it was inherited by the prince of Moscow following the childless death of Dmitry of Pereslavl's son Ivan. Pereslavl-Zalessky was devastated numerous times by the Mongols between the mid-13th century and the early 15th century.

    • 22.5 km² (8.7 sq mi)
    • 1152
    • 142 m (466 ft)
    • Russia
  6. Mar 4, 2016 · On the advice of Sergius, Dmitry left Pereslavl for the Vologda region, where in 1371 he founded the Savior Monastery, subsequently known as Savior-Prilutsky in his honor. How to get there:...

  7. Prince Dmitry of Pereslavl (who in the early 1280s had ousted Andrey from Vladimir and Nizhny Novgorod with the support of the army of Nogai, becoming his vassal) and his supporters prince Mikhail of Tver and prince Daniil of Moscow refused to travel to Sarai and recognise Tokhta.

  8. Dec 25, 2023 · DMITRY Aleksandrovich ( [1250]-Volok 1294 [819]). He was appointed Prince of Pereyaslavl in 1253 by his father. He was installed as Prince of Novgorod by his father in 1259, but was removed by his uncle Iaroslav Grand Prince of Vladimir in 1264 after his father died.

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