Although the city was surrounded by
Cuman-controlled lands, there are no records of Oleshia being under their attack. However, it was the site of numerous disputes among Rus' princes. Oleshia is first mentioned in the
Primary Chronicle (PVL) in 1084 as the place where the exiled prince David Igorevich pillaged traders that were heading for Greece (the
Byzantine Empire). Most
textual witnesses of the Primary Chronicle have the word грьчьникы (
Grĭchnikÿ), meaning "merchants faring to Greece". Only the
Laurentian Codex has the word грькы (
Grĭkÿ, "Greeks"), which is intrinsically less probable, and therefore likely an error.
Leonid Makhnovets (1984) interpreted this section of the
Chronicle as saying that David's raids on the traders in Oleshia (which was apparently located on the
route from the Varangians to the Greeks) forced
Vsevolod I of Kiev to give up the city of
Dorohobuzh to David, so that he would stop harming the commercial interests of Rus'. The
Kievan Chronicle mentions that, in 1153, the representatives of
Iziaslav II of Kiev waited for Rusudan in the vicinity of Oleshia. In 1160, Oleshia was raided by
Berladnici, but they were defeated by the army of
Rostislav I of Kiev. lands around 1200. In 1164, representatives of Rostislav Mstislavich that were on their way to Constantinople with the demand to consecrate
Kliment Smoliatich happened to meet with the newly appointed Kievan metropolitan, John IV, in Oleshia. In 1219, the Volhynian prince
Daniel of Galicia was able to cross the
Dniester thanks to the boats that arrived from Oleshia. The city under Kievan Rus' is last mentioned
sub anno 6732 (1224) in the
Novgorod First Chronicle, during its narration of the
Battle of Oleshia and the
Battle of the Kalka River. Oleshia would later become a
Genoese colony named Illice, Ylice, or Elice (or, alternatively, the colony was founded nearby) until its destruction by the
Turks in 15th century. Illice's fall was further accelerated by the
Lithuanian expansion along the Dnieper, with the city fully disappearing by 1455. == Notes ==