Origins The first known prince of
Rostov mentioned in the
Primary Chronicle under the year 988 was
Yaroslav Vladimirovich, appointed by his father
Vladimir I of Kiev. In 1024, there was reportedly a famine in the area, and a revolt stoked up by pagan sorcerers was suppressed by Yaroslav personally. Upon his death in 1054,
Vsevolod Yaroslavich received the lands of Rostov and
Suzdal. Little is known about the region until the 1090s, except that the town of
Yaroslavl had been founded upon the upper Volga by 1071, and that
Vladimir Monomakh ordered a church to be built in Rostov.
Bishops are recorded in the 1080s and 1090s, but the seat appears to have remained vacant for the next half-century. The 1097
Council of Liubech confirmed Vladimir Monomakh's possession of Rostov and Suzdal. By the early 12th century, the towns of Rostov, Suzdal and
Murom remained junior postings.
Rostov-Suzdal At the 1097
Council of Liubech, Monomakh became prince of Pereyaslavl, including Rostov, for which he made an
appanage for his sons. From that time onwards, the Rostov region was a point of contention between the
Monomakhovichi of Pereyaslavl and the
Sviatoslavichi of
Murom. Control of the
upper Volga river was particularly important, as it was the primary route for trade between
Volga Bulgaria to the east and
Veliky Novgorod to the west. Intercepting that commercial shipping for their own profit was tempting for the Monomakhovichi, but also risky, as it provoked hostilities with both the Bulgars and Novgorodians. It seems that by the year 1108, Monomakh's sixth son
Yuri Dolgorukiy, who resided in the town of
Suzdal', was the prince of Rostov. In the same year, he supposedly founded the fortified outpost of
Vladimir (Volodimer) on the
Klyazma, to control that river and defend against raids of the
Volga Bulgars who had attacked in 1107. In 1120, Yuri conducted a military campaign against
Bolghar territory. During the 11th and 12th centuries when southern parts of Rus' were systematically raided by Turkic nomads, their inhabitants began to migrate northward. In the formerly wooded areas, known as
Zalesye, many new settlements were established. The foundations of
Pereslavl,
Kostroma,
Dmitrov,
Moscow,
Yuriev-Polsky,
Uglich,
Tver,
Dubna, and many others were assigned (either by chronicle or popular legend) to G, whose sobriquet ("the Long-Armed") alludes to his dexterity in manipulating the politics of far-away
Kiev. Sometime in 1108 Monomakh strengthened and rebuilt the town of
Vladimir on the
Klyazma River, 31 km south of Suzdal. During the rule of Yuri, the principality gained military strength, and in the Suzdal-Ryazan war of 1146, it conquered the
Ryazan Principality. Later in the 1150s, Yuri occupied Kiev a couple of times as well. From that time the lands of the northeastern Rus' played an important role in the politics of Kievan Rus'.
Rise of Vladimir Yuri's son
Andrey Bogolyubsky significantly increased Vladimir's power at the expense of the nearby princely states, which he treated with contempt. Unwilling to share power with his brothers and cousins, he drove them out and seized all their lands by 1162, thus uniting his father's patrimony in Vladimir-Suzdal under his sole rule (
samovlastets). When grand prince
Rostislav I of Kiev died in 1167, a succession crisis broke out in which Andrey argued that, according to the emergent tradition of the
Principality of Pereyaslavl being the domain of the crown prince of Kiev, his brother
Gleb ought to be enthroned. After
sacking Kiev in 1169, he enthroned his younger brother. Meanwhile, Andrey embellished Vladimir with white stone churches and monasteries. Gleb's death in 1171 led to yet another succession crisis that saw the Suzdalians kicked out of Kiev; Andrey formed another coalition in an attempt to retake the capital, but was utterly defeated in the
Siege of Vyshgorod (1173). The coalition fell apart, and some months later, prince Andrey was murdered by his own boyars in his suburban residence at
Bogolyubovo in 1174. During the
1174–1177 Suzdalian war of succession, Andrey's brother
Vsevolod III secured the throne of Vladimir, although the Yurievichi lost control of the
Novgorod Republic for a decade. The Yurievichi clan also dropped out of the competition for the Kievan throne, never seeking it again, supporting
Rurik Rostislavich's accession in 1194. Instead, Vsevolod's chief focus was on subjugating the southern
Ryazan Principality, which appeared to stir discord in the princely family, and the mighty Turkic state of
Volga Bulgaria, which bordered Vladimir-Suzdal to the east. After several military campaigns, Ryazan was burnt to the ground in 1208, and the Bulgars were forced to pay tribute.
Fragmentation fragmented Vsevolod's lands: Vsevolod's death in 1212 precipitated another serious dynastic conflict. His eldest son
Konstantin gained the support of powerful Rostovan boyars and
Mstislav the Bold of Kiev and expelled the lawful heir, his brother
George, from Vladimir to
Rostov. George managed to return to the capital six years later, upon Konstantin's death. George proved to be a shrewd ruler who decisively defeated Volga Bulgaria and installed his brother
Yaroslav in
Novgorod. His reign, however, ended when the Mongol hordes under
Batu Khan took and burnt Vladimir in 1238. Thereupon they proceeded to devastate other major cities of Vladimir-Suzdal during the
Mongol invasion of Kievan Rus'.
Under Mongol suzerainty was built in 1158–1160 and functioned as the mother church of Kievan Rus' in the 13th century. While heavy tribute payments and the initial Mongol invasions did manage to cause much destruction to Vladimir-Suzdal, rule under the Mongols also brought wealth to the region, as Vladimir was able to access the Mongol's lucrative patronage of oriental trade. None of the cities of the principality managed to regain the power of Kievan Rus' after the Mongol invasion. Vladimir became a vassal of the
Mongol Empire, later succeeded by the
Golden Horde, with the Grand Prince appointed by the
Great Khan. Even the popular
Alexander Nevsky of Pereslavl had to go to the Khan's capital in
Karakorum to be installed as the Grand Prince in Vladimir. As many factions strove for power, the principality rapidly disintegrated into eleven tiny states:
Moscow,
Tver,
Pereslavl,
Rostov,
Yaroslavl,
Uglich,
Belozersk,
Kostroma,
Nizhny Novgorod,
Starodub-upon-Klyazma, and
Yuriev-Polsky. All of them nominally acknowledged the suzerainty of the Grand Prince of Vladimir, but his effective authority became progressively weaker. By the end of the century, only three cities — Moscow, Tver, and Nizhny Novgorod — still contended for the title of Grand Prince of Vladimir. Once installed, however, they chose to remain in their own cities rather than move to Vladimir. The
Principality of Moscow gradually came to eclipse its rivals. The decision of
metropolitan Peter of Kiev and all Rus' to move his chair from Vladimir to Moscow in 1325 was another sign of Moscow's rising prominence. When the
Tver Uprising of 1327 broke out, forces of Moscow and Nizhny Novgorod helped the Mongols crush it. By the end of the 1330s, Moscow had eclipsed Tver, which then descended inter-princely wars between the various appanages of Tver, particularly between Kashin and Mikulin. During the
Great Troubles, Tver and Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal both attempted to regain the title of grand prince of Vladimir, with Tver succeeding a few times, but since 1394, Moscow effectively inherited the title and controlled Vladimir thereafter, signifying the end of a separate Vladimirian principality. Since that time, traditions of the old Principality of Rostov and the Grand Principality of Vladimir were both symbolically represented in various expanded titles of Grand Princes of Moscow, and later
Russian Tsars and
Emperors: up to 1917, they were all styled as rulers of various historical polities, including Vladimir and Rostov. Thus in Latin versions of those titles, the old Vladimirian and Rostovian polities were referred as
Vladimiria and
Rostovia. == Culture ==