fbpx
Wikipedia

Grand Prince of Kiev

The Grand Prince of Kiev (sometimes grand duke) was the title of the monarch of Kievan Rus', residing in Kiev (modern Kyiv) from the 10th to 13th centuries.[citation needed] In the 13th century, Kiev became an appanage principality first of the grand prince of Vladimir and the Mongol Golden Horde governors, and later was taken over by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[citation needed]

Grand Prince of Kiev
Details
First monarchOleg the Wise
(first undisputed "Prince of Kiev")[1]
Yaroslav the Wise
(first undisputed "Grand Prince of Kiev")[2]

Rus' chronicles such as the Primary Chronicle are inconsistent in applying the title "grand prince" to various princes in Kievan Rus'.[3] Although most sources consistently attribute it to the prince of Kiev,[3] there is no agreement which princes were also "grand prince", and scholars have thus come up with different lists of grand princes of Kiev.[4]

Background edit

Origins edit

According to a founding myth in the Primary Chronicle, Kyi, Shchek and Khoryv and their sister Lybid co-founded the city of Kiev (Kyiv), and the oldest brother Kyi was "chief of his kin" (Old East Slavic: кнѧжаше в родѣ, romanized: knyazhashe v rodie).[5] Some western historians (i.e., Kevin Alan Brook) suppose that Kiev was founded by Khazars or Magyars. Kiev is a Turkic place name (Küi = riverbank + ev = settlement).[6] At least during the 8th and 9th centuries Kiev functioned as an outpost of the Khazar empire (a hill-fortress, called Sambat, "high place" in Old Turkic). According to Omeljan Pritsak, Constantine Zuckerman and other scholars, Khazars lost Kiev at the beginning of the 10th century.[7][8]

At some point, Rurik, a Varangian prince, allegedly founded the "Rurik dynasty" (named after him in the 16th century) in 862 through the "calling of the Varangians", but he is considered to be a legendary, mythical and perhaps even entirely fictional character by modern scholars.[a] The Primary Chronicle never calls Rurik a prince of Kiev; the passage wherein Oleg "sat in Kiev" (Old East Slavic: понелѣже сѣде въ Кыевѣ, romanized: ponelѣzhe sѣde v" Kyyevѣ) makes no mention of Rurik, suggesting the author was 'more interested in the first Rus' ruler to reside in Kiev than with any founder of a dynasty'.[11]

Kiev was captured by Askold and Dir, whose existence is also debatable, and are called "boyars" who "did not belong to [Rurik's] family" by the Primary Chronicle.[12][1] According to some Russian historians (i.e., Gleb S. Lebedev), Dir was a chacanus of Rhos (Rus khagan).[13] Thomas Noonan asserts that one of the Rus "sea-kings", the "High king", adopted the title khagan in the early 9th century.[14] Peter Benjamin Golden maintained that the Rus became a part of the Khazar federation, and that their ruler was officially accepted as a vassal khagan of the Khazar Khagan of Itil.[15]

First princes edit

Askold and Dir are narrated to have been killed in 882 by Oleg, the first "prince" (knyaz) of Kiev according to the Primary Chronicle, but not yet a "grand prince" (velikiy knyaz).[1][11] His relation to Rurik is debatable, and has been rejected by several modern scholars.[16] Although later Muscovite chroniclers would call Oleg a "grand prince" and Kiev a "grand principality" (Old East Slavic: великое княжение, romanized: velikoe knyazhenie), the earliest sources do not.[17] Whereas the reconstructed original Greek text of the Rusʹ–Byzantine Treaty (907) calls Oleg a μεγας ἄρχων or "great archon" ("ruler"), the Old East Slavic translations found in the Laurentian Codex and Hypatian Codex do not.[18] On the other hand, only when the Byzantine emperors Leo VI the Wise, Alexander and Constantine VII are called "the Great", Oleg is also called "the Great".[18] Dimnik (2004) argued it should thus be read as "the Rus' prince Oleg the Great" instead of "Oleg the grand prince of Rus'".[18] Similarly, the only occasions Igor of Kiev is ever called velikiy knyaz in the Primary Chronicle (six times) are all found in the Rusʹ–Byzantine Treaty (945), where the Greek emperors are also called k velikiy tsesarem Grech'-skim ("to the great Greek caesars").[18] The same happens when, after Sviatoslav's invasion of Bulgaria, the 971 peace treaty is recorded; it is the only place in the Primary Chronicle where Sviatoslav I is named a velikiy knyaz.[18] Most significantly, the Nachal'nyy svod (found only in the Novgorod First Chronicle) never mentions any of these peace treaties, and never calls Oleg, Igor or Sviatoslav a velikiy knyaz.[19] According to Dimnik (2004), this means that Greek scribes added the word "great" to the princely title, whereas the Rus' themselves did not, except when translating these three treaties from Greek into Slavic.[19]

Yaropolk I of Kiev and Volodimer I of Kiev are both steadily referred to as just a knyaz by the Novgorod First Chronicle and the Laurentian and Hypatian Codices.[20] There is one exception: the Hypatian Codex writes Volodimir knyaz velikii ("Volodimir the grand prince") when reporting the latter's death; because the Hypatian Codex is the latest source of the three (compiled c. 1425), this is probably a later interpolation.[20] A Paterik of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra of the early 13th century also calls Volodimer a velikiy knyaz, but that was written two centuries after his death, and may not necessarily describe how he was known while alive.[21] The oldest surviving source available is Hilarion of Kiev's Sermon on Law and Grace (c. 1040s), which calls Volodimer a kagan (a Khazar title) rather than a knyaz.[21] Some scholars have suggested that this indicates Kievan Rus' had won its independence from the Khazars in the early 10th century, and had inherited the title of kagan from them, before exchanging it for knyaz later.[21] The Church Statute of Prince Volodimir starts with "Behold, I, Prince Vasilii, called Volodimir," (Old East Slavic: Се аз, князь Василий, нарицаемыи Володимир, romanized: Se yaz, knyaz' Vasilii, naritsayemy Volodimir,[22]), but later in the text he interchangeably calls himself knyaz and velikiy knyaz, and the earliest copy of this document is from the 14th century, so it is difficult to say what the lost original text said.[22] Since chroniclers also regularly referred to Volodimer as velikiy without mentioning his title – the reason why he has become known to history as Volodimer "the Great" – suggests that this adjective was not part of his title, but a sobriquet or nickname, that was also applied to other monarchs or clerics around him.[23]

Velikiy knyaz Yaroslav and descendants edit

Sviatopolk I of Kiev was never called velikiy knyaz ("grand prince") in any source.[24] Moreover, he has been stigmatised by chroniclers with the nickname "the Accursed" or "the Damned" (okayannyy) because of how he violently rose to power in the war of succession following Volodimir's death in 1015.[24] On the other hand, Yaroslav the Wise is the first widely attested velikiy knyaz ("grand prince") in virtually all sources of the second half of the 11th century, and surviving copies of the Church Statute of Prince Yaroslav also strongly suggest he applied the title to himself while he was alive.[25] Dimnik (2004) concluded that by the end of Yaroslav's reign in the third quarter of the 11th century, he was regularly calling himself and being called the velikiy knyaz of Kiev, and the competing titles of kagan and tsar had decisively lost in favour of velikiy knyaz as the preferred appellation of the Kievan monarch.[26] The velikiy knyaz was designated by genealogical seniority and given the right to reign from Kiev – the grand principality superior to all other principalities in the realm – over all other princes descended from Yaroslav.[27] The reason why the system of succession did not always work as Yaroslav intended was because some princes simply usurped power through a coup d'état at the court in Kiev.[28] The 1097 Council of Liubech upgraded the dynastic capitals of the inner circle of senior princes to grand principalities as well, but still acknowledged the superiority of Kiev.[28]

It was not until the Sack of Kiev (1169) by Andrey Bogolyubsky of Vladimir-Suzdal that the grand princes of Vladimir launched a fierce competition with the grand princes of Kiev over who had primacy over the entire realm.[28] Since then, the phrase "velikiy knyaz of Kiev" was merely titular, and chroniclers applied the symbolic title of velikiy knyaz to Kiev or Vladimir on the Klyazma according to whomever they favoured.[28] In practice, the military supremacy of any particular prince – especially from Vsevolod the Big Nest onwards – would determine whether the other princes would or would not acknowledge him as "grand prince".[29] After the Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus' and Sack of Kiev in the late 1230s and 1240s, the khans of the Golden Horde "in effect, terminated the office of the velikiy knyaz' of Kiev and conferred political supremacy on their puppet in Vladimir."[30]

Princes of Kiev edit

Name Lifespan Ruled From Ruled Until Notes
Oleg[31] ?–912/922/940s[31] 881/2 or 889[32] 912/922/940s[31] First knyaz ("prince") of Kiev.[1][11] Relation to Rurik and Igor is disputed.[31] Date of accession is unclear in the Primary Chronicle.[32]
Date of death is disputed:
Igor of Kiev ?–945 912 945 son of Rurik according to Primary Chronicle, but many scholars doubt or reject this claim.[b]
Olga of Kiev ?–969 945 962 (regent-consort)
Sviatoslav I[34] 942–972 962 972 son of Igor
Yaropolk I (Jaropolk)[35] 958 (960?)–980 972 980 One of Svyatoslav's two sons
Volodimir I "the Great" 958–1015 980 1015 One Svyatoslav's two sons; in 988 baptized the Rus'. The earliest sources call him just knyaz ("prince") or kagan, and nickname him Volodimir velikiy ("Volodimir the Great"); later sources also call him velikiy knyaz ("grand prince").[36]
Sviatopolk I "the Accursed"[c] 980–1019 1015 1019 origin is debatable. Is never called velikiy knyaz ("grand prince") in any source.[24]

Grand princes of Kiev edit

Name House Lifespan Ruled From Ruled Until Notes
Yaroslav the Wise Volodimerovichi[9] 978–1054 1019 1054 son of Vladimir the Great, jointly with Mstislav in 1024–36. First widely attested velikiy knyaz ("grand prince") in virtually all contemporary sources.[2]
Iziaslav I[37] Volodimerovichi[9] 1024–1078 1054 1073[37] son of Yaroslav, first time (in 1068/69 lost state power to Polotsk princes)
Sviatoslav II[37] Volodimerovichi[9] 1027–1076 1073[37] 1076[37] son of Yaroslav
Iziaslav I[37] Volodimerovichi[9] 1024–1078 1076[37] 1078 second time,[37] in 1075 Pope Gregory VII sent him a crown from Rome
Vsevolod I Volodimerovichi[9] 1030–1093 1078 1093 son of Yaroslav
Sviatopolk II Iziaslavichi 1050–1113 1093 1113 son of Iziaslav I
Vladimir II Monomakh Monomakhovychi 1053–1125 1113 1125 son of Vsevolod I
Mstislav I of Kiev[38] Monomakhovychi 1076–1132 1125[38] 1132[38] son of Vladimir II
Yaropolk II[39] Monomakhovychi 1082–1139 1132[38] 1139[40] brother of Mstislav I
Viacheslav I Monomakhovychi 1083–1154 1139 1139 brother of Yaropolk II (first time)
Vsevolod II[40] Svyatoslavichi ?–1146 1139[40] 1146 son of Oleh Svyatoslavich
Igor II Svyatoslavichi ?–1147 1146 1146 brother of Vsevolod II
Iziaslav II Monomakhovychi 1097–1154 1146 1149 son of Mstislav I (first time)
Yuri Dolgorukiy Monomakhovychi 1099–1157 1149 1151 (first time)
Viacheslav I Monomakhovychi 1083–1154 1151 1154 (second time) jointly
Iziaslav II Monomakhovychi 1097–1154 (second time) jointly
Rostislav I Monomakhovychi 1110–1167 1154 1154 brother of Iziaslav II (first time)
Iziaslav III Svyatoslavichi ?–1162 1154 1155 (first time)
Yuri I Dolgorukiy[40] Monomakhovychi 1099–1157 1155[40] 1157[40] (second time)
Iziaslav III Svyatoslavichi ?–1162 1157 1158 (second time)
Rostislav I[40] Monomakhovychi 1110–1167 1158[40] 1167[40] (second time) jointly with Iziaslav III in 1162
Mstislav II Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–1172 1167 1169 son of Iziaslav II (first time)
Gleb[40] Yurievichi (Monomakh) ?–1171 1169[40] 1169 son of Yuri Dolgorukiy (first time)
Mstislav II Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–1172 1170 1170 (second time)
Gleb Yurievichi (Monomakh) ?–1171 1170 1171 (second time)
Vladimir III Mstislavich Monomakhovychi 1132–1171 1171 1171 son of Mstislav I the Great
Michael I Yurievichi (Monomakh) ?–1176 1171 1171 half-brother of Gleb
Roman I Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1180 1171 1173 son of Rostislav I (first time)
Vsevolod III the Big Nest Yurievichi (Monomakh) 1154–1212 1173 1173 brother of Michael I
Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1215 1173 1173 brother of Roman I (first time)
Sviatoslav III Olgovichi ?–1194 1174 1174 son of Vsevolod II (first time)
Yaroslav II Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–1180 1174 1175 son of Iziaslav II (first time)
Roman I Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1180 1175 1177 (second time)
Sviatoslav III[40] Olgovichi ?–1194 1177[40] 1180 (second time)
Yaroslav II Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–1180 1180 1180 (second time)
Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1215 1180 1182 (second time)
Sviatoslav III Olgovichi ?–1194 1182 1194 (third time)
Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1215 1194 1202 (third time)
Igor III Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–? 1202 1202 son of Yaroslav II (first time)
Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1215 1203 1206 jointly (fourth time)
Roman II the Great Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) 1160–1205 son of Mstislav II, jointly (1203–05)
Rostislav II Rostislavichi (Monomakh) 1173–1214 son of Rurik Rostislavich, jointly (1204–06)
Vsevolod IV the Red Svyatoslavichi (Olgovichi) ?–1212 1206 1207 son of Sviatoslav III (first time)
Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1215 1207 1210 (fifth time)
Vsevolod IV the Red Svyatoslavichi (Olgovichi) ?–1212 1210 1212 (second time)
Igor III Iziaslavichi (Monomakh) ?–? 1212 1214 (second time)
Mstislav III Rostislavichi (Monomakh) ?–1223 1214 1223 son of Roman I
Vladimir IV Rurikovich Rostislavichi (Monomakh) 1187–1239 1223 1235 brother of Rostislav II
Iziaslav IV Vladimirovich Siveria (Olgovichi) or
Rostislavichi (Monomakh)
1186–? 1235 1236 son of Vladimir Igorevich or Mstislav
Yaroslav III Yurievichi (Monomakh) 1191–1246 1236 1238 son of Vsevolod the Big Nest (first time)
Michael II Svyatoslavichi (Olgovichi) 1185–1246 1238 1239 son of Vsevolod IV (first time)

Princes of Kiev after the Mongol invasion edit

Due to the Mongol invasion of 1240, Michael of Chernigov left Kiev to seek military assistance from King Béla IV of Hungary. During that time, Prince Rostislav of Smolensk occupied Kiev, but was captured the same year by Daniel of Galicia who placed his voivode Dmytro to guard Kiev while the grand prince was away. Being unsuccessful in Hungary, Michael visited Konrad I of Masovia. Receiving no results in Poland, he eventually asked Daniel of Galicia for asylum due to the Mongol invasion. Since the 14th century, the principality of Kiev started to fall under the influence of Grand Duchy of Lithuania. In 1299, the Metropolitan of Kiev Maximus moved his metropolitan see from Kiev to Vladimir-on-Klyazma. In 1321, after the battle on the Irpin River, Gediminas installed Mindgaugas, one of his subjects from the house of Olshanski, a descendant of the family of Vseslav of Polotsk that was exiled to the Byzantine Empire. In 1331, Kiev was once again taken by a member of the Siverski house (Olgovichi branch), the prince of Putivl. After Grand Duke Algirdas defeated the Golden Horde at the Battle of Blue Waters in 1362, he incorporated Kiev and its surrounding areas into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

Name House Lifespan Ruled from Ruled until Notes
Rostislav Mikhailovich Smolensk (Rostislavichi) 1210–1262 1239 1239 son of Michael II
Voivode Dmytro 1239 1240 appointed by Daniel of Galicia
Michael II Svyatoslavichi (Olgovichi) 1185–1246 1241 1243 (second time)
Yaroslav III Yurievichi (Monomakh) 1191–1246 1243 1246 (second time)
Alexander Nevsky Vladimirsky (Monomakh) 1220–1263 1246 1263 son of Yaroslav III
Yaroslav IV Vladimirsky (Monomakh) 1230–1271 1263 1271 brother of Alexander
Lev Galicia (Monomakh) 1228–1301 1271 1301 son of Daniel
Iziaslav IV Vladimirovich Siverski (Olgovichi) ?–? 1301 ?
Stanislav Ivanovich Siverski (Olgovichi) 1228–1301 ? 1321
Mindaugas Holshanski Alšėniškiai ?–? 1321 1324 son of Holsha Romanovich
Algimantas-Michael Alšėniškiai ?–? 1324 1331[41] son of Mindaugas
Fyodor (Teodoras) Siverski (Olgovichi) ?–? 1331 1362 son of Ivan
Vladimir V Algirdaitis Gediminids ?–? 1362 1394 son of Algirdas
Skirgaila Gediminids 1354–1397 1395 1397 son of Algirdas
Ivan Olshansky Alšėniškiai ?–? 1397 c. 1402 son of Algimantas (in 1404–11 Jurgis Gedgaudas as voivode)
Andrew Alšėniškiai ?–? c. 1412 c. 1422 son of Ivan
Michael IV Alšėniškiai ?–1433 c. 1422 c. 1432 son of Ivan
Michael V Boloban Alšėniškiai ?–1435 c. 1433 c. 1435 son of Simonas
Boleslav (Švitrigaila) Gediminids 1370–1452 1432 1440 son of Algirdas
Alexander-Olelko Olelkovich ?–1454 1443 1454 son of Vladimir
Simeon Olelkovich Olelkovich 1418–1470 1454 1470 son of Alexander

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Christian Raffensperger (2012, 2017), Ostrowski (2018), Halperin (2022).[9][10]
  2. ^ Including Hrushevsky (1904), Vernadsky (1943), Riasanovsky (1947), Paszkiewicz (1954), Franklin and Shepard (1996).[16]
  3. ^ The Old Slavonic is Свѧтопълкъ in the Cyrillic alphabet, the modern Ukrainian is Святополк, Polish is Świętopełk, Czech is Svatopluk, and Slovak is Svätopluk. Reconstructed, his name is Sventopluk. More commonly, his name is given in its Latin and Frankish equivalents: Suentopolcus, Suatopluk, Zventopluk, Zwentibald, Zwentibold, Zuentibold, or Zuentibald.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Dimnik 2004, p. 259.
  2. ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 264–265, 306.
  3. ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 253.
  4. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 253–254.
  5. ^ Cross & Sherbowitz-Wetzor 1930, p. 54–55.
  6. ^ "An Introduction to the History of Khazaria". www.khazaria.com.
  7. ^ Pritsak, Omeljan (1981). The origin of Rus. Cambridge, Mass.: Distributed by Harvard University Press for the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute.
  8. ^ Zuckerman, Constantine (2007). The Khazars and Byzantium – The First Encounter. In The World of the Khazars: New Perspectives – Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium, eds. Peter Benjamin Golden, Haggai Ben-Shammai, and András Róna-Tas, pp. 399–432. Leiden, Netherlands: Brill.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Halperin 2022, p. viii.
  10. ^ Ostrowski 2018, p. 47.
  11. ^ a b c Ostrowski 2018, p. 32.
  12. ^ Cross & Sherbowitz-Wetzor 1930, p. 60.
  13. ^ Duczko, Wladyslaw (2004). Viking Rus: Studies on the Presence of Scandinavians in Eastern Europe. Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands. ISBN 90-04-13874-9
  14. ^ Noonan, Thomas (2001). The Khazar Qaghanate and Its Impact on the Early Rus' State: The translatio imperii from Itil to Kiev. Nomads in the Sedentary World, Anatoly Mikhailovich Khazanov and Andre Wink, eds. p. 76-102. Richmond, England: Curzon. ISBN 0-7007-1370-0
  15. ^ Golden, Peter Benjamin (1982). The Question of the Rus' Qaganate. Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi. pp. 77–92
  16. ^ a b Ostrowski 2018, p. 30–31, 39.
  17. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 259–260.
  18. ^ a b c d e Dimnik 2004, p. 260.
  19. ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 260–261.
  20. ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 261.
  21. ^ a b c Dimnik 2004, p. 262.
  22. ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 262–263.
  23. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 263–264.
  24. ^ a b c Dimnik 2004, p. 264.
  25. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 264–265.
  26. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 306.
  27. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 306–307.
  28. ^ a b c d Dimnik 2004, p. 307.
  29. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 307–308.
  30. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 308.
  31. ^ a b c d Ostrowski 2018, p. 42–44.
  32. ^ a b Ostrowski 2018, p. 44.
  33. ^ a b c Ostrowski 2018, p. 42–43.
  34. ^ Leszek Moczulski (2007). Narodziny Międzymorza. Bellona. p. 475.
  35. ^ Ярополк is modern Ukrainian, Jaropełk is Polish, Jaropluk is Czech, Jaropelkas is Lithuanian, Iaropelkos is Greek, Jaropolk is German and Swedish.
  36. ^ Dimnik 2004, p. 261–264.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g h Martin 2004, p. 32.
  38. ^ a b c d Martin 2004, p. 102.
  39. ^ Martin 2004, p. xvii, 102.
  40. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Martin 2004, p. xvii.
  41. ^ "Розділ 4.1. Леонтій Войтович. Князівські династії Східної Європи". izbornyk.org.ua. Retrieved 12 April 2018.

Bibliography edit

  • Cross, Samuel Hazzard; Sherbowitz-Wetzor, Olgerd P. (1930). The Russian Primary Chronicle, Laurentian Text. Translated and edited by Samuel Hazzard Cross and Olgerd P. Sherbowitz-Wetzor (1930) (PDF). Cambridge, Massachusetts: The Mediaeval Academy of America. p. 325. Retrieved 26 January 2023. (primary source)
  • Dimnik, Martin (January 2004). "The Title "Grand Prince" in Kievan Rus'". Mediaeval Studies. 66: 253–312. doi:10.1484/J.MS.2.306512. Retrieved 27 February 2023.
  • Halperin, Charles J. (2022). The Rise and Demise of the Myth of the Rus' Land (PDF). Leeds: Arc Humanities Press. p. 107. ISBN 9781802700565. Retrieved 5 March 2023.
  • Martin, Janet (2004). Medieval Russia: 980–1584. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521368322. (digital printing 2004)
  • Ostrowski, Donald (2018). "Was There a Riurikid Dynasty in Early Rus'?". Canadian-American Slavic Studies. 52 (1): 30–49. doi:10.1163/22102396-05201009.

grand, prince, kiev, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, februa. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Grand Prince of Kiev news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Grand Prince of Kiev sometimes grand duke was the title of the monarch of Kievan Rus residing in Kiev modern Kyiv from the 10th to 13th centuries citation needed In the 13th century Kiev became an appanage principality first of the grand prince of Vladimir and the Mongol Golden Horde governors and later was taken over by the Grand Duchy of Lithuania citation needed Grand Prince of KievDetailsFirst monarchOleg the Wise first undisputed Prince of Kiev 1 Yaroslav the Wise first undisputed Grand Prince of Kiev 2 Rus chronicles such as the Primary Chronicle are inconsistent in applying the title grand prince to various princes in Kievan Rus 3 Although most sources consistently attribute it to the prince of Kiev 3 there is no agreement which princes were also grand prince and scholars have thus come up with different lists of grand princes of Kiev 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Origins 1 2 First princes 1 3 Velikiy knyaz Yaroslav and descendants 2 Princes of Kiev 3 Grand princes of Kiev 4 Princes of Kiev after the Mongol invasion 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 BibliographyBackground editOrigins edit According to a founding myth in the Primary Chronicle Kyi Shchek and Khoryv and their sister Lybid co founded the city of Kiev Kyiv and the oldest brother Kyi was chief of his kin Old East Slavic knѧzhashe v rodѣ romanized knyazhashe v rodie 5 Some western historians i e Kevin Alan Brook suppose that Kiev was founded by Khazars or Magyars Kiev is a Turkic place name Kui riverbank ev settlement 6 At least during the 8th and 9th centuries Kiev functioned as an outpost of the Khazar empire a hill fortress called Sambat high place in Old Turkic According to Omeljan Pritsak Constantine Zuckerman and other scholars Khazars lost Kiev at the beginning of the 10th century 7 8 At some point Rurik a Varangian prince allegedly founded the Rurik dynasty named after him in the 16th century in 862 through the calling of the Varangians but he is considered to be a legendary mythical and perhaps even entirely fictional character by modern scholars a The Primary Chronicle never calls Rurik a prince of Kiev the passage wherein Oleg sat in Kiev Old East Slavic ponelѣzhe sѣde v Kyevѣ romanized ponelѣzhe sѣde v Kyyevѣ makes no mention of Rurik suggesting the author was more interested in the first Rus ruler to reside in Kiev than with any founder of a dynasty 11 Kiev was captured by Askold and Dir whose existence is also debatable and are called boyars who did not belong to Rurik s family by the Primary Chronicle 12 1 According to some Russian historians i e Gleb S Lebedev Dir was a chacanus of Rhos Rus khagan 13 Thomas Noonan asserts that one of the Rus sea kings the High king adopted the title khagan in the early 9th century 14 Peter Benjamin Golden maintained that the Rus became a part of the Khazar federation and that their ruler was officially accepted as a vassal khagan of the Khazar Khagan of Itil 15 First princes edit Askold and Dir are narrated to have been killed in 882 by Oleg the first prince knyaz of Kiev according to the Primary Chronicle but not yet a grand prince velikiy knyaz 1 11 His relation to Rurik is debatable and has been rejected by several modern scholars 16 Although later Muscovite chroniclers would call Oleg a grand prince and Kiev a grand principality Old East Slavic velikoe knyazhenie romanized velikoe knyazhenie the earliest sources do not 17 Whereas the reconstructed original Greek text of the Rusʹ Byzantine Treaty 907 calls Oleg a megas ἄrxwn or great archon ruler the Old East Slavic translations found in the Laurentian Codex and Hypatian Codex do not 18 On the other hand only when the Byzantine emperors Leo VI the Wise Alexander and Constantine VII are called the Great Oleg is also called the Great 18 Dimnik 2004 argued it should thus be read as the Rus prince Oleg the Great instead of Oleg the grand prince of Rus 18 Similarly the only occasions Igor of Kiev is ever called velikiy knyaz in the Primary Chronicle six times are all found in the Rusʹ Byzantine Treaty 945 where the Greek emperors are also called k velikiy tsesarem Grech skim to the great Greek caesars 18 The same happens when after Sviatoslav s invasion of Bulgaria the 971 peace treaty is recorded it is the only place in the Primary Chronicle where Sviatoslav I is named a velikiy knyaz 18 Most significantly the Nachal nyy svod found only in the Novgorod First Chronicle never mentions any of these peace treaties and never calls Oleg Igor or Sviatoslav a velikiy knyaz 19 According to Dimnik 2004 this means that Greek scribes added the word great to the princely title whereas the Rus themselves did not except when translating these three treaties from Greek into Slavic 19 Yaropolk I of Kiev and Volodimer I of Kiev are both steadily referred to as just a knyaz by the Novgorod First Chronicle and the Laurentian and Hypatian Codices 20 There is one exception the Hypatian Codex writes Volodimir knyaz velikii Volodimir the grand prince when reporting the latter s death because the Hypatian Codex is the latest source of the three compiled c 1425 this is probably a later interpolation 20 A Paterik of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra of the early 13th century also calls Volodimer a velikiy knyaz but that was written two centuries after his death and may not necessarily describe how he was known while alive 21 The oldest surviving source available is Hilarion of Kiev s Sermon on Law and Grace c 1040s which calls Volodimer a kagan a Khazar title rather than a knyaz 21 Some scholars have suggested that this indicates Kievan Rus had won its independence from the Khazars in the early 10th century and had inherited the title of kagan from them before exchanging it for knyaz later 21 The Church Statute of Prince Volodimir starts with Behold I Prince Vasilii called Volodimir Old East Slavic Se az knyaz Vasilij naricaemyi Volodimir romanized Se yaz knyaz Vasilii naritsayemy Volodimir 22 but later in the text he interchangeably calls himself knyaz and velikiy knyaz and the earliest copy of this document is from the 14th century so it is difficult to say what the lost original text said 22 Since chroniclers also regularly referred to Volodimer as velikiy without mentioning his title the reason why he has become known to history as Volodimer the Great suggests that this adjective was not part of his title but a sobriquet or nickname that was also applied to other monarchs or clerics around him 23 Velikiy knyaz Yaroslav and descendants edit Sviatopolk I of Kiev was never called velikiy knyaz grand prince in any source 24 Moreover he has been stigmatised by chroniclers with the nickname the Accursed or the Damned okayannyy because of how he violently rose to power in the war of succession following Volodimir s death in 1015 24 On the other hand Yaroslav the Wise is the first widely attested velikiy knyaz grand prince in virtually all sources of the second half of the 11th century and surviving copies of the Church Statute of Prince Yaroslav also strongly suggest he applied the title to himself while he was alive 25 Dimnik 2004 concluded that by the end of Yaroslav s reign in the third quarter of the 11th century he was regularly calling himself and being called the velikiy knyaz of Kiev and the competing titles of kagan and tsar had decisively lost in favour of velikiy knyaz as the preferred appellation of the Kievan monarch 26 The velikiy knyaz was designated by genealogical seniority and given the right to reign from Kiev the grand principality superior to all other principalities in the realm over all other princes descended from Yaroslav 27 The reason why the system of succession did not always work as Yaroslav intended was because some princes simply usurped power through a coup d etat at the court in Kiev 28 The 1097 Council of Liubech upgraded the dynastic capitals of the inner circle of senior princes to grand principalities as well but still acknowledged the superiority of Kiev 28 It was not until the Sack of Kiev 1169 by Andrey Bogolyubsky of Vladimir Suzdal that the grand princes of Vladimir launched a fierce competition with the grand princes of Kiev over who had primacy over the entire realm 28 Since then the phrase velikiy knyaz of Kiev was merely titular and chroniclers applied the symbolic title of velikiy knyaz to Kiev or Vladimir on the Klyazma according to whomever they favoured 28 In practice the military supremacy of any particular prince especially from Vsevolod the Big Nest onwards would determine whether the other princes would or would not acknowledge him as grand prince 29 After the Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus and Sack of Kiev in the late 1230s and 1240s the khans of the Golden Horde in effect terminated the office of the velikiy knyaz of Kiev and conferred political supremacy on their puppet in Vladimir 30 Princes of Kiev editName Lifespan Ruled From Ruled Until NotesOleg 31 912 922 940s 31 881 2 or 889 32 912 922 940s 31 First knyaz prince of Kiev 1 11 Relation to Rurik and Igor is disputed 31 Date of accession is unclear in the Primary Chronicle 32 Date of death is disputed 912 according to Primary Chronicle 33 922 according to Novgorod First Chronicle 33 940s according to Genizah Letter 33 Igor of Kiev 945 912 945 son of Rurik according to Primary Chronicle but many scholars doubt or reject this claim b Olga of Kiev 969 945 962 regent consort Sviatoslav I 34 942 972 962 972 son of IgorYaropolk I Jaropolk 35 958 960 980 972 980 One of Svyatoslav s two sonsVolodimir I the Great 958 1015 980 1015 One Svyatoslav s two sons in 988 baptized the Rus The earliest sources call him just knyaz prince or kagan and nickname him Volodimir velikiy Volodimir the Great later sources also call him velikiy knyaz grand prince 36 Sviatopolk I the Accursed c 980 1019 1015 1019 origin is debatable Is never called velikiy knyaz grand prince in any source 24 Grand princes of Kiev editName House Lifespan Ruled From Ruled Until NotesYaroslav the Wise Volodimerovichi 9 978 1054 1019 1054 son of Vladimir the Great jointly with Mstislav in 1024 36 First widely attested velikiy knyaz grand prince in virtually all contemporary sources 2 Iziaslav I 37 Volodimerovichi 9 1024 1078 1054 1073 37 son of Yaroslav first time in 1068 69 lost state power to Polotsk princes Sviatoslav II 37 Volodimerovichi 9 1027 1076 1073 37 1076 37 son of YaroslavIziaslav I 37 Volodimerovichi 9 1024 1078 1076 37 1078 second time 37 in 1075 Pope Gregory VII sent him a crown from RomeVsevolod I Volodimerovichi 9 1030 1093 1078 1093 son of YaroslavSviatopolk II Iziaslavichi 1050 1113 1093 1113 son of Iziaslav IVladimir II Monomakh Monomakhovychi 1053 1125 1113 1125 son of Vsevolod IMstislav I of Kiev 38 Monomakhovychi 1076 1132 1125 38 1132 38 son of Vladimir IIYaropolk II 39 Monomakhovychi 1082 1139 1132 38 1139 40 brother of Mstislav IViacheslav I Monomakhovychi 1083 1154 1139 1139 brother of Yaropolk II first time Vsevolod II 40 Svyatoslavichi 1146 1139 40 1146 son of Oleh SvyatoslavichIgor II Svyatoslavichi 1147 1146 1146 brother of Vsevolod IIIziaslav II Monomakhovychi 1097 1154 1146 1149 son of Mstislav I first time Yuri Dolgorukiy Monomakhovychi 1099 1157 1149 1151 first time Viacheslav I Monomakhovychi 1083 1154 1151 1154 second time jointlyIziaslav II Monomakhovychi 1097 1154 second time jointlyRostislav I Monomakhovychi 1110 1167 1154 1154 brother of Iziaslav II first time Iziaslav III Svyatoslavichi 1162 1154 1155 first time Yuri I Dolgorukiy 40 Monomakhovychi 1099 1157 1155 40 1157 40 second time Iziaslav III Svyatoslavichi 1162 1157 1158 second time Rostislav I 40 Monomakhovychi 1110 1167 1158 40 1167 40 second time jointly with Iziaslav III in 1162Mstislav II Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1172 1167 1169 son of Iziaslav II first time Gleb 40 Yurievichi Monomakh 1171 1169 40 1169 son of Yuri Dolgorukiy first time Mstislav II Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1172 1170 1170 second time Gleb Yurievichi Monomakh 1171 1170 1171 second time Vladimir III Mstislavich Monomakhovychi 1132 1171 1171 1171 son of Mstislav I the GreatMichael I Yurievichi Monomakh 1176 1171 1171 half brother of GlebRoman I Rostislavichi Monomakh 1180 1171 1173 son of Rostislav I first time Vsevolod III the Big Nest Yurievichi Monomakh 1154 1212 1173 1173 brother of Michael IRurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1215 1173 1173 brother of Roman I first time Sviatoslav III Olgovichi 1194 1174 1174 son of Vsevolod II first time Yaroslav II Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1180 1174 1175 son of Iziaslav II first time Roman I Rostislavichi Monomakh 1180 1175 1177 second time Sviatoslav III 40 Olgovichi 1194 1177 40 1180 second time Yaroslav II Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1180 1180 1180 second time Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1215 1180 1182 second time Sviatoslav III Olgovichi 1194 1182 1194 third time Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1215 1194 1202 third time Igor III Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1202 1202 son of Yaroslav II first time Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1215 1203 1206 jointly fourth time Roman II the Great Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1160 1205 son of Mstislav II jointly 1203 05 Rostislav II Rostislavichi Monomakh 1173 1214 son of Rurik Rostislavich jointly 1204 06 Vsevolod IV the Red Svyatoslavichi Olgovichi 1212 1206 1207 son of Sviatoslav III first time Rurik Rostislavich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1215 1207 1210 fifth time Vsevolod IV the Red Svyatoslavichi Olgovichi 1212 1210 1212 second time Igor III Iziaslavichi Monomakh 1212 1214 second time Mstislav III Rostislavichi Monomakh 1223 1214 1223 son of Roman IVladimir IV Rurikovich Rostislavichi Monomakh 1187 1239 1223 1235 brother of Rostislav IIIziaslav IV Vladimirovich Siveria Olgovichi orRostislavichi Monomakh 1186 1235 1236 son of Vladimir Igorevich or MstislavYaroslav III Yurievichi Monomakh 1191 1246 1236 1238 son of Vsevolod the Big Nest first time Michael II Svyatoslavichi Olgovichi 1185 1246 1238 1239 son of Vsevolod IV first time Princes of Kiev after the Mongol invasion editDue to the Mongol invasion of 1240 Michael of Chernigov left Kiev to seek military assistance from King Bela IV of Hungary During that time Prince Rostislav of Smolensk occupied Kiev but was captured the same year by Daniel of Galicia who placed his voivode Dmytro to guard Kiev while the grand prince was away Being unsuccessful in Hungary Michael visited Konrad I of Masovia Receiving no results in Poland he eventually asked Daniel of Galicia for asylum due to the Mongol invasion Since the 14th century the principality of Kiev started to fall under the influence of Grand Duchy of Lithuania In 1299 the Metropolitan of Kiev Maximus moved his metropolitan see from Kiev to Vladimir on Klyazma In 1321 after the battle on the Irpin River Gediminas installed Mindgaugas one of his subjects from the house of Olshanski a descendant of the family of Vseslav of Polotsk that was exiled to the Byzantine Empire In 1331 Kiev was once again taken by a member of the Siverski house Olgovichi branch the prince of Putivl After Grand Duke Algirdas defeated the Golden Horde at the Battle of Blue Waters in 1362 he incorporated Kiev and its surrounding areas into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Name House Lifespan Ruled from Ruled until NotesRostislav Mikhailovich Smolensk Rostislavichi 1210 1262 1239 1239 son of Michael IIVoivode Dmytro 1239 1240 appointed by Daniel of GaliciaMichael II Svyatoslavichi Olgovichi 1185 1246 1241 1243 second time Yaroslav III Yurievichi Monomakh 1191 1246 1243 1246 second time Alexander Nevsky Vladimirsky Monomakh 1220 1263 1246 1263 son of Yaroslav IIIYaroslav IV Vladimirsky Monomakh 1230 1271 1263 1271 brother of AlexanderLev Galicia Monomakh 1228 1301 1271 1301 son of DanielIziaslav IV Vladimirovich Siverski Olgovichi 1301 Stanislav Ivanovich Siverski Olgovichi 1228 1301 1321Mindaugas Holshanski Alseniskiai 1321 1324 son of Holsha RomanovichAlgimantas Michael Alseniskiai 1324 1331 41 son of MindaugasFyodor Teodoras Siverski Olgovichi 1331 1362 son of IvanVladimir V Algirdaitis Gediminids 1362 1394 son of AlgirdasSkirgaila Gediminids 1354 1397 1395 1397 son of AlgirdasIvan Olshansky Alseniskiai 1397 c 1402 son of Algimantas in 1404 11 Jurgis Gedgaudas as voivode Andrew Alseniskiai c 1412 c 1422 son of IvanMichael IV Alseniskiai 1433 c 1422 c 1432 son of IvanMichael V Boloban Alseniskiai 1435 c 1433 c 1435 son of SimonasBoleslav Svitrigaila Gediminids 1370 1452 1432 1440 son of AlgirdasAlexander Olelko Olelkovich 1454 1443 1454 son of VladimirSimeon Olelkovich Olelkovich 1418 1470 1454 1470 son of AlexanderSee also editList of princesses and grand princesses consort of Kiev Kiev Voivodeship List of Hungarian monarchs List of Polish monarchs List of rulers of Galicia and Volhynia List of rulers of Lithuania List of Russian monarchs List of leaders of Ukraine Symbols of the RurikidsNotes edit Christian Raffensperger 2012 2017 Ostrowski 2018 Halperin 2022 9 10 Including Hrushevsky 1904 Vernadsky 1943 Riasanovsky 1947 Paszkiewicz 1954 Franklin and Shepard 1996 16 The Old Slavonic is Svѧtoplk in the Cyrillic alphabet the modern Ukrainian is Svyatopolk Polish is Swietopelk Czech is Svatopluk and Slovak is Svatopluk Reconstructed his name is Sventopluk More commonly his name is given in its Latin and Frankish equivalents Suentopolcus Suatopluk Zventopluk Zwentibald Zwentibold Zuentibold or Zuentibald References edit a b c d Dimnik 2004 p 259 a b Dimnik 2004 p 264 265 306 a b Dimnik 2004 p 253 Dimnik 2004 p 253 254 Cross amp Sherbowitz Wetzor 1930 p 54 55 An Introduction to the History of Khazaria www khazaria com Pritsak Omeljan 1981 The origin of Rus Cambridge Mass Distributed by Harvard University Press for the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute Zuckerman Constantine 2007 The Khazars and Byzantium The First Encounter In The World of the Khazars New Perspectives Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium eds Peter Benjamin Golden Haggai Ben Shammai and Andras Rona Tas pp 399 432 Leiden Netherlands Brill a b c d e f Halperin 2022 p viii Ostrowski 2018 p 47 a b c Ostrowski 2018 p 32 Cross amp Sherbowitz Wetzor 1930 p 60 Duczko Wladyslaw 2004 Viking Rus Studies on the Presence of Scandinavians in Eastern Europe Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden The Netherlands ISBN 90 04 13874 9 Noonan Thomas 2001 The Khazar Qaghanate and Its Impact on the Early Rus State The translatio imperii from Itil to Kiev Nomads in the Sedentary World Anatoly Mikhailovich Khazanov and Andre Wink eds p 76 102 Richmond England Curzon ISBN 0 7007 1370 0 Golden Peter Benjamin 1982 The Question of the Rus Qaganate Archivum Eurasiae Medii Aevi pp 77 92 a b Ostrowski 2018 p 30 31 39 Dimnik 2004 p 259 260 a b c d e Dimnik 2004 p 260 a b Dimnik 2004 p 260 261 a b Dimnik 2004 p 261 a b c Dimnik 2004 p 262 a b Dimnik 2004 p 262 263 Dimnik 2004 p 263 264 a b c Dimnik 2004 p 264 Dimnik 2004 p 264 265 Dimnik 2004 p 306 Dimnik 2004 p 306 307 a b c d Dimnik 2004 p 307 Dimnik 2004 p 307 308 Dimnik 2004 p 308 a b c d Ostrowski 2018 p 42 44 a b Ostrowski 2018 p 44 a b c Ostrowski 2018 p 42 43 Leszek Moczulski 2007 Narodziny Miedzymorza Bellona p 475 Yaropolk is modern Ukrainian Jaropelk is Polish Jaropluk is Czech Jaropelkas is Lithuanian Iaropelkos is Greek Jaropolk is German and Swedish Dimnik 2004 p 261 264 a b c d e f g h Martin 2004 p 32 a b c d Martin 2004 p 102 Martin 2004 p xvii 102 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Martin 2004 p xvii Rozdil 4 1 Leontij Vojtovich Knyazivski dinastiyi Shidnoyi Yevropi izbornyk org ua Retrieved 12 April 2018 Bibliography editCross Samuel Hazzard Sherbowitz Wetzor Olgerd P 1930 The Russian Primary Chronicle Laurentian Text Translated and edited by Samuel Hazzard Cross and Olgerd P Sherbowitz Wetzor 1930 PDF Cambridge Massachusetts The Mediaeval Academy of America p 325 Retrieved 26 January 2023 primary source Dimnik Martin January 2004 The Title Grand Prince in Kievan Rus Mediaeval Studies 66 253 312 doi 10 1484 J MS 2 306512 Retrieved 27 February 2023 Halperin Charles J 2022 The Rise and Demise of the Myth of the Rus Land PDF Leeds Arc Humanities Press p 107 ISBN 9781802700565 Retrieved 5 March 2023 Martin Janet 2004 Medieval Russia 980 1584 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521368322 digital printing 2004 Ostrowski Donald 2018 Was There a Riurikid Dynasty in Early Rus Canadian American Slavic Studies 52 1 30 49 doi 10 1163 22102396 05201009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grand Prince of Kiev amp oldid 1190560251 Princes of Kyiv, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.