142:
658:
That, of course, sounds as a fairy tale, however
Christianity as a religion while still being challenged by people that followed the older traditions used this misinterpretation to outcast the followers of Slavic paganism. Volkhvs of Novgorod were well known to challenge the well established Christianity in Kiev in the 11th century, which resulted in Vseslav's victory when Mstislav Iziaslavovich fled to Kiev. Not long after that the same volkhvs were calling to uprising against
446:, so its members could march out and face the nomads the second time, the crowd freed Vseslav from prison, and proclaimed him grand prince of Kiev, forcing Iziaslav to flee to Poland. Returning with an army seven months later, Iziaslav retook his throne, and Vseslav fled back to Polotsk. After several years of complicated struggle with Iziaslav of Kiev, he finally secured Polotsk in 1071. During the last 30 years of his reign, his chief enemies were
616:"He with wiles at the last tore himself free: and galloped to the city of Kíev; with his weapon took hold of the golden throne of Kíev; galloped from them like a wild beast at midnight from Bĕ́lgorod, swathed himself in a blue mist, rent asunder his bonds into three parts, opened wide the gates of Nóvgorod, shattered the Glory of Yarosláv ; galloped like a wolf from Dudútki to the Nemíga."
36:
540:
141:
657:
and were thought to possess magical powers. This fact may be tied to
Vseslav's alleged magical as well as his lupine aspects. In the Ruthenian Christianity volkhv is said to have been the son of a serpent and the Princess Marfa Vseslavevna and could transform himself into a wolf and other animals.
530:
is sometimes said to be
Vseslav's daughter, although her date of birth is given as 1120, two decades after Vseslav's death and thus she could not be his child; other sources, however, say she was the daughter of Sviatoslav Vseslavich, and thus a granddaughter of Vseslav. She founded a number of
421:
and bringing them to decorate his own cathedral of the same name in
Polotsk. His attack threatened to cut the sons of Yaroslav in the Middle Dnieper region off from Scandinavia, the Baltic region, and the far north, important sources of men, trade, and income (in furs for example) for the Rus
625:"Prince Vséslav was a judge to his subjects, he appointed cities for the princes: but he himself at night raced like a wolf from Kiev to the Idol of Tmutarakáń, raced, like a wolf across the path of the great Khors."
609:
is shown to illustrate that inter-princely strife is weakening the
Russian land. Vseslav is also said to be able to hear the church bells (stolen from Novgorod) of his cathedral at Polotsk all the way from Kiev:
461:—indeed the chronicles strangely link the two events, as if the sorcerer had died as a result of the crucifixion and resurrection. He was buried in the Cathedral of Holy Wisdom in Polotsk.
426:, in Kiev, and was thus and affront to the Kievan grand prince. The Yaroslavichi joined forces and marched north, sacking Minsk (then under the control of Polotsk) and defeating Vseslav in
683:
568:(a veil of birth membrane) on his head, and that the sorcerers told his mother that this should be bound to his head for the rest of his life as it was a sign of good luck. In modern
1071:
619:"On the Nemíga the sheaves are laid out with heads; men thresh with flails in hedgerows; on the barn-floor they spread out life; they winnow the soul from the body."
430:
on March 3, 1067 Vseslav fled but was treacherously captured during the peace talks in June, when
Iziaslav violated his oath. He was then imprisoned in Kiev.
923:
873:
The
Novgorodian First Chronicle as well as the Lavrentian and Hypatian Chronicles mention his death but not the place of burial. NPL, 17, 202;
1066:
733:
418:
758:
482:
243:
119:
422:
princes in the Middle
Dnieper. The attack also forced the young Mstislav, then enthroned in Novgorod, to flee back to his father,
497:, Prince of Drutsk; There has been some discussion whether Vseslav had six or rather seven sons. Some historians (L.Alekseev and
100:
934:(Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe, 1999), 7; Dianne E. Farrell, "Shamanic Elements in Some Early Eighteenth Century Russian Woodcuts,"
348:
72:
1061:
57:
50:
593:
351:, completed in the mid-11th century, is one of the most enduring monuments from his reign and the oldest stone building in
79:
1056:
386:
He took the throne of
Polotsk in 1044 upon his father's death, and although since 1093 he was the senior member of the
543:
Volga
Sviatoslavich, alias Volkh Vseslavich, the bogatyr based on Vseslav of Polotsk; a drawing by the Russian artist
86:
606:
427:
442:, brought about by defeat at the hands of the Kipchaks on the Alta River and Iziaslav's unwillingness to arm the
148:
68:
938:
52, No. 4 (Winter 1993): 725–744; Felix J. Oinas, "The Problem of the Aristocratic Origin of Russian Byliny,"
394:) from the grand princely succession. In fact, since he was the only major prince in Rus not descended from
920:
364:
340:
46:
1013:
628:"To him at Polotsk they rang the bells early for matins at Saint Sophia; and he at Kíev heard the sound."
531:
monasteries in Polotsk and the surrounding region, and is considered one of the patron saints of Belarus.
308:
1046:
622:"On the blood-stained Nemíga the banks were sown with bane,—sown with the bones of the sons of Russia."
527:
439:
640:
1051:
993:
659:
519:
336:
158:
915:
Roman Jakobson and Marc Szeftel, "The Vseslav Epos," in Roman Jakobson and Ernest J. Simmons, eds.,
1076:
695:
569:
395:
501:) believe that Boris was the baptizm name of Rogvolod, and thus they were one and the same person.
1003:
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557:
423:
376:
372:
186:
176:
93:
662:. Volkh appears in a number of drawings by the late-19th and early 20th-century Russian artist
1020:
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498:
451:
368:
332:
255:
193:
687:
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447:
405:, which was held by Yaroslav's three sons, Vseslav started pillaging the northern areas of
927:
488:
268:
390:
for his generation, since his father had not been prince in Kiev, Vseslav was excluded (
494:
522:, with the rest of Vseslaviches. It is uncertain who his wife or his descendants were.
398:, he was, according to Simon Franklin and Jonathan Shepard, "an outsider from within"
1040:
387:
663:
544:
17:
723:
613:"In the seventh age of Troyán Vséslav cast his lots for the Maiden dear to him."
477:). Roman perished either in Ryazan or Murom. His widow became a nun and lived in
903:
35:
457:
Vseslav died April 24, 1101, the Wednesday before Good Friday according to the
919:
42 (Philadelphia: American Folklore Society, 1949, p. 83; available online at
539:
406:
774:
515:
347:, he created a coalition against the Yaroslaviches' triumvirate. Polotsk's
957:
414:
298:
413:
but was thrown back. In the winter of 1066–1067, he pillaged and burnt
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344:
293:
247:
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220:
649:
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443:
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391:
751:
Dynasties of the world: a chronological and genealogical handbook
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402:
917:
Russian Epic Studies. Memoirs of the American Folklore Society
417:
the Great, removing the bell and other religious objects from
383:(with Vasilii as his baptismal name) and married around 1060.
29:
813:
Novgorodskaia Pervaia Letopis: Starshego i mladshego izvodov
564:
states that he was conceived by sorcery and was born with a
632:
Volkh Vseslavich/Volga Sviatoslavich and Vseslav of Polotsk
921:
Volkh Vseslav'evich Bylina: A Poem of Vseslav the Sorcerer
27:
Prince of Polotsk (r. 1044–1101) and Kiev (r. 1068–1069)
572:
he is known as Usiasłaŭ the Sorcerer; in Russian he is
485:, where she opened her charity. They had no children.
643:or Volga Sviatoslavich, who is found in a cycle of
473:Roman (?-1114/1116), Prince of ? (probably of
304:
292:
278:
254:
238:
226:
211:
207:
199:
192:
182:
172:
164:
157:
134:
722:Franklin, Simon; Shepard, Jonathan (6 June 2014).
666:, who was heavily influenced by Russian folklore.
601:or folk-tales, he is depicted as a werewolf. In
753:. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 167.
371:and Vitebsk, and was thus the great-grandson of
815:(Moscow and Leningrad: ANSSR, 1950), 17, 186;
591:Vseslav also appears in the 12th-century epic
775:"Музей истории архитектуры Софийского собора"
8:
580:, Vseslav the Sorcerer or Vseslav the Seer.
779:Музей истории архитектуры Софийского собора
948:
795:(London and New York: Longman, 1996), 251.
140:
131:
120:Learn how and when to remove this message
904:"Tale of the Armament of Igor", Part II
848:(PSRL 1), 166–7; Franklin and Shepard,
714:
675:
636:Vseslav may also be the basis for the
275:
56:Please improve this article by adding
1072:11th-century princes from Kievan Rus'
942:Vol. 30, No. 3 (Sept. 1971): 513–522.
791:Simon Franklin and Jonathan Shepard,
7:
323:1029 – 24 April 1101; also known as
556:Vseslav had a great reputation for
653:were priests of the pre-Christian
379:. He was born in c. 1029–1030 in
25:
821:Novgorodskaia chetvertaia letopis
535:Vseslav in literature and legend
34:
811:(PSRL 2), 155; A. N. Nasonov,
781:(in Russian). 20 January 2010.
510:Rostislav, possibly Prince of
507:Sviatoslav, Prince of Vitebsk;
1:
1067:Iziaslavichi family (Polotsk)
932:The Complete Russian Folktale
817:Novgorodskaia Tretaia Letopis
793:The Emergence of Rus 750–1200
725:The Emergence of Rus 750-1200
320:
215:
58:secondary or tertiary sources
419:the Cathedral of Holy Wisdom
409:. In 1065, he laid siege to
594:The Tale of Igor's Campaign
586:The Tale of Igor's Campaign
339:(1068–1069). Together with
261:
168:September 1068 – April 1069
1093:
728:. Routledge. p. 255.
607:defeat at the Nemiga River
514:. In 1129, he was sent to
428:battle on the Nemiga River
1027:
1018:
1010:
1000:
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978:
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562:Russian Primary Chronicle
504:Davyd, Prince of Polotsk,
459:Russian Primary Chronicle
283:
274:
139:
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349:Cathedral of Holy Wisdom
244:Cathedral of Holy Wisdom
1014:Bryachislav Izyaslavich
749:Morby, John E. (2002).
597:, where, as in several
365:Bryachislav Izyaslavich
363:Vseslav was the son of
341:Rostislav Vladimirovich
891:Lavrentevskaia Letopis
875:Lavrentevskaia Letopis
862:Lavrentevskaia letopis
846:Lavrentevskaia Letopis
832:Franklin and Shepard,
805:Lavrentevskaia Letopis
548:
483:Saint Sophia Cathedral
469:Vseslav had six sons:
317:Vseslav Bryachislavich
309:Bryachislav of Polotsk
284:Vseslav Bryachislavich
45:relies excessively on
1062:Grand princes of Kiev
552:Vseslav in chronicles
542:
528:Euphrosyne of Polotsk
440:Kiev Uprising of 1068
401:Unable to secure the
850:The Emergence of Rus
834:The Emergence of Rus
660:Gleb Sviatoslavovich
520:Vladimir II Monomakh
448:Vsevolod Yaroslavich
434:Grand Prince of Kiev
337:Grand Prince of Kiev
325:Vseslav the Sorcerer
159:Grand Prince of Kiev
69:"Vseslav of Polotsk"
1057:People from Polotsk
879:Ipatevskaia Letopis
809:Ipatevskaia Letopis
700:Усяслаў Брачыславіч
692:Всеслав Брячиславич
450:and Vsevolod's son
149:Radziwiłł Chronicle
18:Usiaslau of Polatsk
953:Vseslav of Polotsk
926:2005-11-22 at the
906:, Sacred Texts.com
549:
491:, Prince of Minsk;
377:Rogneda of Polotsk
373:Vladimir I of Kiev
1035:
1034:
1028:Succeeded by
1021:Prince of Polotsk
1001:Succeeded by
930:. Jack V. Haney,
735:978-1-317-87224-5
499:Vasily Tatishchev
452:Vladimir Monomakh
369:Prince of Polotsk
333:Prince of Polotsk
314:
313:
288:
287:
194:Prince of Polotsk
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16:(Redirected from
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1030:Davyd Vseslavich
1011:Preceded by
984:Preceded by
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864:(PSRL 1), 171–2.
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641:Volkh Vseslavich
578:Vseslav Veshchii
335:(1044–1101) and
329:Vseslav the Seer
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135:Vseslav the Seer
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877:(PSRL 1), 275;
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819:(PSRL 3), 212;
807:(PSRL I), 166;
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655:Slavic religion
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574:Vselav Charadei
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489:Gleb Vseslavich
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269:Gleb Vseslavich
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230:April 24, 1101
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146:Vseslav in the
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979:Regnal titles
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893:(PSRL 1), 155.
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1047:1030s births
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664:Ivan Bilibin
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343:and voivode
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44:
1052:1101 deaths
584:Vseslav in
438:During the
173:Predecessor
1077:Werewolves
1041:Categories
1025:1044–1101
1004:Iziaslav I
998:1068–1069
987:Iziaslav I
709:References
696:Belarusian
570:Belarusian
407:Kievan Rus
187:Iziaslav I
177:Iziaslav I
80:newspapers
47:references
684:‹See Tfd›
516:Byzantium
359:Biography
203:1044–1101
183:Successor
110:July 2024
924:Archived
424:Iziaslav
415:Novgorod
396:Yaroslav
688:Russian
650:Volkhvs
638:bogatyr
560:. The
558:sorcery
479:Polotsk
403:capital
381:Polotsk
353:Belarus
345:Vyshata
294:Dynasty
262:more...
248:Polotsk
233:Polotsk
221:Polotsk
94:scholar
969:
852:, 252.
836:, 252.
757:
732:
645:byliny
605:, his
599:byliny
512:Lukoml
475:Drutsk
465:Family
331:) was
305:Father
239:Burial
96:
89:
82:
75:
67:
971:Died:
964:Born:
958:Rurik
670:Notes
444:veche
411:Pskov
392:izgoi
299:Rurik
279:Names
256:Issue
200:Reign
165:Reign
101:JSTOR
87:books
973:1101
966:1039
755:ISBN
730:ISBN
566:caul
526:St.
375:and
227:Died
218:1029
212:Born
73:news
576:or
518:by
327:or
246:in
49:to
1043::
777:.
698::
694:;
690::
647:.
481:,
454:.
367:,
355:.
321:c.
216:c.
60:.
763:.
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319:(
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108:(
98:·
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