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Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. NN of Kiev: Birth: Abt 965.

  2. Yaroslav I Vladimirovich Kiev: Birth: 976 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 20 Feb 1054 in Vyshgorod, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine

  3. Mstislav Vladimirovich of Chernigov: Birth: Abt 978 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: Abt 1035 in Chernigov, , Chernigov Oblast, Ukraine

  4. Iziaslav Vladimirovich Kiev: Birth: Abt 980 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 1001 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine

  5. Premislava Vladimirovna Kiev: Birth: Abt 982 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 1018 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine

  6. Vsevolod Vladimirovich Kiev: Birth: Abt 983 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 1015 in Volodymyr-Volyns'kyy, , Volyn Oblast, Ukraine

  7. Wsjewolod : Birth: 1001. Death: 1049

  8. Arlogia Orkney: Birth: 1015 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 10 Dec 1046 in , , Orkney Islands, Scotland


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Dobroniegra Maria Kiev: Birth: Aft 1010 in Kiev, , Kiev Oblast, Ukraine. Death: 13 Dec 1087 in Kraków, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland


Family
Marriage:
Sources
1. Title:   World Family Tree Vol. 8, Ed. 1
Page:   Tree #3267
Author:   Brøderbund Software, Inc.
Publication:   Release date: January 12, 1997

Notes
a. Note:   Many genealogies show him as son of Anna Porphyrogenita of Byzantium, but according to Francisco Antonio Doria, this is out of the question. He apparently was born prior to his father marrying Anna, so the mother of Yaroslav is in doubt. Most genealogists now think Vladimir and Anna were childless. An alternative suggested is Rogneda, dau Rogvolod, Prince of Polotsk. Was married twice. Rogneda of Polotsk was his first wife.
  THE KINGDOM OF KIEV WAS DIVIDED AMONG VLADIMIR THE GREAT AND HIS BROTHERS UNTIL 980 WHEN VLADIMIR GAINED SOLE CONTROL. THE MOST SIGNIFICANT EVENT OF HIS REIGN WAS HIS CONVERSION TO BYZANTINE CHRISTIANITY IN 988 AND THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE RELIGION AS THE OFFICIAL CHURCH OF THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE.
  Upon Conversion to Christianity, took the Baptismal name of Basil, and put away his heathen wives.
  His feast in celebrated on 15 July in the Russian Orthodox and Ruthenian Greek Catholic calendars, and he has received the name of Ravnoapostol (equal to the Apostles) in the title of the feast and the troparion of the liturgy. The Russians have added in their service books words referring his conversion and intercession to the present Russian Empire (rossiiskaya zemlya), but the Ruthenians have never permitted these interpolations.
  «i»Note:«/i»
 !NAME: Vladimir or Wladimar I "The Great" Grand Duke Of /KIEV/.
  !BIRTH DATE: 0960 (55-1015).
  !BURIAL PLACE: Church Of The Tithes, Kiev, Kiev, Ukraine.
  !SOURCE: "Europaische Stammtafeln", by Detlev Schwennicke, Volume II, Table 128,
 Generation 4.
  !SOURCE: "Europaische Stammtafeln", by Detlev Schwennicke, Volume II, Table 127,
 Generation 1 and Table 128, Generation 4.
  !SOURCE: "Ancestral File: Submission Sheets", by Genealogical Department Royal
 Identification Unit (Family History Dept.-Medieval Families Unit [MFU]), FHL
 Film No. 1394475, Page AF 87C-000210-01C.
  !SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors of Some American Families", by Michel L. Call, Volume
 1, 1989, Chart No. 11578, No. 4.
  !SOURCE: "Royal Ancestors of Some American Families", by Michel L. Call, Volume
 1, 1989, Chart No. 11577, No. 12.
  !SOURCE: "History of the Byzantine Empire 324-1453", By A. A. Vasiliev, 1952,
 Page 730, No. 9, Generation 2.
  !SOURCE: "The Byzantine Empire - The Rearguard of European Civilization", By
 Edward Foord, 1911, Table V, Page 414, Generation 7.
  !Only 4 marriages on Schwennicke source.
  1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT. 995 2 PLAC Russia
  Saint Vladimir. Converted to Christianity in 988. 1 Sources: RC 143, 321, 361; Clarkson; A. Roots 241. 243; AF; Kraentzler 1162, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1233, 1603; Timetables of History; Through the Ages. Roots: St. Vladimir, Grand Prince of Kiev. Died 15 July 1015. Married after 1011, a daughter (died 14 Aug 1014) of Kuno, Count of Ohinigen, by Richilde, dau. of Otto I, the Great. Married also Rogneide, dau. of Rognald of Polotzk. RC: "The Great" of Kiev, Ukraine, Russia. Grand prince of Novgorod and Kiev. Baptized a Christian, 988. K: Wladimir I le Grand et le Saint. Grand Duke of Novogorod, Kiew. "Le Grand et le Saint." Grand Prince of Kiev or Grand Duke of Kiev and Novgorod. Ruled 980-1015. "980. St.Vladimir becomes Prince of Kiev." Clarkson: Vladimir succeeded his father through the process of fratricidal wars in which his brothers were slain. "He installed himself at Kiev (977), whence, by savage campaigns, he collected wives and tribute from most of the Dnieper Basin. Vladimir's chief fame rests on his forced conversion of the Russian Slavs to Christianity...During his reign, Kiev was repeatedly harassed by the Pechenegs; to hold them off, Vladimir built a sort of fortified line of new towns along the steppe frontier. At his death (1015) he left seven sons--offour or five different mothers--each ruling as prince in a portion of the Russian land; one of them, Yaroslav of Novgorod, was in open rebvellion, having refused to pay tribute to his father. Sviatopolk, who seized Kiev, promptly murdered three of his brothers, but was defeated in a four-year struggle by Yaroslav, who succeeded to the title of grand prince. Yaroslav, however, was forced to share the territory with another brother, Mstislav, who took the opportunity to move his residence from outlying Tmutorakan, beyond the Sea of Azov, to Chernigov, near Kiev. Not until Mstislav's death (1036) did Yaroslav "the Wise" venture to remove his seat from Novgorod to Kiev." "Vladimir...who had won the throne of Kiev by the murder of his older brother, was the last major European ruler to abandon paganism." He invited envoys from the Khazars (Jews), the Volga Bulgars (Muslims), Rome and Greece to "sell" their religious beliefs. But "Vladimir and his simple warriors (were) unable to make up their minds in this war of words." Therefore, they visited the temples of the Bulgars, the Romans and the Greeks, not bothering with a visit to the Khazars. They found the mosques unclean and western Catholic worship tolerable, but they were entralled with the spendor and beauty of the Greek places of worship. Hence, they embraced the Greek Orthodox religion. Vladimir was promised the hand of Anne, sister of the Byzantine emperor, in return for military aid and, despite some foot dragging by the emperor after the aid was provided, married the lady in 988. "In 990 Vladimir returned to Kieve with his imperial bride and a retinue of priests. Throughout his dominions the population was compulsorily baptized wholesale..." RC says he had many pagan wives and concubines of whom these are known: (1) Adlaga; (2) Olava; (3) Malfrida, a Bohemian, d. 1002; (5) a Greek, widow of his brother, Teropolk; (6) N.N.(27-36), a Bulgarian; md (7) 989, Anna, daughter of the Eastern Emperor, the Basilius Romanos, d. 10011; (8) N.N. (321-33), daughter of Kuno, Count of Ohningen. K. calls the latter Rogneda de Oehningen. One AF record says born about 962. According to my records, St. Vladimir had three daughters with Vladimirovna as name or part of name--all via different wives. Maybe he just liked the name. Maybe there are errors in the records.
  Birth: «tab»unknown
 Death: «tab»Jul. 15, 1015
 Kiev
 City of Kiev, Ukraine
  Born about 958 in Pskov,Son of Sviatoslav Igorevich I of Kiev and Malusha. He had issue with at least 6 different women.
  Family links:
 Spouses: Rogneda of Polotsk (____ - 1002)* Anna Porphyrogeneta (____ - 1012)* Children: Izyaslav of Polotsk (____ - 1001)* Mstislav Of Chernigov (____ - 1036)* Prince Yaroslav the Wise (978 - 1054)* *Calculated relationship
  Burial:
 Church of the Tithes
 Kiev
 City of Kiev, Ukraine
 Plot: Old Church section


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