Yaroslav II Vsevolodovich

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Yaroslav II. Vsevolodowitsch ( Russian Ярослав Всеволодович ; * 1190 ; † September 30, 1246 in Karakorum ) was Grand Duke of Vladimir from the Rurikids from 1238 .

Yaroslav II, the son of Vsevolod Jurjewitsch , succeeded his brother Jurij II , who died in the battle of the Sit against the Mongols in 1238 , to the throne of the Grand Duke of Vladimir. At first Yaroslav remained largely unaffected by the new Mongol rulers. However, that soon changed. After the return of the great khan Batu , Jaroslaw II had to appear for the first time at his court in Sarai in 1242 . Batu confirmed him as Grand Duke, but from this point on all Russian princes had to have their rule approved by the Mongols. During one of these visits Yaroslav II was poisoned in Karakoram in 1246 .

Jaroslaw II. Was the father of Wassilis and Jaroslaws III.

See also

literature

  • Yaroslav II (Theodore) Vsevolodovich . In: Энциклопедический словарь Брокгауза и Ефрона - Enziklopeditscheski slowar Brokgausa i Jefrona . tape 41 a [82]: Яйцепровод – Ѵ. Brockhaus-Efron, Saint Petersburg 1904, p. 832–833 (Russian, full text [ Wikisource ] PDF ).
  • Yevgeny Zhukov and others: Sovetskaja istoritscheskaja enziklopedija. Volume 16. Sovetskaja enziklopedija, Moscow 1976, col. 984. (Russian)
  • Frithjof Schenk : Alexander Newski. An anti-German hero in Russian cultural memory? In: Matthias Wemhoff , Alexander Lewykin: Russians and Germans. Essay volume: 1000 years of art, history and culture. Imhof, Petersberg 2012, ISBN 978-3-86568-803-3 , pp. 478-485.

Receipts

  1. ^ Frithjof Schenk: Alexander Newski. An anti-German hero in Russian cultural memory? In: Matthias Wemhoff and Alexander Lewykin: Russians and Germans. Essay volume: 1000 years of art, history and culture. Imhof, Petersberg 2012, pp. 478-485.
predecessor Office successor
Yuri II. Russian ruler Svyatoslav III.