See also

Family of Rostislav VLADIMIROVICH and Anna LANKE

Husband: Rostislav VLADIMIROVICH (1045-1066)
Wife: Anna LANKE (c. 1050- )

Husband: Rostislav VLADIMIROVICH

Name: Rostislav VLADIMIROVICH
Sex: Male
Father: Vladimir (1020-1052)
Mother: Anna (c. 1025- )
Birth 1045 Tmutarakan, Krasnodar, Russia
Title frm 1056 to 1064 (age 10-19) Prince of Volyn
Title 1056 (age 10-11) Prince of Rostov
Title frm 1064 to 1065 (age 18-20) Prince of Tmutarakan
Death 3 Feb 1066 (age 20-21) Tmutarakan, Krasnodar, Russia

Wife: Anna LANKE

Name: Anna LANKE
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 1050 (est)

Note on Husband: Rostislav VLADIMIROVICH

Rostislav Vladimirovich (died 1066) was a landless prince (izgoi) from the Rurikid dynasty of Kievan Rus’. He was baptized as Mikhail.[1]

 

During his minority, Rostislav ruled Rostov in the land of the Merya. His father Vladimir of Novgorod was the eldest son of Yaroslav I of Kiev. If Vladimir had not predeceased his father, he would have succeeded to the Kievan throne. Under the East Slavic house law, the early death of Rostislav's father made his descendants forfeit all claims to Kiev.

 

For five years after his father's death, Rostislav who was about 14 years old had no appanage. Finally, his uncles gave him Volhynia and Halych, where he stayed from 1057 and 1064, guarding the western frontier of the Rus' lands. According to Vasily Tatischev, it was there that he married Anna Lanke, the daughter of King Béla I of Hungary. Rostislav did not like the distant and meager land and, in 1064, assisted by his father's close friend Vyshata, seized the rich Tmutarakan on the Black Sea littoral, previously controlled by the House of Chernigov.

 

His predecessor, Gleb Svyatoslavich, escaped to his father, Svyatoslav II of Chernigov who was part of the Yaroslaviches triumvirate. The latter approached Tmutarakan with his army and Rostislav was forced to leave the city. Once Svyatoslav returned to Chernigov, Rostislav expelled Gleb once again from Tmutarakan and entered the city in triumph. During his brief rule, he subdued the local Circassians (also known as Kasogi) and other indigenous tribes. His success provoked the rivalry of neighboring Greek Chersonesos in Crimean peninsula, whose envoy poisoned him on 3 February 1066.