of
St. Demetrius was installed by Sviatopolk in the Kievan
St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery to glorify the patron saint of his father. '' When
Vsevolod Iaroslavich died in 1093, Sviatopolk was acknowledged by other princes as the senior son of the grand prince and permitted to ascend the Kievan throne. Although he participated in the princely congresses organized by Vladimir Monomakh, he is sometimes charged with encouraging internecine wars among Rurikid princes. For instance, he sided with his cousin David of
Volhynia and his son-in-law
Bolesław III Wrymouth in capturing and blinding one of the
Galician princes. He also sided with Vladimir Monomakh in several campaigns against the
Kipchaks but was defeated in the
Battle of the Stugna River (1093). Later that year, Sviatopolk was again defeated when faced with the Kipchaks, whereupon the latter destroyed Torchesk, an Oghuz Turk settlement. In 1096, in an attempt to force
Oleg I of Chernigov into a Rus compact, Sviatopolk left his lands undefended. His father-in-law, Tugorkhan, raided
Pereyaslavl, while
Boniak, a
Cuman khan, raided as far as Kiev, destroying
Berestovo and sacking the three monasteries of Klov, Vydubichi, and
the Kiev Monastery of the Caves. Tugorkhan was killed during his raid on Pereiaslavl, and so Sviatopolk had him buried in Kiev. In 1111, Sviatopolk, alongside
Vladimir II, led an army at the , where they defeated a Cuman army on the river. The site of this battle is probably at modern-day
Izium. Sviatopolk's
Christian name was Michael, so he encouraged embellishment of St Michael's Abbey in Kiev, which has been known as the
Golden-Roofed up to the present. The history now known as
the Primary Chronicle was compiled by the monk
Nestor during Sviatopolk's reign. ==Marriage and children==