Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Vladimir III Igorevich (October 8, 1170– c. 1211) was Prince of Putivl and Prince of Galicia. He was the son of Igor Svyatoslavich and Euphrosyne Yaroslavna.

  2. Mother. Princess Victoria Melita of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Grand Duke Vladimir Kirillovich of Russia ( Russian: Владимир Кириллович Романов; 30 August [ O.S. 17 August] 1917 – 21 April 1992) was the Head of the Imperial Family of Russia, a position which he claimed from 1938 to his death.

  3. People also ask

  4. 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 ...

  5. Even a few Russian rulers took their bride from these nomads (to give perhaps the most telling example, Vladimir III Igorevich, son of Igor Svyatoslavich, protagonist of The Tale of Igor's Campaign, got married with the daughter of Khan Konchak of the Cuman-Polovtsian confederate who had defeated and captured him and his father).

  6. Vladimir III Igorevich explained. Vladimir III Igorevich (October 8, 1170Putivl, 1211) was a Rus' prince (a member of the Rurik dynasty). He was the son of Igor Svyatoslavich and was with him during his campaign against the Cumans on 13 April 1185, immortalized in the epic The Tale of Igor's Campaign; he participated in the first battle, wherein he set off ahead of the main group along with ...

  7. Роман Ігорович, 1177/1179 – September 1211) [1] was an Olgovichi prince. He was prince of Zvenyhorod (1206–1208, 1210–1211), and of Halych (1208, 1208–1209). [1] He was son of Igor Svyatoslavich and Evfrosinia Yaroslavna, the second daughter of prince Yaroslav Volodimerovich of Halych by his first wife Olga Yuryevna of Kiev.

  8. Igor (born c. 877—died 945, Dereva region [Russia]) grand prince of Kiev and presumably the son of Rurik, prince of Novgorod, who is considered the founder of the dynasty that ruled Kievan Rus and, later, Muscovy until 1598. Igor, successor to the great warrior and diplomat Oleg (reigned c. 879–912), assumed the throne of Kiev in 912.

  1. People also search for