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  1. Reign: 1097–1115: Successor: Vsevolod II of Kiev: Born: c. 1052 Died: 1 August 1115 (aged 62 or 63) Spouse: 1. Theophano Mouzalonissa 2. Maria Yuryevna, daughter of Yuri I Vladimirovich Dolgoruky and Aëpovna, Princess of the Kumans, who is the daughter of Aëpa II Ocenevich, Khan of the Cumans and Okand.

  2. Vsevolod IV Svyatoslavich the Red ( Russian: Вcеволод Святославич Чермный, romanized : Vsevolod Svyatoslavich Chermnyi) or Vsevolod Chermnyi [1] (died August 1212) was Grand Prince of Kiev (1203; 1206; 1207; 1208–1212). He was also Prince of Chernigov (1204–1206/1208) and Belgorod Kievsky (1205). [2] His baptismal ...

  3. Igor II of Kiev. Igor Svyatoslavich. Roman II Igorevich. Vladimir III Igorevich.

  4. Oleg Svyatoslavich ( Russian: Олег Святославич ); c. 1052 – 1 August 1115) was a Rus Sviatoslavichi prince whose equivocal adventures ignited political unrest in Kievan Rus' at the turn of the 11th and 12th centuries. He reigned as Prince of Chernigov from 1097 to 1115, and was the progenitor of the Olgovichi family.

  5. Rostislav Mikhailovich ( Hungarian: Rosztyiszláv, [1] Bulgarian and Russian: Ростислав Михайлович) (after 1210 [2] / c. 1225 – 1262) [3] was a Rurikid prince and a dignitary in the Kingdom of Hungary. [1] He was prince of Novgorod (1230), of Halych (1236–1237, 1241–1242), of Lutsk (1240), and of Chernigov (1241–1242 ...

    • 1254–1262
    • Béla
  6. Igor was the elder son of Svyatoslav Olgovich, by his second wife, the Novgorodian Catherine. By giving the child the baptismal name of Yury, Svyatoslav Olgovich acknowledged his friendship with prince Yury Vladimirovich of Suzdal. [2] In choosing Igor for the boy's princely name, he testified to the close bond that had existed between him and ...

  7. In the spring of 1166, Prince Svyatoslav Vladimirovich of Vshchizh died, and his domain passed to the closest living relatives, the Olgovichi (the ruling dynasty of Chernigov). Oleg’s father, as the senior prince of the Olgovichi, held the authority to allocate the dead prince’s domains, and he gave Vshchizh to one of his sons; one view is ...

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