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| Count Vermandois and Senslis Pepin de Peronne Martel II1 (M) b. 0818 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0797 | King of Italy Bernard Martel |
| Mother-Bio* | Cunigunda (?) of Gellone | |
| Birth* | 0818 | 1 |
| Death | c 0840 | 1 |
| Death | c 0878 | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0846 | Pepin I de SENLIS+ |
| CoParent | Rothaide of BOBBIO | |
| Son-Bio* | 0848 | Comte de Vermandois Herbert de Vermandois I+ |
| ||
King of Italy Bernard Martel1,2 (M) b. 0797, d. 17 Apr 0818 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Apr 0777 | King of Italy and Lombardy Pepin Martel3,2 |
| Mother-Bio* | Berthe de TOULOUSE | |
| Mother-Bio | c 0774 | Chrothais (?)3 |
| Event-Misc* | M3 | |
| Burial* | Milan, Italy4,3 | |
| Name-Var | Bernard, King of Italy (?)3 | |
| GEDCOM* | _MDC Bernard revolted in 817 against Louis I. Louis had him blinded, and he died as a result o3 | |
| Birth | c 0797 | Lombardy, Italy4,3 |
| Birth* | 0797 | 1,5 |
| Event-Misc | bt 0813 - 0817 | King of Italy, Type: Titled4,3 |
| Marriage* | c 0815 | Cunigunde (?)3 |
| Death | 17 Apr 0818 | Milan, Italy, Unknown GEDCOM info: Result of being blinded.4,3 |
| Death* | 17 Apr 0818 | Milan, ITA1,6 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 17 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Cunigunde (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | bt 0817 - 0818 | Pepin, Lord of Peronne (?)+3 |
| CoParent | Cunigunda (?) of Gellone | |
| Son-Bio* | 0818 | Count Vermandois and Senslis Pepin de Peronne Martel II+ |
| ||
Cunigunda (?) of Gellone1 (F) d. 15 Jun 0835 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0752 | William de Gellone Count de Toulouse, Duc de Narbonne |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0771 | Cunigonde (?) of Austrasia |
| Death* | 15 Jun 0835 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | King of Italy Bernard Martel | |
| Son-Bio* | 0818 | Count Vermandois and Senslis Pepin de Peronne Martel II+ |
| ||
Pepin I de SENLIS1 (M) b. c 0846, d. 0893 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0818 | Count Vermandois and Senslis Pepin de Peronne Martel II |
| Birth* | c 0846 | Vermandois, Normandie, FRA1 |
| Death* | 0893 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | c 0876 | Pepin II de Senlis Comte de Senlis+ |
| ||
Berthe de TOULOUSE1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Guillaume de TOULOUSE | |
| Father-Bio | Guillaume de TOULOUSE | |
| Marriage* | King of Italy and Lombardy Pepin Martel | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | King of Italy and Lombardy Pepin Martel | |
| Son-Bio* | 0797 | King of Italy Bernard Martel+ |
| ||
Guillaume de TOULOUSE1 (M) | ||
| Name-Var | Guillaume de TOULOUSE | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio | Berthe de TOULOUSE+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Berthe de TOULOUSE+ | |
| ||
Oda [Ita?] von SACHSEN1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Gebhard II von Wetterau Duke of Lotharingia; Count of Wetterau | |
| Son-Bio* | Udo I von WETTERAU Count of Wetterau, Count in Oberlahngau+ | |
| ||
Gebhard II von Wetterau Duke of Lotharingia; Count of Wetterau1 (M) d. 22 Jun 0910 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Count of Lahngau and Franconia Udo von Lahngau II | |
| Mother-Bio* | (?) Ita | |
| Death* | 22 Jun 0910 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Oda [Ita?] von SACHSEN | |
| Son-Bio* | Udo I von WETTERAU Count of Wetterau, Count in Oberlahngau+ | |
| ||
(?) Ita1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Count of Lahngau and Franconia Udo von Lahngau II | |
| Son-Bio* | Gebhard II von Wetterau Duke of Lotharingia; Count of Wetterau+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Conrad of FRANCONIA | |
| ||
Count of Lahngau and Franconia Udo von Lahngau II1,2 (M) d. c 0879 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Gebhard I von LAHNGAU Count in Niederlahngau | |
| Death* | c 0879 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | (?) Ita | |
| Son-Bio* | Gebhard II von Wetterau Duke of Lotharingia; Count of Wetterau+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Conrad of FRANCONIA | |
| ||
Conrad of FRANCONIA1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Count of Lahngau and Franconia Udo von Lahngau II | |
| Mother-Bio* | (?) Ita | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Gebhard I von LAHNGAU Count in Niederlahngau1 (M) d. c 0879 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0798 | Eudes I d'ORLEANS Count in Niederlahngau |
| Mother-Bio* | Ingletrude de PARIS | |
| Death* | c 0879 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 8 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | Count of Lahngau and Franconia Udo von Lahngau II+ | |
| ||
Ingletrude de PARIS1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Eudes I d'ORLEANS Count in Niederlahngau | |
| Son-Bio* | Gebhard I von LAHNGAU Count in Niederlahngau+ | |
| ||
Eudes I d'ORLEANS Count in Niederlahngau1 (M) b. 0798, d. 0834 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0769 | Hadrian, Lord of Wormsgau (?)2 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0769 | Waldrat of Hornbach (?)2 |
| Name-Var | Eudes, Count of Orléans (?)2 | |
| Event-Misc | M2 | |
| Name-Var | Odo, Count of Orleans (?)2 | |
| Birth* | 0798 | 3,2 |
| Death* | 0834 | 1 |
| Death* | 0834 | 3,2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 25 Mar 2003 | |
| CoParent | Ingletrude de PARIS | |
| Son-Bio* | Gebhard I von LAHNGAU Count in Niederlahngau+ | |
| CoParent | Engeltrude of Paris (?) | |
| Dau-Bio* | 27 Sep 0830 | Ermentrude of Orléans (?)+2 |
| ||
Third Count of Andech Aribo von Andech1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Second Count of Andech Frederick von Andech I | |
| Mother-Bio* | Cunigunda von WOHLFARTSHAUSEN | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | (?) Adelheid | |
| Son-Bio* | 0960 | Frederick II von Andech 4th Count von Andech+ |
| ||
(?) Adelheid1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Third Count of Andech Aribo von Andech | |
| Son-Bio* | 0960 | Frederick II von Andech 4th Count von Andech+ |
| ||
Cunigunda von WOHLFARTSHAUSEN1 (F) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Second Count of Andech Frederick von Andech I | |
| Son-Bio* | Third Count of Andech Aribo von Andech+ | |
| ||
Second Count of Andech Frederick von Andech I1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | First Count of Andech Rapoto von Andech I | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Cunigunda von WOHLFARTSHAUSEN | |
| Son-Bio* | Third Count of Andech Aribo von Andech+ | |
| ||
First Count of Andech Rapoto von Andech I1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Rapoldus of GERMANY | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | Second Count of Andech Frederick von Andech I+ | |
| ||
Rapoldus of GERMANY1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0850 | King of Germany Arnulf (?) |
| Mother-Bio* | Oda von BAYERN | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | First Count of Andech Rapoto von Andech I+ | |
| ||
Oda von BAYERN1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Theodore von Bayern Duke of Bavaria | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | King of Germany Arnulf (?) | |
| Son-Bio* | Rapoldus of GERMANY+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Edith [Hegwig] of GERMANY | |
| ||
King of Germany Arnulf (?)1,2 (M) b. 0850, d. 0899 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0828 | King of Bavaria, Italy, and Germany, Holy Roman Emperor Carloman (?)2 |
| Mother-Bio* | c 0828 | Litwinde (?)3 |
| Father-Bio | 0828 | King of Bavaria, Italy, and Germany, Holy Roman Emperor Carloman (?)3 |
| Note | Arnulf, also called ARNULF OF CARINTHIA, German ARNULF VON KÄRNTEN (d.Dec. 8, 899), duke of Carinthia who deposed his uncle, the Holy Romanemperor Charles III the Fat, and became king of Germany, later brieflywearing the crown of the emperor. Arnulf was the illegitimate son of Charles the Fat's eldest brother,Carloman, who was king of Bavaria. Arnulf inherited the march ofCarinthia from his father but was excluded from the succession to thekingdom on Carloman's death. Arnulf maintained and consolidated hisfrontiers, though in constant tension with the Moravian kingdom ofSvatopluk. In November 887, at Frankfurt, the East Frankish magnatesrevolted against the incompetent emperor Charles the Fat, who since 885had ruled the reunited Carolingian empire. Arnulf was elected king of theEast Franks, and Charles yielded without a struggle. The West Franks,Burgundy, and Italy refused to recognize Arnulf, however, and elected newkings from their own nobility. The Carolingian empire thus finallydisintegrated. Arnulf's base of operations remained in Bavaria, but he successfullydefended his authority as German king in Lotharingia (now Lorraine), andhe even maintained a loose feudal authority over the other kings. He wasan energetic ruler whose suzerainty was acknowledged even by the sons ofSvatopluk after their father's death in 894. In 891 Arnulf inflicted acrushing defeat on the Vikings at the Dyle River, north of Brussels, andtheir raids up the Rhine River consequently ended in 892. Arnulf alsogave his son Zwentibold the crown of Lotharingia. The king of Italy, Guy of Spoleto, had had himself crowned Holy Romanemperor by Pope Stephen V. In 893, after reluctantly crowning Guy's son,Lambert, as co-emperor, the new pope, Formosus, sought help against Guyfrom Arnulf, who accordingly invaded Italy in 894. Arnulf withdrew fromItaly later that same year, but, after Guy's death in 894, Pope Formosusurged Arnulf to invade Italy once more. Crossing the Alps in October 895,Arnulf, although handicapped by bad weather, illness, and the absence ofexpected support from Berengar of Friuli, appeared before the walls ofRome. Rome fell, and in St. Peter's on Feb. 22, 896, Arnulf was crownedemperor by Formosus, who declared Lambert deposed. After a two-week stayin the city, Arnulf marched south to settle accounts with his rival atSpoleto, but en route he was suddenly taken ill and had to return toBavaria where he died in Dec. 899, and was buried at Regensburg. Lambertremained emperor despite the pope's action. The last three years of Arnulf's life, during which his illnesscontinued, saw Germany invaded by Moravians and Hungarians, Lotharingiain revolt against Zwentibold, Italy lost, and France free of Arnulf'sinfluence. [Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97, ARNULF]3 | |
| Event-Misc | M3 | |
| Burial | Regensburg, Germany4,3 | |
| Name-Var | Arnulph Of Germany5 | |
| Name-Var | Arnulf, King of the East Franks (?)3 | |
| Name-Var | Arnulf, Holy Roman Emperor (?)6,3 | |
| Birth | c 0850 | 7,3 |
| Birth* | 0850 | 1 |
| Birth | c 0863 | 2 |
| GEDCOM | 0887 | King of the East Franks, _ELE4,3 |
| Event-Misc | bt 22 Feb 0895 - 0896 | Holy Roman Emperor; by Pope Formosus, at St. Peter's, Rome, Type: Crowned4,3 |
| Death* | 0899 | 1 |
| Death | 0899 | 2 |
| Death | 0899 | 5 |
| Death | 08 Dec 0899 | Bavaria7,4,3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 24 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Oda of Bavaria (?) | |
| Dau-Bio* | Glismode (?)+3 | |
| CoParent | Oda von BAYERN | |
| Son-Bio* | Rapoldus of GERMANY+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Edith [Hegwig] of GERMANY | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | 0893 | King of Germany Louis 'the Child' (?) III2 |
| ||
Edith [Hegwig] of GERMANY1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0850 | King of Germany Arnulf (?) |
| Mother-Bio* | Oda von BAYERN | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
Theodore von Bayern Duke of Bavaria1 (M) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 12 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio* | Oda von BAYERN+ | |
| ||
King of Bavaria, Italy, and Germany, Holy Roman Emperor Carloman (?)1,2 (M) b. 0828, d. 0880 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0805 | King of East Franks Louis 'the German' von Bayern II2 |
| Mother-Bio* | Emma d'Andech | |
| Father-Bio | c 0805 | King of East Franks Louis 'the German' von Bayern II3 |
| Mother-Bio | Emma d'Andech3 | |
| Event-Misc | M3 | |
| Note | Carloman (828-880), king of Bavaria and Italy, was the eldest son ofLouis the German, king of the East Franks. He married a daughter ofErnest, count of the Bohemian mark, and in conjunction with hisfather-in-law resisted the authority of his father in 861 and 863. In865 he was entrusted by Louis with a share in his authority, beinggranted jurisdiction over Bavaria and Carinthia. During the troublesbetween Louis and his two younger sons, Carloman remained faithful to hisfather and carried on the war with the Moravians so successfully that,when peace was made at Forchheim in 874, they recognized the Frankishsupremacy. In 875 the Emperor Louis II died, having named his cousinCarloman, as his successor in Italy, but Pope John VIII preferred CharlesII the Bald. In undisputed control of Bavaria, Carloman crossed the Alpsto claim his inheritance, but was cajoled into returning by the king ofthe West Franks, Charles the Bald. In 876, on his father's death,Carloman became king of Bavaria. On the death of Charles the Bald (877),and after a short campaign against the Moravians, he went again to Italyin 877 and was crowned king of the Lombards at Pavia; but Pope John stillrefused him the imperial crown. Stricken with paralysis, he bequeathedthe whole of his lands and titles to his brother Louis III, the Younger.Carloman died on Sept. 22, 880, at Öttingen, where he was buried. Hisillegitimate son Arnulf became emperor in 896. [Encyclopaedia BritannicaCD '97, CARLOMAN; Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 4, p. 877,CARLOMAN]3 | |
| Name-Var | Carloman, King of Bavaria (?)3 | |
| Birth | 0828 | 4,5,3 |
| Birth* | 0828 | 1,6 |
| Event-Misc | bt 0876 - 0880 | King of Bavaria, Type: Reigned7,3 |
| Death* | 0880 | 1,2 |
| Death | 22 Sep 0880 | Öttingen, Germany5,3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 24 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Litwinde (?) | |
| Son-Bio | 0850 | King of Germany Arnulf (?)+3 |
| Son-Bio* | 0850 | King of Germany Arnulf (?)+2 |
| ||
Ingram de Haysbe1,2 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | (?) Rotbert | |
| Father-Bio | c 0717 | Gunderland[?] (?)3 |
| Name-Var | Ingram, Count of Hesbaye (?)3 | |
| Name-Var | Ingerman, Count of Hesbaye (?)3 | |
| Event-Misc | M3 | |
| Birth | c 0747 | 3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio | c 0778 | Irmengarde de Haysbe+3 |
| Dau-Bio* | c 0778 | Irmengarde de Haysbe+ |
| ||
(?) Rotbert1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Sigrand de HESBAYE | |
| Mother-Bio* | Landree (?) | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Son-Bio* | Ingram de Haysbe+ | |
| ||
Yolande de Courtenay1 (F) b. 1200, d. 1233 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Pierre II de COURTENAY | |
| Mother-Bio* | Yolande de HAINAULT | |
| Father-Bio | c 1155 | Peter II Count de , Byzantine Emperor Courtenay |
| Father-Bio | c 1155 | Peter II Count de , Byzantine Emperor Courtenay |
| Mother-Bio | c 1175 | Yolande of , Byzantine Empress Flanders |
| Mother-Bio | c 1175 | Yolande of , Byzantine Empress Flanders |
| GEDCOM* | BURIAL: Egrecz Abbey, _FA11 | |
| Name-Var | Yolande de Courtenay | |
| Name-Marr | Hungary | |
| Birth | c 1194 | Courtenay, Gatinais, Isle-de-France, France |
| Birth* | 1200 | 1 |
| Marriage | 1215 | King of Hungary Andreas (?) II; 2nd wife2 |
| Marriage* | 1215 | King of Hungary Andreas (?) II3 |
| Death* | 1233 | 1 |
| Death | 1233 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | King of Hungary Andreas (?) II | |
| Dau-Bio | Yolande [Violante] of HUNGARY+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Yolande [Violante] of HUNGARY+ | |
| ||
Pedro III 'the great' of ARAGON1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 1207 | Jaime I 'the conqueror' of ARAGON |
| Mother-Bio* | Yolande [Violante] of HUNGARY | |
| Father-Bio | 1207 | Jaime I 'the conqueror' of ARAGON |
| Mother-Bio | Yolande [Violante] of HUNGARY | |
| Event-Misc | 1276-1285, Type: Ruled | |
| Event-Misc | 1276-1285, Type: Ruled | |
| Name-Var | Pedro III 'The Great' King of Sicily & Aragon | |
| Burial | Conquered Sicily in 1282 | |
| Birth | 1239 | Barcelona, Spain2 |
| Marriage | 1262 | 2 |
| Death | 11 Nov 1285 | Villafranca del Panades, Catalonia2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| ||
King of Hungary Bela (?) III1 (M) b. bt 1148 - 1150, d. 23 Apr 1196 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 1130 | Geza II of HUNGARY |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1130 | Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev |
| Father-Bio | c 1125 | Geza II King of Hungary |
| Father-Bio | c 1125 | Geza II King of Hungary |
| Mother-Bio | c 1130 | Euphrosine Mstislavna of Kiev |
| Mother-Bio | c 1130 | Euphrosine Mstislavna of Kiev |
| Name-Var | Bela III King of Hungary | |
| Name-Var | Bela III King of Hungary | |
| Birth | 1148 | Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergo, Hungary2 |
| Birth | 1148 | Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergo, Hungary2 |
| Birth* | bt 1148 - 1150 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1168 | Anna de Chatillon3 |
| Marriage | c 1171 | Anna de Chatillon2 |
| Marriage | c 1171 | Anna de Chatillon2 |
| Marriage | a 1184 | Margaret Princess of France; 2nd husband 2nd wife |
| Marriage | a 1184 | Margaret Princess of France; 2nd husband 2nd wife |
| Death | 18 Apr 1196 | 2 |
| Death | 18 Apr 1196 | 2 |
| Death* | 23 Apr 1196 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Anna de Chatillon | |
| Son-Bio* | 1175 | King of Hungary Andreas (?) II+ |
| Dau-Bio | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| Dau-Bio | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| CoParent | Margaret Princess of France | |
| Dau-Bio | c 1185 | Constantia Princess of Hungary |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1185 | Constantia Princess of Hungary |
| ||
Anna de Chatillon1,2 (F) d. 1184 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Renaud de CHATILLON-SUR-LOING | |
| Mother-Bio* | c 1125 | Princess of Antioch Constance de Hauteville |
| Father-Bio | c 1120 | Renaud de , Prince of Antioch Chatillon |
| Mother-Bio | c 1125 | Princess of Antioch Constance de Hauteville |
| Name-Var | Agnes de Chatillon | |
| Name-Marr | Hungary | |
| Birth | c 1153 | Antioch, Turkey |
| Marriage* | 1168 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III2 |
| Marriage | c 1171 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III3 |
| Marriage | c 1171 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III3 |
| Death* | 1184 | 2 |
| Death | 1184 | 3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | King of Hungary Bela (?) III | |
| Son-Bio* | 1175 | King of Hungary Andreas (?) II+ |
| Dau-Bio | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| Dau-Bio | c 1176 | Margaret of HUNGARY |
| ||
Margaret of HUNGARY1 (F) b. c 1176, d. a 1223 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | bt 1148 - 1150 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III |
| Mother-Bio* | Anna de Chatillon | |
| Father-Bio | bt 1148 - 1150 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III |
| Father-Bio | bt 1148 - 1150 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III |
| Mother-Bio | Anna de Chatillon | |
| Mother-Bio | Anna de Chatillon | |
| Name-Marr | Empire | |
| Name-Var | Margaret Princess of Hungary | |
| Name-Var | Margaret Princess of Hungary | |
| Birth* | c 1176 | Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergo, Hungary |
| Birth* | c 1176 | Esztergom, Komarom-Esztergo, Hungary |
| Marriage* | 1185 | Isaac II Angelus Emperor of Byzantine Empire; 1st husband 2nd wife |
| Marriage* | May 1204 | 2nd husband 2nd wife |
| Marriage* | May 1204 | 2nd husband 2nd wife |
| Marriage* | bt 1207 - 1208 | 3rd husband |
| Marriage | bt 1207 - 1208 | 3rd husband |
| Marriage | bt 1207 - 1208 | 3rd husband |
| Death* | a 1223 | |
| Death* | a 1223 | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 28 Mar 2003 | |
| ||
Renaud de CHATILLON-SUR-LOING1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Geoffrey de Chatillon Sur Loing Sire de Chatillon, Comte de Gien | |
| Marriage* | b May 1153 | Princess of Antioch Constance de Hauteville2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Princess of Antioch Constance de Hauteville | |
| Dau-Bio* | Anna de Chatillon+ | |
| ||
Princess of Antioch Constance de Hauteville1 (F) b. c 1125, d. c 1163 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | bt 1107 - 1108 | Bohemund II de Hauteville Prince of Antioch |
| Mother-Bio* | Alice of JERUSALEM | |
| Father-Bio | 1107 | Bohemond II Prince of Antioch |
| Mother-Bio | c 1110 | Alix de Rethel |
| Name-Var | Constance de , Princess of Antioch Hauteville | |
| Name-Marr | Chatillon | |
| Birth* | c 1125 | Antioch, Turkey |
| Birth* | c 1127 | 1 |
| Marriage* | bt 1152 - 1153 | Renaud de , Prince of Antioch Chatillon2 |
| Marriage* | b May 1153 | Renaud de CHATILLON-SUR-LOING1 |
| Death* | c 1163 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 28 Mar 2003 | |
| CoParent | Renaud de CHATILLON-SUR-LOING | |
| Dau-Bio | Anna de Chatillon+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Anna de Chatillon+ | |
| CoParent | Raimond de , Prince of Antioch Poitou | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1145 | Maria de Poitou+ |
| ||
Geza II of HUNGARY1 (M) b. c 1130, d. 03 May 1162 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | b 1109 | Bela II 'the blind' of HUNGARY |
| Mother-Bio* | Jelen Nemanjic of Serbia | |
| Birth* | c 1130 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1146 | Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev2 |
| Death* | 03 May 1162 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev | |
| Son-Bio* | bt 1148 - 1150 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III+ |
| ||
Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev1 (F) b. c 1130, d. a 1186 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 1076 | Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV |
| Mother-Bio* | Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD | |
| Birth* | c 1130 | 1 |
| Marriage* | 1146 | Geza II of HUNGARY1 |
| Death* | a 1186 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Geza II of HUNGARY | |
| Son-Bio* | bt 1148 - 1150 | King of Hungary Bela (?) III+ |
| ||
Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV1 (M) b. 1076, d. 15 Apr 1132 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 1053 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV |
| Mother-Bio* | Gytha (?) of England | |
| Name-Var | Mstislas I Grand Duke of Kiev | |
| GEDCOM | Unknown GEDCOM tag: IDNO 1092 | |
| Name-Var | Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV | |
| Name-Var | Mstislas I Grand Duke of Kiev | |
| Birth* | 1076 | 1 |
| Birth* | 1076 | Kiev, Ukraine |
| Birth* | 1076 | Kiev, Ukraine2,3 |
| Birth* | 1076 | Kiev, Ukraine3 |
| Marriage* | 1095 | Kristina Ingesdottir; 1st wife |
| Marriage* | 1095 | Kristina Ingesdottir; 1st wife |
| Marriage* | 1122 | Lyubawa of Novogord; 2nd wife3 |
| Marriage | 1122 | Lyubawa of Novogord; 2nd wife3 |
| Death* | 15 Apr 1132 | 2,3 |
| Death* | 15 Apr 1132 | 1 |
| Death* | 15 Apr 1132 | |
| Death* | 15 Apr 1132 | 3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 25 Mar 2003 | |
| CoParent | Kristina Ingesdottir | |
| Son-Bio | 1096 | Izyaslav II Grand Duke of Kiev |
| Son-Bio* | 1096 | Izyaslav II Grand Duke of Kiev |
| Dau-Bio | c 1099 | Ingeborga of Kiev |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1099 | Ingeborga of Kiev |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1101 | Mariya Agafiya Mstislavna of Kiev |
| Dau-Bio | c 1101 | Mariya Agafiya Mstislavna of Kiev |
| Son-Bio* | c 1102 | Vsevolod Gavriil of Novgorod-Pskov |
| Son-Bio | c 1102 | Vsevolod Gavriil of Novgorod-Pskov |
| CoParent | Lyubawa of Novogord | |
| Son-Bio | c 1097 | Rotislav Grand Prince of Kiev+ |
| Son-Bio* | c 1097 | Rotislav Grand Prince of Kiev+ |
| Dau-Bio | c 1130 | Euphrosine Mstislavna of Kiev+ |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1130 | Euphrosine Mstislavna of Kiev+ |
| CoParent | Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1130 | Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev+ |
| ||
Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD1 (F) d. a 1168 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | Dmitri Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD | |
| Death* | a 1168 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV | |
| Dau-Bio* | c 1130 | Euphrosyne (?) of Kiev+ |
| ||
Dmitri Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD1 (M) | ||
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | ||
| Dau-Bio* | Zawidlicz of NOVGOROD+ | |
| ||
Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV1 (M) b. 1053, d. 19 May 1125 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV |
| Mother-Bio* | Maria Monomachina | |
| Father-Bio | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV2 |
| Mother-Bio | Maria Monomachina2 | |
| Name-Var | Vladimir II Of Kiev2 | |
| Birth | 1053 | 2 |
| Birth* | 1053 | 1 |
| Marriage* | c 1070 | Gytha (?) of England1 |
| Death | 1125 | 2 |
| Death* | 19 May 1125 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Gytha (?) of England | |
| Son-Bio* | 1076 | Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV+ |
| ||
Gytha (?) of England1 (F) | ||
| Marriage* | c 1070 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV | |
| Son-Bio* | 1076 | Mstislav I [Harald] of KIEV+ |
| ||
Vselolad I of KIEV1 (M) b. 1029, d. 13 Apr 1093 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I |
| Mother-Bio* | 1001 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden |
| Father-Bio | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I2 |
| Mother-Bio | 1001 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden2 |
| Name-Var | Vsevolod Of Kiev2 | |
| Birth* | 1029 | 1 |
| Birth | 1030 | 2 |
| Marriage* | 1046 | Maria Monomachina1 |
| Death | 1093 | 2 |
| Death* | 13 Apr 1093 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Maria Monomachina | |
| Son-Bio | 1053 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV+2 |
| Son-Bio* | 1053 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV+ |
| ||
Maria Monomachina1 (F) | ||
| Name-Var | (?) Of The East2 | |
| Marriage* | 1046 | Vselolad I of KIEV3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Vselolad I of KIEV | |
| Son-Bio | 1053 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV+2 |
| Son-Bio* | 1053 | Vladimir II Monomakh of KIEV+ |
| ||
Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I1 (M) b. c 0980, d. 10 Mar 1054 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I |
| Mother-Bio* | Anna Porphyrogenita | |
| Father-Bio | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I2 |
| Father-Bio | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I3 |
| Mother-Bio | c 0962 | Rogneda of POLOTSK2 |
| Mother-Bio | c 0962 | Rogneda of POLOTSK |
| Mother-Bio | c 0962 | Rogneda of POLOTSK3 |
| Event-Misc | M3 | |
| Name-Var | Jaroslav I Vladimirovich , Grand Duke of Kiev3 | |
| Note | Yaroslav I, byname YAROSLAV THE WISE, Russian YAROSLAV MUDRY (b.980--d. Feb. 2, 1054), grand prince of Kiev from 1019 to 1054. A son of the grand prince Vladimir, he was vice-regent of Novgorodat the time of his father's death in 1015. Then his eldest survivingbrother, Svyatopolk the Accursed, killed three of his other brothers andseized power in Kiev. Yaroslav, with the active support of theNovgorodians and the help of Varangian (Viking) mercenaries, defeatedSvyatopolk and became the grand prince of Kiev in 1019. Yaroslav began consolidating the Kievan state through both culturaland administrative improvements and through military campaigns. Hepromoted the spread of Christianity in the Kievan state, gathered a largecollection of books, and employed many scribes to translate Greekreligious texts into the Slavic language. He founded churches andmonasteries and issued statutes regulating the legal position of theChristian Church and the rights of the clergy. With the help of Byzantinearchitects and craftsmen, Yaroslav fortified and beautified Kiev alongByzantine lines. He built the majestic Cathedral of St. Sophia and thefamous Golden Gate of the Kievan fortress. Under Yaroslav, thecodification of legal customs and princely enactments was begun, and thiswork served as the basis for a law code called the Russkaya Pravda('Russian Justice'). Yaroslav pursued an active foreign policy, and his forces wonseveral notable military victories. He regained Galicia from the Poles,decisively defeated the nomadic Pechenegs on the Kievan state's southernfrontier, and expanded Kievan possessions in the Baltic region,suppressing the Lithuanians, Estonians, and Finnish tribes. His militarycampaign against Constantinople in 1043 was a failure, however. Trade with the East and West played an important role in Kievan Rusin the 11th century, and Yaroslav maintained diplomatic relations withthe European states. His daughters Elizabeth, Anna, and Anastasia weremarried respectively to Harald III of Norway, Henry I of France, andAndrew I of Hungary. In his testament, Yaroslav sought to prevent a power struggle amonghis five sons by dividing his empire among them and enjoining the youngerfour sons to obey the eldest, Izyaslav, who was to succeed his father asgrand prince of Kiev. This advice had no lasting effect, and civil warensued after Yaroslav's death.3 | |
| Name-Var | Yaroslav I 'The Wise,' (?) Grand Duke of Kiev3 | |
| Name-Var | Yaroslav I Of Kiev2 | |
| Birth | 0976 | Kiev, Ukraine3 |
| Birth | 0978 | Kiev, Ukraine4,3 |
| Birth* | c 0980 | 1 |
| Marriage | bt Feb 1018 - 1019 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden4,3 |
| Marriage* | 1019 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden1 |
| Death | 20 Feb 1053 | /54 |
| Death | bt 20 Feb 1053 - 1054 | Kiev, Ukraine4,3 |
| Death | 1054 | 2 |
| Death* | 10 Mar 1054 | 1 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden | |
| Dau-Bio* | Agatha of KIEV+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Anastasia Of Kiev+2 | |
| Dau-Bio* | 1012 | Dobremneva Of Kiev+2 |
| Son-Bio* | 1025 | Isiaslav I Of Kiev+2 |
| Son-Bio | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV+2 |
| Son-Bio* | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV+ |
| Dau-Bio* | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+ |
| Dau-Bio | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+3 |
| Dau-Bio | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+2 |
| ||
Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden1,2 (F) b. 1001, d. 10 Feb 1050 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | King of Sweden Olave 'Skötkonung' (?) III | |
| Mother-Bio* | Estrid (?) | |
| Father-Bio | King of Sweden Olave 'Skötkonung' (?) III3 | |
| Father-Bio | King of Sweden Olave 'Skötkonung' (?) III4 | |
| Mother-Bio | Estrid (?)3 | |
| Mother-Bio | Estrid (?)4 | |
| Name-Var | Ingegerd, Princess of Sweden (?)4 | |
| Event-Misc* | F4 | |
| Name-Var | Ingegerd Olafsdotter , Princess of Sweden4 | |
| Name-Var | Ingegarde Of Sweden3 | |
| Birth | c 1001 | Sweden5,4 |
| Birth* | 1001 | 2 |
| Marriage | bt Feb 1018 - 1019 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I6,4 |
| Marriage* | 1019 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I7 |
| Death | bt 10 Feb 1049 - 1050 | Kiev, Ukraine5,4 |
| Death* | 10 Feb 1050 | 2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I | |
| Dau-Bio* | Agatha of KIEV+ | |
| Dau-Bio* | Anastasia Of Kiev+3 | |
| Dau-Bio* | 1012 | Dobremneva Of Kiev+3 |
| Son-Bio* | 1025 | Isiaslav I Of Kiev+3 |
| Son-Bio | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV+3 |
| Son-Bio* | 1029 | Vselolad I of KIEV+ |
| Dau-Bio* | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+ |
| Dau-Bio | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+4 |
| Dau-Bio | 1036 | Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna+3 |
| ||
Grand Duchess of Kiev Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna1,2 (F) b. 1036, d. c 1066 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I |
| Mother-Bio* | 1001 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden |
| Father-Bio | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I3 |
| Father-Bio | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I4 |
| Mother-Bio | 1001 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden3 |
| Mother-Bio | 1001 | Ingegarde Olafsdattir of Sweden4 |
| Name-Var | Anna Yaroslavna , Princess of Kiev4 | |
| Event-Misc | F4 | |
| Burial | Abbaye Villiers, France5,4 | |
| Name-Marr | De Vermandois3 | |
| Name-Var | Anne Of Kiev3 | |
| Name-Var | Anna Agnesa Yaroslavna , Princess of Kiev4 | |
| Note* | Anne of Kiev, refused to be regent of her young son Philippe. Later she was abducted by Raoul of Crepy, lived with him as his wife and married him when his wife died. Widowed a second time, she lost her title as Queen and was henceforth referred to as the Queen Mother, Grand Duchess of Kiev. BURIAL: Abbaye Villiers nr La-Ferte-Alais | |
| Birth | 1024 | Kiev, Ukraine4 |
| Birth | 1036 | 5,4 |
| Birth* | 1036 | 1,6 |
| Marriage* | 29 Jan 1049 | King of France, Duc de Burgogne, Comte de Paris Henri de France I; Reims, Marne, FRA1,7 |
| Marriage | 1051 | King of France, Duc de Burgogne, Comte de Paris Henri de France I3 |
| Marriage | 19 May 1051 | King of France, Duc de Burgogne, Comte de Paris Henri de France I; Rheims, France8,4 |
| Death* | c 1066 | 9,2 |
| Death | 1075 | 3 |
| Death | a 1075 | 4 |
| Death | bt 1076 - 1089 | 5,4 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 17 Feb 2003 | |
| CoParent | King of France, Duc de Burgogne, Comte de Paris Henri de France I | |
| Son-Bio* | b 23 May 1052 | King of France Philippe 'the Fair' de France I+ |
| Son-Bio | b 23 May 1052 | King of France Philippe 'the Fair' de France I+3 |
| Son-Bio | b 23 May 1052 | King of France Philippe 'the Fair' de France I+2 |
| Son-Bio* | 1057 | Hugues 'magnus' de FRANCE Duc de France et Bourgogne, Marquis d'Orleans, Comte de Vermandois, Valois, Chaumont, et Amiens j.u.+ |
| Son-Bio | 1057 | Hugues 'magnus' de FRANCE Duc de France et Bourgogne, Marquis d'Orleans, Comte de Vermandois, Valois, Chaumont, et Amiens j.u.+4 |
| Son-Bio | 1057 | Hugues 'magnus' de FRANCE Duc de France et Bourgogne, Marquis d'Orleans, Comte de Vermandois, Valois, Chaumont, et Amiens j.u.+3 |
| ||
Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I1 (M) b. 0965, d. 15 Jul 1015 Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | bt 0915 - 0927 | Grand Duke of Kiev Sviatoslav (?) |
| Mother-Bio* | (?) Debrima | |
| Father-Bio | bt 0915 - 0927 | Grand Duke of Kiev Sviatoslav (?)2 |
| Father-Bio | bt 0915 - 0927 | Grand Duke of Kiev Sviatoslav (?)3 |
| Mother-Bio | (?) Debrima2 | |
| Mother-Bio | c 0927 | Maloucha (?)3 |
| Event-Misc* | M3 | |
| Name-Var | Vladimir I Sviatoslavich, Grand Duke of Kiev (?)3 | |
| Note* | Vladimir I, in full VLADIMIR SVYATOSLAVICH, byname SAINT VLADIMIR, orVLADIMIR THE GREAT, Russian SVYATOY VLADIMIR, or VLADIMIR VELIKY (b. c.956, Kiev, Kievan Rus [now in Ukraine]--d. July 15, 1015, Berestova, nearKiev; feast day July 15), grand prince of Kiev and first Christian rulerin Kievan Rus, whose military conquests consolidated the provinces ofKiev and Novgorod into a single state, and whose Byzantine baptismdetermined the course of Christianity in the region. Vladimir was the youngest son of the Norman-Rus prince Svyatoslav I andhis mistress Malushka, and was a member of the Rurik lineage dominantfrom the 10th to the 13th century. He was made prince of Novgorod in 970.On the death of Svyatoslav in 972, a long civil war took place betweenhis sons Yaropolk and Oleg, in which Vladimir was involved. Yaropolkattempted to seize the duchy of Novgorod as well as Kiev. Vladimir wasforced to flee to Scandinavia, where he enlisted help from an uncle. From977 to 984 while in Scandinavia, he collected as many of the Vikingwarriors as he could to assist him recover Novgorod. On his way to Kievhe sent ambassadors to Ragnvald, prince of Polotsk, to sue for the handof his daughter Ragnilda. The haughty princess refused to affianceherself to 'the son of a bondswoman,' but Vladimir attacked Polotsk, slewRagnvald and took Ragnilda by force. On his return, he marched against Yaropolk. In 980, he captured Kiev,slew Yaropolk by treachery, and was proclaimed prince of all Russia. In981 he conquered the Chervensk cities, the modern Galicia; in 983 hesubdued the heathen Yatvyags, whose territories lay between Lithuania andPoland; in 985 he led a fleet along the central rivers of Russia toconquer the Bulgars of the Kama, planting numerous fortresses andcolonies on his way. At this time Vladimir was a thoroughgoing pagan.He increased the number of the trebishcha or heathen temples; offered upChristians (Theodore and Ivan, the protomartyrs of the Russian church) onhis altars; he had 800 concubines, besides numerous wives; and spent hiswhole leisure in feasting and hunting. He also formed a great councilout of his boyars, and set his 12 sons over his subject principalities. Although Christianity in Kiev existed before Vladimir's time, he hadremained a pagan, accumulated about seven wives, established temples,and, it is said, had taken part in idolatrous rites involving humansacrifice. In the year 987, as the result of a consultation with hisboyars, Vladimir sent envoys to study the religions of the variousneighbouring nations whose representatives had been urging him to embracetheir respective faiths. The result is amusingly described by thechronicler Nestor. Of the Moslem Bulgarians of the Volga the envoysreported 'there is no gladness among them; only sorrow and a greatstench; their religion is not a good one.' In the temples of the Germansthey saw 'no beauty'; but at Constantinople, where the full festivalritual of the Orthodox Church was set in motion to impress them, theyfound their ideal. 'We no longer knew whether we were in heaven or onearth, nor such beauty, and we know not how to tell of it.' [This story,deriving from the 11th-century monk Jacob, that Vladimir chose theByzantine rite over the liturgies of German Christendom, Judaism, andIslam because of its transcendent beauty is apparently mythicallysymbolic of his determination to remain independent of external politicalcontrol, particularly that of the Germans.] With insurrections troubling Byzantium, the emperor Basil II (976-1025)sought military aid from Vladimir. Vladimir was impressed by the offer ofthe emperor to give him his sister Anna in marriage, and agreed. A pactwas reached between them about 987, when Vladimir also consented to thecondition that he become a Christian. In 988 he was baptized at Khersonin the Crimea, taking the Christian name of Basil out of compliment tohis imperial brother-in-law; the sacrament was followed by his marriagewith the Roman princess. Vladimir ordered the Christian conversion of Kiev and Novgorod, whereidols were cast into the Dnieper River after local resistance had beensuppressed. While crypto-Christians had been numerous in Kiev for sometime before the public recognition of the Orthodox faith, the new RusChristian worship adopted the Byzantine rite in the Old Church Slavoniclanguage. The Byzantines, however, maintained ecclesiastical control overthe new Rus church, appointing a Greek metropolitan, or archbishop, forKiev, who functioned both as legate of the patriarch of Constantinopleand of the emperor. The Rus-Byzantine religio-political integrationchecked the influence of the Roman Latin church in the Slavic East anddetermined the course of Russian Christianity, although Kiev exchangedlegates with the papacy. Among the churches erected by Vladimir was thesplendid Desyatinnuy Sobor or 'Cathedral of the Tithes' in Kiev (designedby Byzantine architects and dedicated about 996) that became the symbolof the Rus conversion. The remainder of his reign was devoted to goodworks and he also expanded education, judicial institutions, aid to thepoor, and introduced ecclesiastical courts. Another marriage, following the death of Anne (1011), affiliated Vladimirwith the Holy Roman emperors of the German Ottonian dynasty and produceda daughter, who became the consort of Casimir I the Restorer of Poland(1016-58). Vladimir extended the realm to include the watersheds of the Don,Dnieper, Dniester, Neman, Western Dvina, and upper Volga, destroyed orincorporated the remnants of competing Varangian organizations, andestablished relations with neighbouring dynasties, consolidating theKievan realm from Ukraine to the Baltic Sea and solidified the frontiersagainst incursions of Bulgarian, Baltic, and Eastern nomads. With hisneighbours he lived at peace, the incursions of the savage Pechenegsalone disturbing his tranquility. His nephew Svyatpolk, son of hisbrother and victim Yaropolk, he married to the daughter of Boleslaus ofPoland. He died at Berestova, near Kiev, while on his way to chastisethe insolence of his son, Prince Yaroslav of Novgorod. The various partsof his dismembered body were distributed among his numerous sacredfoundations and were venerated as relics. The University of Kiev hasrightly been named after the man who both civilized and Christianizedancient Russia. His memory was also kept alive by innumerable folkballads and legends. With him the Varangian period of Russian historyceases and the Christian period begins. The successes of Vladimir's long reign made it possible for the reign ofhis son Yaroslav (ruled 1019-54) to produce a flowering of cultural life.But neither Yaroslav, who gained control of Kiev only after a bitterstruggle against his brother Svyatopolk (1015-19), nor his successors inKiev were able to provide lasting political stability within the enormousrealm. The political history of Rus is one of clashing separatist andcentralizing trends inherent in the contradiction between localsettlement and colonization, on the one hand, and the hegemony of theclan elder, ruling from Kiev, on the other. As Vladimir's 12 sons andinnumerable grandsons prospered in the rapidly developing territoriesthey inherited, they and their retainers acquired settled interests thatconflicted both with one another and with the interests of unity.[Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1961 ed., Vol. 23, pp. 229-30, VLADIMIR I;Encyclopaedia Britannica CD '97, VLADIMIR I; Encyclopaedia Britannica CD'97, RURIK DYNASTY]3 | |
| Name-Var | Vladimir I 'The Great,' (?) Grand Duke of Kiev3 | |
| Name-Var | Vladimir I Of Kiev2 | |
| Birth | c 0955 | of Kiev, Ukraine4,3 |
| Birth | c 0956 | Kiev, Ukraine5,6,3 |
| Marriage | 0960 | Rogneda of POLOTSK2 |
| Birth* | 0965 | 1 |
| Marriage | 0980 | Rogneda of POLOTSK7,3 |
| Marriage* | bt 0987 - 0989 | Anna Porphyrogenita1 |
| Baptism | 0988 | Kherson, Crimea4,8,3 |
| Death | 1015 | 2 |
| Death* | 15 Jul 1015 | Beresyx, RUS1 |
| Death | 15 Jul 1015 | Berestow [near Kiev], Ukraine4,3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 26 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | Anna Porphyrogenita | |
| Dau-Bio | Premislava (?) of Kiev+2 | |
| Dau-Bio* | Premislava (?) of Kiev+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Isiaslav I of KIEV+ | |
| Son-Bio | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I+2 |
| Son-Bio* | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I+ |
| Son-Bio | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I+3 |
| ||
Anna Porphyrogenita1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0940 | Emperor of the East Romanus Porphyrogenitus II |
| Mother-Bio* | 0941 | (?) Teofano |
| Marriage* | bt 0987 - 0989 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I2 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I | |
| Dau-Bio* | Premislava (?) of Kiev+ | |
| Son-Bio* | Isiaslav I of KIEV+ | |
| Son-Bio* | c 0980 | Grand Duke of Kiev Yaroslav 'the Wise' (?) I+ |
| ||
Premislava (?) of Kiev1 (F) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I |
| Mother-Bio* | Anna Porphyrogenita | |
| Father-Bio | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I2 |
| Mother-Bio | c 0962 | Rogneda of POLOTSK2 |
| Name-Var | Premislava Of Kiev2 | |
| Marriage* | c 1000 | Ladislas 'the bald' of HUNGARY3 |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 11 Apr 2001 | |
| CoParent | Ladislas Of Hungary | |
| Son-Bio* | Bela I Of Hungary+2 | |
| CoParent | Ladislas 'the bald' of HUNGARY | |
| Dau-Bio* | Prisca (?) of Hungary+ | |
| ||
Isiaslav I of KIEV1 (M) Pedigree | ||
| Father-Bio* | 0965 | Grand Duke of Kiev Vladimir I (?) I |
| Mother-Bio* | Anna Porphyrogenita | |
| Immigrant | O | |
| Last Edited | 7 Mar 2001 | |
| CoParent | of POLAND | |
| Son-Bio* | Sviatpolk II of KIEV+ | |
| ||
For comments or corrections please contact
Compiler:
Benjamin McAlester Brink
Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
This page was created by John Cardinal's Second Site v1.4.7. Site updated on 4 Oct 2003 at 9:13:21 PM BRINK; 15565 people. Copyright 2003 Ben & Janet Brink