Vsevolod I of Kiev

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Vsevolod I redirects here. It can also refer to Vsevolod I Svyatoslavich (c. 1153–1196).
Vsevolod I
Grand Prince of Kiev
Vsevolod Yaroslavich.png
Reign 1078–1093
Full name Vsevolod Yaroslavovich (Andrei)
Titles Prince of Pereyaslav (1054–1073) and
Chernigov (1073–1078)
Born ~1030
Died April 13, 1093 [aged ~63]
Predecessor Izyaslav I
Successor Sviatopolk II
Wives Anastasia (?–1067)
Anna, a daughter of the Cuman Khan (?–1111)
Issue

with Anastasia: Vladimir, Ionna

with Anna: Eupraxia, Rostislav, Catherine, Maria
Dynasty Rurik Dynasty
Father Yaroslav the Wise
Mother Ingegerd Olofsdotter (a daughter of Olof Skötkonung)

Vsevolod I Yaroslavich (Ukrainian and Russian: Всеволод I Ярославич, Old Norse: Vissivald), (1030 – 13 April 1093) ruled as Grand Prince of Kiev from 1078 until his death.

Contents

Early life [edit]

He was the fourth and favourite son of Yaroslav I the Wise by Ingigerd Olafsdottir.

To back up an armistice signed with the Byzantine Empire in 1046, his father married him to Byzantine Anastasia (d. 1067), who tradition holds was a daughter of Emperor Constantine IX Monomachos by his second wife (he gained the Imperial throne through his third marriage), but no reliable source has ever been found to confirm this. However, the couple's son Vladimir Monomakh bore the family name of the Roman/Byzantine emperor, giving the story credence.

Upon his father's death in 1054, he received in appanage the towns of Pereyaslav, Rostov, Suzdal, and the township of Beloozero which would remain in possession of his descendants until the end of Middle Ages. Together with his elder brothers Iziaslav and Sviatoslav he formed a sort of princely triumvirate which jointly waged war on the steppe nomads, polovtsy, and compiled the first East Slavic law code. In 1067 Vsevolod's Greek wife died and he soon married a Kypchak princess, Anna. She brought him another son, who drowned after the Battle of the Stugna River, and two daughters, one becoming a nun and another, Eupraxia of Kiev, marrying Emperor Henry IV.

Kievan court in the times of Vsevolod I

Reign [edit]

Upon Sviatoslav's death in 1076, Vsevolod inherited the Kievan throne, but ceded it to the banished Iziaslav in return for his patrimony of Chernigov. But Iziaslav died two years later, and Vsevolod took the Kievan throne yet again. Vsevolod was versed in Greek learning and spoke five languages. Since he lost most of his battles, his eldest son, Vladimir Monomakh, a grand and famous warrior, did most of the fighting for his father. The last years of his reign were clouded by grave illness, and Vladimir Monomakh presided over the government.

Children [edit]

Vsevolod and his first wife Anastasia (daughter of Constantine IX Monomachos) had only one known son:

  • Vladimir II Monomakh (1053 – 19 May 1125).
  • Anna Vsevolodovna (d. 3 November 1112). Abbess. Visited Constantinople in 1089.

Vsevolod and his second wife had five known children:

Ancestry [edit]

See also [edit]

External links [edit]

Vsevolod I of Kiev
Rurikovich
Born: 1030 Died: 1093
Regnal titles
Preceded by
?
Prince of Pereyaslavl
1054–1073
Succeeded by
Vladimir Vsevolodich
Preceded by
Sviatoslav Yaroslavich
Prince of Chernigov
1073–1078
Succeeded by
Vsevolod I
Preceded by
Sviatoslav Yaroslavich
Grand Prince of Kiev
1076–1093
Succeeded by
Sviatopolk II