rostov-suzdal
If you are looking for the page with the statistics about this nation you can find it here: All Statistics
The cluster includes all the forms of the country.
The cluster includes the following incarnations of the same nation:
Principality of Rostov-Suzdal
Principality of Vladimir-Suzdal
Principality of Vladimir-Suzdal (Mongol Empire)
Principality of Vladimir-Suzdal (Golden Horde)
Establishment
January 1133: Following the death of Mstislav I of Kiev in 1132, the semi-autonomous states of the Kievan Rus' were de facto independent.
Chronology
Interactive Chronologies with maps are available in the section Changes Navigation
Following the death of Mstislav I of Kiev in 1132, the semi-autonomous states of the Kievan Rus' were de facto independent.
Were a series of military campaigny by the Mongols that created the largest contiguous Empire in history, the Mongol Empire, which controlled most of Eurasia.
2.1.Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus'
The Mongol Empire invaded and conquered the Kievan Rus' in the mid-13th century.
February 1238: The Mongols burnt down Kolomna and Moscow.
February 1238: After burning down Kolomna and Moscow, the Mongols proceeded to besiege the city Vladimir. Three days later, the capital of Vladimir-Suzdal was taken and burnt to the ground.
March 1238: The forces of Vladimir-Suzdal were encircled and totally annihilated by the Mongols in the Battle of the Sit River on March 4. Vladimir-Suzdal became a Mongol vassal.
March 1238: The forces of Vladimir Suzdal crossed the Volga to engage the Mongols.
Were a series of wars between the successor states of the Mongol Empire.
3.1.Toluid Civil War
Was a war of succession over the Mongol Empire fought between Kublai Khan and his younger brother, Ariq Böke, from 1260 to 1264.
3.1.1.Division of the Mongol Empire
The Mongol Empire fragmented into four successor states at the beginning of the Toluid Civil War.
January 1261: The Mongol Empire fragmented into four political units: the Golden Horde, the Ilkhanate, the Yuan Dynasty and the Chagatai Khanate.
January 1137: At the end of the XII - beginning of the XIII centuries - the settlement of the Vyatka land by the first Russian settlers, mainly immigrants from the Novgorod Republic, began.
January 1158: urij Dolgorukij moved the throne of the principality of Rostov-Suzdal to Vladimir in 1157.
January 1166: The first reliably known prince of Kolomna was Gleb Svyatoslavich.
January 1171: In the 1160s the Principality of Ryazan was divided into the Murom principality and the Ryazan principality.
January 1176: The Pereyaslavl-Zalessky Principality Existed from 1175.
January 1208: In 1207 a sub-principality of Rostov was established again under Konstantin Vsevoloditsch.
January 1214: The Yurievsky Principality was founded in 1213 by Prince Svyatoslav Vsevolodovich.
January 1217: The Principality of Suzdal is established as an inheritance of the Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal Grand Duchy.
January 1217: Uglitsky principality (1216-1605).
January 1219: The Yaroslavl principality was a Russian principality with the center in the city of Yaroslavl which existed from 1218 to 1463.
January 1219: The Principality of Suzdal is reabsorbed by the Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal Grand Duchy.
January 1229: In 1228 the Yurievsky Principality was annexed to the possessions of the Vladimir-Suzdal princes.
January 1239: The Principality of Beloozero was detached from the Principality of Rostov in 1238.
January 1239: The Principality of Suzdal is established as an inheritance of the Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal Grand Duchy.
January 1247: The Principality of Tverskoe emerged after the murder of the Grand Duke Yaroslav Vsevolodovich (1246).
January 1248: The Kostroma Principality separated from the Vladimir-Suzdal principality around 1247.
January 1248: In 1247, the Grand Duke of Vladimir Svyatoslav III Vsevolodovich allocated the principality to his nephews, the sons of Grand Duke Yaroslav II. One of them, Konstantin, got the Galicia-Dmitrov principality.
January 1249: In 1248 the Yurievsky Principality gained independence again.
January 1265: In 1264, the territory shown on the map was incorporated into the Gorodets Principality, which existed from 1264 to 1403. The principality was ruled by Prince Yaroslav of Tver and later by his descendants, playing a significant role in the political landscape of medieval Russia.
January 1278: The Kostroma principality returned to the Vladimir principality.
January 1281: The Dmitrov Principality was an independent state entity between 1280 and 1334.
January 1294: In 1293 the Grand Duke of Vladimir Dmitry Alexandrovich ceded the lands of the Kostroma principality to his brother Andrei.
January 1301: Expansion of the Grand Duchy of Moscow by 1300.
January 1322: After the death of Prince David of Yaroslavl in 1321, his sons, Vasily and Mikhail, divided the Yaroslavl principality. The Principality of Molozh was established. It encompassed the Mologa River basin, and its capital was the city of Mologa
Disestablishment
January 1332: The Moscovites absorbed the Duchy of Vladimir-Suzdal by the 1320s.
Selected Sources
Kopalyan, N. (2017): World Political Systems after Polarity, Taylor & Francis, p. 164