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  1. Rogneda Rogvolodovna (Russian: Рогнеда Рогволодовна; [a] Christian name: Anastasia; c. 960 – c. 1000), [3] also known as Ragnhild (Ragnheiðr), [4] is a person mentioned in the Primary Chronicle as having been a princess of Polotsk, the daughter of Rogvolod (Ragnvald), who came from Scandinavia and established ...

  2. 26 de abr. de 2022 · Rogneda (baptized Anastasia, d. c.1000) was the daughter of Prince Rogvolod of Polotsk. Biography: Princess Rogneda lived in Polotsk and was betrothed to Yaropolk Svyatoslavich, Grand Prince of Kiev.

    • "Ранхилд Горислава Полоцкая"
    • Полоцк, Полоцкое Княжество, Belarus
    • 962
  3. When Rogneda Rogvolodovna Grand Princess consort of Kyiv was born about 0962, her father, Rogvolod First Prince of Polotsk, Belarus, was 27 and her mother, Ingelborge of Norway, was 15. She married Vladimir the Great Sviatoslavich I, Saint Vladimir, Grand Prince of Kiev and Prince of Novgorod in 0977.

  4. 7 de set. de 2021 · Explore genealogy for Рогнеда (Polotsk) Полоцкая born 0962 Polotsk, Chelyabinsk, Byelorussia died 1002 Berestovo, Kiev, Ukraine including ancestors + descendants + 3 genealogist comments + more in the free family tree community.

    • Female
  5. 18 de dez. de 2019 · Rogneda was the Polotsk princess, daughter of Prince Rogvolod. After the defeat of his father and the capture of Polotsk by the troops of Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich, she was forcibly taken as his wife (she became the third wife after the “Czech” and the Greek Preface – the wife of the murdered Vladimir Yaropolk).

  6. Rogneda Rogvolodovna (Russian: Рогнеда Рогволодовна; Christian name: Anastasia; c. 960 – c. 1000), also known as Ragnhild (Ragnheiðr), is a person mentioned in the Primary Chronicle as having been a princess of Polotsk, the daughter of Rogvolod (Ragnvald), who came from Scandinavia and established himself at Polotsk in the ...

  7. Rogneda of Polotsk (962–1002) is the Slavic name for Ragnhild, whose father Ragnvald (Slavic: Rogvolod) came from overseas (i.e., from Scandinavia) and established himself at Polatsk, in Belarus, in the mid-10th century.