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  1. Simeon Ivanovich (Russian: Симеон Иванович; 7 September 1317 – 27 April 1353), also known as Semyon Ivanovich (Russian: Семён Иванович), nicknamed the Proud (Russian: Гордый, romanized: Gordy), was Prince of Moscow and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1340 to 1353.

  2. SHOW ALL QUESTIONS. Simeon Ivanovich ( Russian: Симеон Иванович; 7 September 1317 – 27 April 1353), also known as Semyon Ivanovich ( Russian: Семён Иванович ), nicknamed the Proud ( Russian: Гордый, romanized: Gordy ), was Prince of Moscow and Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1340 to 1353. Quick Facts Grand ...

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  4. M. Filimonov/Sputnik. Simeon returned to Moscow, the city he had once ruled, only in 1613, to witness Mikhail Romanov, the first tsar of the new dynasty, ascend to the Russian throne. Simeon...

    • Simeon of Moscow1
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  5. Aug 24, 2022 · 1340 Mar 31. Reign of Simeon of Moscow. Moscow, Russia. Simeon Ivanovich Gordyy (the Proud) was Prince of Moscow and Grand Prince of Vladimir. Simeon continued his father's policies aimed to increase the power and prestige of his state.

  6. May 20, 2023 · http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simeon_of_Moscow. Simoen was Prince of Moscow and Grand Prince of Vladimir. Simeon continued his father's policies of supporting the Golden Horde and acting as its leading enforcer in Russia. Simeon's rule was marked by regular military and political standoffs against Novgorod Republic and Lithuania.

    • Moscow, город Москва
  7. May 21, 2018 · SIMEON (1316 – 1353), prince of Moscow and grand prince of Vladimir. Like his father Ivan I Danilovich "Moneybag," Simeon Ivanovich ("the Proud") collaborated with the Tatar overlords and secured a preferential status.

  8. Moscow, the Golden Horde, and the Kazan Khanate from a Po ycultural Point of View THE seventeenth-century chronicles record an interesting event under the year 1574: At that time Tsar Ivan Vasil'evich enthroned Simeon Bekbulatovich as tsar in Moscow and crowned him with the crown of the tsars, and called himself [simply]

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