St. Vladimir I of Kiev Biography
St. Vladimir I of Kiev Biography, Feast Day, Date of Birth, Country of Birth, Profession, Place of Work, Date of Death, Place of Death. |
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Date of Birth | 956 AD |
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Country of Birth | Ukraine of Europe |
Matrimony/Holy Orders | St.s who were Married |
Profession | Prince |
Place of Work | Ukraine |
Date of Death | July 15 1015 |
Place of Death | Berestova, near Kiev |
Feast Day | July 15 |
Beatification | N/A |
Canonization | Pre-Congregation |
Patron Saint of | Manitoba, archeparchy of Winnipeg Ukrainian Catholic Diocese of Stamford, Connecticut, United States Russia converts parents of large families reformed and penitent murderers |
Biography
Saint Vladimir I of Kiev, grandson of St. Olga of Kiev. Child of the agnostic Norman-Rus ruler Svyatoslav of Kiev and his partner Malushka. Terrific ruler of Kiev. Sovereign of Novgorod in 970. On the demise of his dad in 972, he fled to Scandinavia, enrolled help from an uncle, and defeated Yaropolk, another child of Svyatoslav, who had endeavored to hold onto Novgorod and Kiev. By 980 Vladimir had united the Kievan domain from Ukraine to the Baltic Sea, and had set the outskirts against Bulgarian, Baltic, and Eastern wanderers.
Conversion
Christianity had gained some ground in Kiev, however Vladimir stayed agnostic, had seven spouses, built up sanctuaries, and took an interest in excessive rituals, potentially including human penance. Around 987, Byzantine Emperor Basil II looked for military guide from Vladimir. The two achieved a settlement for help that included Basil’s sister Anne in marriage, and Vladimir turning into a Christian. He was purified through water, took the patronal name Basil, at that point requested the Christian change of Kiev and Novgorod. Icons were tossed into the Dnieper River, and the new Rus Christians embraced the Byzantine ritual in the Old Church Slavonic language. Legend says Vladimir picked the Byzantine custom over the ceremonies of German Christendom, Judaism, and Islam as a result of its extraordinary excellence; it likely additionally mirrored his assurance to stay free of outside political control.
Byzantines kept up religious authority over the new Rus church; the Greek metropolitan for Kiev answered to both the patriarch of Constantinople and of the sovereign. Rus-Byzantine religio-political joining checked the impact of the Roman Latin church in the Slavic East, and decided the course of Russian Christianity.
Vladimir extended training, legal organizations, and help to poor people. He and Anne had the saint children St. Boris and St. Gleb. Following the passing of Anne in 1011, another marriage associated him with the German Holy Roman sovereigns. His little girl turned into the associate of Casimir I the Restorer of Poland.
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