Prince of Novgorod-Seversky was the knyaz, the ruler or sub-ruler, of the Principality of Novgorod-Seversky. It may have been created in 1139, the date of one modern authority,[1] and is most famous for Igor Svyatoslavich, hero of the Old Russian Tale of Igor's Campaign.
List of princes of Novgorod-Seversky[]
On the contrary, according to the version of L.Voytovich [4] , Oleg Svyatoslavich reigned in Chernigov (and Igor Svyatoslavich in Novgorod-Seversky) in 1178 - 1180 , and since Igor Svyatoslavich's transition to Chernigov in 1198 in Novgorod-Seversky began to rule one after another descendants of Svyatoslav Vsevolodovich:Ruler | Native name | Born | Reign | Death | Parents | Consort | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oleg Svyatoslavich | Олег Святославич | c1053 | 1097-1115 | 1115 | Svyatoslav Yaroslavich Cecilia of Dithmarschen |
Theophano Mouzalonissa Daughter of Osaluka-Khan |
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Vsevolod Olgovich | Всеволод II Ольгович | 1094 | 1115-1127 | 1146 | Oleg Svyatoslavich Theophano Mouzalonissa |
Maria Mstislavna of Kiev (c1108-c1155) | ||
Vladimir Davydovich | Владимир Давыдович | c1118 | 1127-1139 | 1151 | Davyd Svyatoslavich<br<Theodosia | |||
Igor Olgovich | ![]() |
Игорь Ольгович | c1095 | 1139-1146 | 1147 | Oleg Svyatoslavich Theophano Mouzalonissa |
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Svyatoslav Olgovich | Святослав Ольгович | c1108 | 1146-1157 (with interruptions) | 1164 | Unknown woman of Novgorod | Also Prince of Novgorod , Kursk, Starodub and Belgorod, Turov and Chernigov | ||
Svyatoslav Vsevolodovich | c1123 | 1157-1164 | 1184 | Mariya of Polotsk | ||||
Oleg Svyatoslavich | c1137 | 1164-1180 | 1180 | Yelena Yuryevna Agafia Rostislavna daughter of Andrei Vladimirovich of Volhynia |
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Igor Svyatoslavich | ![]() |
Игорь Святославич | 1151 | 1180-1197 | 1202 | Svyatoslav Olgovich Yekaterina of Novgorod |
Eufrosinya Yaroslavna of Halych | |
Vladimir Igorevich | 1170 | 1198 - 1206 | c1213}}, son of Prince Igor's | |||||
Oleg Igorevich (1206 -) | ||||||||
Izyaslav Vladimirovich | -1239 | the son of Vladimir Igorevich | ||||||
Oleg Svyatoslavich | Олег Святославич | 1198-1201 | ||||||
Vsevolod Svyatoslavich | 1201-1204 | |||||||
Gleb Svyatoslavich | 1204-1212 | |||||||
Mstislav Glebovich | 1212-1239 | |||||||
Andrei Mstislavich | 1239-1245 | the son of Mstislav Glebovich , was killed by the Mongols.
According to the version of Zotov RV [5] , the Novgorod Prince of Novgorod after Vladimir Igorevich (1206) was Rurik Olgovich (in baptism Constantine , died between 1210 and 1215 ), grandson of Svyatoslav Vsevolodovich. Subsequently, during the transitions of Vsevolod Chermny to Kiev reign, Rurik switched to Chernigov. | ||||||
== Lithuanian period == | ||||||||
Dmitri Olgierdovich of Bryansk (c1330-1399) | Дмитрий Ольгердович | (1362-1379) | ||||||
Koribut (c1355-c1404) | Корибут Ольгердович | (1380-1393 or 1401) | ||||||
Fyodor Lyubartovich of Halych-Volhynia (1351-1431) | Фёдор Любартович | (1394-1405) | ||||||
Shemyakin, Ivan Dmitrievich (1454- after 1471) , the son of Dmitry Shemyaki , who fled Moscow | ||||||||
Shemyakin, Vasily Ivanovich in 1500 , together with the principality, became a citizen of the Moscow Prince Ivan III , he was repressed in 1523 , after which the principality lost its independence |
In the aftermath of the Mongol invasions, it fell under the control of Briansk. The principality was taken over by the Lithuanians in the fourteenth-century when the power of the Golden Horde began to decline. In the fifteenth-century the principality was given to Prince Ivan of Mozhaisk when he fled from Grand Prince Vasili II
- Under Lithuanian overlordship
- Ivan Dmitrievich of Mozhaisk, d. 1471 x 1485
- Semen Ivanovich, d. x 1500
- Vasily Ivanovich, d. 1519
Notes[]
- ^ Cawley, Charles, FMG, Foundation for Medieval Genealogy, http://fmg.ac/Projects/MedLands/RUSSIA,%20Rurik.htm#_Toc111997324, retrieved August 2012,.
References[]
- Martin, Janet, Medieval Russia, 980-1584, (Cambridge, 1995)