Familypedia
Advertisement


Aleksandr Mikhailovich of Tver was born 7 October 1301 to Mikhail Yaroslavich of Tver (1271-1318) and Anna Dmitriyevna of Kashin (c1280-1368) and died 29 October 1339 of unspecified causes.

Grand Prince Aleksandr Mikhailovich (Russian: Александр Михайлович Тверской; 7 October 1301 – 29 October 1339) was a Prince of Tver as Alexander I and Grand Prince of Vladimir-Suzdal as Alexander II.

Life

Aleksandr was a second son of Prince Mikhail of Tver by his wife, Anna of Kashin. As a young man, his appanages included Kholm and Mikulin. In 1322, he continued the Tver princes' opposition to the rise of Moscow when he rather spectacularly waylaid Grand Prince Yuri Danilovich of Moscow (who had schemed against Aleksandr's father to gain the yarlyk or patent of office from the khan of the Golden Horde, the Mongol kingdom which ruled Russia and much of central Asia in the 13th and 14th centuries) as Yuri journeyed with the tribute from Novgorod to Moscow.[1]

Four years later, Aleksandr succeeded his childless brother Dmitri Mikhailovich who had been executed on orders of Öz Beg Khan in the Horde after Dmitri avenged his father's death by murdering Yuri.[2]

Facial Chronicle - b.07, p

A mob in Tver burning the Khan's cousin Shevkal alive in 1327.

In 1327, a Tatar official, the Baskaki Shevkal (the cousin of Öz Beg Khan, arrived in Tver from the Horde, with a large retinue. They took up residence at Aleksandr's palace and, according to chronicle reports, started terrorizing the city, randomly robbing and killing. Rumors spread that Shevkal wanted to kill the prince, occupy the throne for himself and introduce Islam to the city. When, on 15 August 1327, the Tatars tried to take a horse from a deacon named Dyudko, he cried for help and a mob of furious people rushed on the Tatars and killed them all. Shevkal and his remaining guards were burnt alive in one of the houses where they had attempted to hide.[3]

The massacre led inevitably to Tatar reprisals. Indeed, the whole incident may have been a provocation by the Tatars to destroy Aleksandr and the Tver princes. Ivan Kalita of Moscow, brother of Yuri who had been murdered by Dmitri the Terrible Eyes in 1322, immediately went to the Horde and, before Aleksandr had time to justify himself to Öz Beg Khan, persuaded the khan to grant Moscow the Jarlig or patent of office for the throne of Vladimir. The khan also sent Ivan at the head of an army of 50,000 soldiers to punish Tver. Aleksandr fled with his family to Novgorod, but he was not accepted there for fear of the Tatars, so he went on to Pskov.

Pskov not only allowed Aleksandr to enter their city, but made him their prince. Desiring to save the Russian land from further devastation — had Ivan Kalita left Aleksandr in Pskov, the Tatars would have certainly sent another punitive expedition which would have destroyed that city — Aleksandr agreed to abandon the city, but the residents of Pskov would not let him go. Metropolitan Feognost (Theognostus) arrived in Novgorod and he and Archbishop Moisei of Novgorod (1325–1330; 1352–1359) excommunicated the city at the behest of Ivan Kalita. In 1329, fulfilling the order of the khan, Ivan Kalita and many other princes declared war to Pskov. Aleksandr fled into Lithuania and then to Sweden, after which the metropolitan lifted the ban of excommunication against Pskov. Aleksandr returned to Pskov a year and a half later under the patronage of Gediminas, Grand Duke of Lithuania.

In 1335, Aleksandr sent his son, Fyodor, to the Horde in order to gain forgiveness. Two years later in 1337 he went there himself. Öz Beg Khan, at least for a time, forgave his old enemy and sent him back to Tver. This led to renewed hostilities with Moscow, which Tver could not sustain.

On October 29, 1339, Aleksandr and Fyodor were quartered in Sarai, the new capital city of the Horde]], by the orders of Öz Beg Khan.[4]

Family

Aleksandr was married ca. 1320 to Anastasia of Halych and had eight children:

  1. Fyodor of Tver
  2. Lev
  3. Mikhail II of Tver (1333–1399)
  4. Vsevolod of Kholm (died 1364)
  5. AndreI
  6. Vladimir
  7. Maria, married Simeon Ivanovich of Moscow
  8. Uliana, married Algirdas

See also


Children


Offspring of Aleksandr Mikhailovich of Tver and Anastasia Yuryevna of Halych (c1293-c1364)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Lev Aleksandrovich of Tver (1320-1322)
Fyodor Aleksandrovich of Tver (c1223-1339)
Uliana Aleksandrovna of Tver (c1325-1392) 1325 17 March 1391 Algirdas (1296-1377)
Maria Aleksandrovna of Tver (c1326-1399) 1326 1399 Simeon Ivanovich of Moscow (1316-1353)
Vsevolod Aleksandrovich of Kholm (c1228-1364)
Andrei Aleksandrovich (1330-1365)
Vladimir Aleksandrovich (c1331-1365)
Mikhail II Aleksandrovich of Tver (1333–1399)




Siblings


Offspring of Mikhail Yaroslavich of Tver (1271-1318) and Anna Dmitriyevna of Kashin (c1280-1368)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Fyodora Mikhailovna of Tver (c1296-c1297) 1296 1297
Dmitri Mikhailovich of Tver (1299-1326) 1299 15 September 1326 Maria of Lithuania (1300-1349)
Aleksandr Mikhailovich of Tver (1301-1339) 7 October 1301 29 October 1339 Anastasia Yuryevna of Halych (c1293-c1364)
Konstantin Mikhailovich of Tver (1302-1345) 1302 1345 Sofya Yuryevna of Moscow (c1303-c1355)
Yevdokiya
Vasili Mikhailovich of Tver (c1304-1368) 1304 1368 Yelena Ivanovna

Residences

Aleksandr Mikhailovich
Born: 1301 Died: 1339
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Dmitri Mikhailovich
Grand Prince of Vladimir
1326–1327
Succeeded by
Ivan I Danilovich
Prince of Tver
1326–1327
Succeeded by
Konstantin Mikhailovich
Preceded by
Konstantin Mikhailovich
Prince of Tver
1338–1339


Footnotes (including sources)

Afil



  1. ^ Janet Martin, Medieval Russia 980-1584 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 176.
  2. ^ Martin, Medieval Russia, 176.
  3. ^ Arsenii Nikolaevich Nasonov, ed., Novgorodskaia Pervaia Letopis Starshego i Mladshego Izvodov (Moscow and Leningrad: ANSSR, 1950), 98-99, 342; A. N. Nasonov, ed., Pskovskie Letopisi (Moscow and Leningrad: ANSSSR, 1941-1955), Vol. 1, p. 17, Vol. 2, p. 23; John Fennell, "The Tver Uprising of 1327: A Study of the Sources," Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 15 (1967), 161-179; Michael C. Paul, "Secular Power and the Archbishops of Novgorod Before the Muscovite Conquest," Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 8, No. 2 (2007), 251
  4. ^ John Fennell, "Princely Executions in the Horde 1308-1339," Forschungen zur Osteuropaischen Geschichte 38 (1988), 9-19.
Advertisement