Anna VON ROSTOV

Anna VON ROSTOV

Eigenschaften

Art Wert Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Name Anna VON ROSTOV

Ereignisse

Art Datum Ort Quellenangaben
Geburt 1280
Tod 2. November 1368
Heirat 8. November 1294 Tver nach diesem Ort suchen

Ehepartner und Kinder

Heirat Ehepartner Kinder
8. November 1294
Tver
Michael VON TVER

Notizen zu dieser Person

Saint Anna of Kashin (Russian: Святая благоверная великая княгиня - инокиня Анна Кашинская) (1280 – 2 October 1368) was a Russian princess from the Rurik Dynasty, who was canonized in 1650.

Anna was a daughter of Prince Dmitry Borisovich of Rostov and a great-granddaughter of Prince Vasily of Rostov. From her earliest years, Anna was brought up strictly Christian. She was taught the virtues of Humbleness and obedience. Her teacherwas Saint Ignatius, bishop of Rostov (d. 1288), who was noted for strict selflessness and pacifism. Like all royal daughters of Her time, Anna learned different kinds of needlework. When the princess grew up, Princess Xenia of Tver, second wifeof Grand Prince Yaroslav of Tver sent ambassadors to Rostov with a request to marry Anna to her son Mikhail of Tver|Mikhail. The embassy was successful, and Anna became the wife of Prince Mikhail.

Princess Anna's marriage to Prince Mikhail took place on 8 November 1294 in the Preobrazhensky cathedral of Tver. In celebration of this event, dwellers in the city of Kashin built the Mikhaylovsky temple and the triumphal gates from the local Kremlin to the Tver road, naming the gates also "Mikhaylovsky." In the Kashin Uspensky cathedral a special Feast was established and celebrated annually on 8 November.

Anna and Mikhail had five children:

1. Feodora
2. Prince Dmitry of Tver (1299–1326)
3. Prince Alexander of Tver (1301–1339)
4. Prince Konstantin of Tver (1306–1346)
5. Prince Vasily of Kashin (d. after 1368)

In 1294, her father died, and in 1295 a terrible fire destroyed Tver. Soon after that, Anna and Mikhail's first-born daughter, Feodora, fell severely ill and died in infancy. In 1296, another fire destroyed their palace, and the prince and princess were barely rescued. In 1317, a war began between her husband and Prince Yury of Moscow.

In 1318 the princess said goodbye to her husband forever, who was summoned to the Horde, where he was brutally tortured to death on 22 November 1318. Only in July of the following year did Anna hear about her husband's martyrdom. Learning that Mikhail's remains had been brought to Moscow, she sent an embassy there, and her husband's body was transferred into Tver and buried in Preobrazhensky cathedral.

In 1325, her eldest son, Dimitry, was tortured in the Horde. In 1327, her second son, Alexander, broke the Tartar army, which devastated the duchy. In revenge Uzbeg Khan gathered a new army and destroyed Tver; Prince Alexander was forced to hideIn Pskov. For ten years, Anna did not see her son, and in 1339 Prince Alexander and his son Feodor were killed by the Horde.

After the death of Prince Mikhail, Anna carried out an old desire "in silence to work only for God." She took vows in Sofia's monastery in Tver and adopted the name Evfrosiniya. In 1365 the youngest son of the princess, Vasiliy, her only child remaining alive by that time, entreated his mother to move to his principality. The Uspensky monastery was built in Kashin, and there the saint accepted the schema with the name of Anna.

She died of old age on 2 October 1368, and was buried in the cathedral temple of the Blessed Virgin.

Quellenangaben

1 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_of_Kashin

Datenbank

Titel Ackermann-Ahnen
Beschreibung Familienforschung Europa Schwerpunkte Hessen, Niedersachsen Hugenotten + Waldenser Europäisches Mittelalter
Hochgeladen 2024-01-01 13:36:39.0
Einsender user's avatar Thomas Wolfgang Ackermann
E-Mail ackermann.fuldatal@googlemail.com
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