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Mikhail Yaroslavich Duke Of Vladimir
- Preferred Name: Mikhail Yaroslavich Duke Of Vladimir
- Alternate Name: Mikhail Yaroslavich Grand Prince of Tver I
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Prince Of Tver & Vladimir
- Alternate Name: Mikhail of_ Tver
- Alternate Name: Mikhail Yaroslavich (Grand Duke of Tver and Vladimir) I
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Grand Duke Of Tver And Vladimir ;[and Vladimir]
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Grand Duke Of Tver And Vladimir
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Tver And Vladimi [and Vladimir]
- Alternate Name: Mikhail III Yaroslavich Tver And Vladimi [and Vladimir]
- Alternate Name: Mikhail III Yaroslavich Grand Duke of Tver & Vladimir
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Grand Duke Of Tver And Vladimir and Vladimir
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Tver Vladimir Grand Duke
- Alternate Name: Mikhail I Yaroslavich Grand Duke Of Tver And Vladimir
- Gender: M
- http://familysearch.org/v1/TitleOfNobility: Grand Duke in Tver and Vladimir at LATI: N2.4333 LONG: E3.0833 with note: standardized
- Death: 22 NOV 1318 in Vladimir, Vladimir, Vladimir, Vladimirskaya Oblast', Russia with note: standardized
- Birth: 1251 in Vladimir,Vladimir,Russia,U.S.S.R. at LATI: N6.1365 LONG: E0.3966
- FSID: K8CC-KGT
- Notes:
=== Life Sketch ===
Mikhail Yaroslavich (Russian: Михаил Ярославич) (1271 – 22 November 1318), also known as Michael of Tver, was a Prince of Tver (from 1285) who ruled as Grand Prince of Vladimir from 1304 until 1314 and again from 1315–1318. He was canonized and counted among the saints of the Russian Orthodox Church.
Mikhail Yaroslavich was the second son of Yaroslav III (Yaroslav Yaroslavich), the younger brother of Aleksandr Nevsky, and succeeded him as Prince of Tver in 1285. His mother Xenia was the second spouse to Yaroslav III and is known as the saint Xenia of Tarusa. Upon the death of Andrei Aleksandrovich (Aleksandr Nevsky's son and Yaroslav's nephew), Mikhail became the Grand Prince of Vladimir in 1304, as was consistent with the rota system of collateral succession that had been practised in Rus since the time of Yaroslav the Wise. He was confirmed in office by Tokhta, Khan of the Golden Horde.
Troubles as Grand Prince and Rivalry with Moscow
While he seemed secure in the throne, being the legitimate heir and having been confirmed by the Khan in Sarai, Grand Prince Mikhail suffered a series of setbacks as grand prince which led to him losing the grand princely office for both himself and, in some ways, ultimately for his descendants. He was, like most Grand Princes of Vladimir, accepted as Prince of Novgorod the Great in 1309,[2] but fought with Novgorod, going so far as to withdraw his lieutenants (namestniki) and cut off grain shipments into the city in 1312.
While he was on decent terms with Tokhta Khan, and initially with his successor, Uzbeg Khan (Mikhail paid homage on Uzbeg's accession to the throne in 1313 and remained in Sarai until 1315), he eventually lost influence to Yury of Moscow, who gained influence in Novgorod while the grand prince was away in Sarai. Mikhail did manage to finally take control of the city in 1316 with Mongol aid, but the following year Uzbeg Khan gave the yarlik or patent of office of the Grand Prince of Vladimir to Yury, who also married Uzbeg's sister.
After granting Yury the iarlyk or patent of office, the Khan sent his army under the Mongol general Kavgadii to help Yuri in his struggle with Mikhail Yaroslavich. December 22, 1317 Mikhail defeated Yuri at a village called Bortenevo (40 km from Tver). Mikhail captured Yuri's wife, who was the Khan's sister. When she died in Mikhail's custody, he was blamed for her death, although it seems unlikely that he would have killed her knowing how much it would hurt him politically for such little gain. He released Kavgadii, who returned to Sarai and accused Mikhail of murdering the Khan's sister, withholding tribute, and warring against his Mongol overlord. As a result, Mikhail was summoned to the Horde by the Khan and executed on November 22, 1318.
Mikhail and the Church
Mikhail also alienated the Church, particularly Metropolitan Petr (ruled 1308–1326). When Metropolitan Maksim died in 1305, Mikhail nominated another candidate, but Petr was consecrated by the Patriarch of Constantinople. Petr sided with Moscow and opposed Mikhail on several occasions. In 1309, he appointed David as Archbishop of Novgorod and David was instrumental in the argument that led Mikhail to withdraw his lieutenants and cut the grain supplies to the city. In 1314, Novgorod called on Yury to be named grand prince and for Mikhail to be deposed. Thus the support of the Church aided Yury to Mikhail's detriment.[5] Despite his having been unfavored by the Russian Orthodox Church during his lifetime, the Church later declared Mikhail a saint because of his piousness during his summons by the Khan which he knew was to certain death and because his relics, when transported to his hometown, were discovered to be incorrupt.[6]
Family and children
In 1294 Mikhail married Princess Anna of Rostov, daughter of Dimitry of Rostov. They had five children:
Prince Dmitry of Tver (1299–1326)
Prince Alexander of Tver (1301–1339)
Prince Konstantin of Tver (1306–1346)
Prince Vasily of Kashin (d. after 1368)
Feodora of Tver
Mikhail's sons and successors Dmitry the Terrible Eyes and Alexander were both also loved in the Horde, as was Alexander's elder son, Mikhail. Both Aleksandr Mikhailovich, and Mikhail Aleksandrovich briefly held the Grand Princely office (in 1326-1327 and 1371-1372 respectively)[7] but Mikhail's failure to defeat Yury of Moscow, followed by Aleksandr's role (real or perceived) in the Tver Uprising of 1327, led the Tver branch to lose the favor of the Khans, and the Danilovich - the Muscovite princes, held the title for all but two years after 1317.
Mikhail's wife took the veil in Kashin's nunnery and died there on October 2, 1368. She is commemorated as Anna of Kashin by the Russian Orthodox Church and was canonized in 1677.
=== ?? Line 14: (New PAF RIN=48498) 1 NAME M ===
?? Line 14: (New PAF RIN=48498) 1 NAME Mikhail I Yaroslavich, Grand Duke Of /TVER AND VLADIMIR/
=== Mikhail Yaroslavich el santo Gran Duque de Tver ===
El santo Gran Duque de Tver, hijo de Yaroslav III, nieto de Yaroslav II Vsevolodovich, nació en 1272, poco después de la muerte de su padre, y de su segunda esposa Xenia; fue apodado Tversky, porque reinó en Tver.
Después de la muerte del Gran Duque Andrei Alexandrovich de Tverskoy (1304), se suponía que Mikhail ascendería al trono del Gran Duque, pero su sobrino, Georgy Danilovich de Moscú, le desafió este derecho. Este litigio se prolongó durante muchos años, agravado por la intransigencia y el deseo de poder de Georgy y su parentesco con los tártaros: estaba casado con Konchak, la hermana de Khan Uzbek.
Preferred Parents:
Father: Yaroslav Yaroslavich Grand Duke of Tver and Vladimir III, b. BEF 1236 in Владимир, Владимирское Княжество d. 16 SEP 1271 in , Удельная Русь
Mother: Kseniya Mariya Yurevna Grand Duchess of Tver and Vladimir, b. 1243 in Tarusa,Russia,U.S.S.R. d. 1313
Family 1: Anna von Kaschin "The Saint", b. 1280 in Rostov, Russia d. 2 OCT 1368 in Kashin, Tver', Russia
- m. 8 NOV 1294 in Tver Tverskaya Oblast', Russia
- Alexander II. Michailowitsch Von Tver, b. 7 OCT 1301 in Tver', Tver', Rússia d. 29 OCT 1339 in sarai, Ryazanskaya Oblast', Rússia
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