Oleg I of Chernigov

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Template:Family name hatnote Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty

Oleg Svyatoslavich (Russian and Ukrainian: Олег Святославич; Template:Circa 1052 – 1 August 1115), nicknamed Gorislavich (Гориславич, literally "of famous woe")<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> was a prince from Kievan Rus' whose equivocal adventures ignited political unrest in the country at the turn of the 11th and 12th centuries. He reigned as Prince of Chernigov from 1094 to 1097, and as Prince of Novgorod-Seversk from 1097 to 1115{{ safesubst:#invoke:Unsubst||date=__DATE__ |$B= Template:Fix }}. He was the progenitor of the Olgovichi family.Template:Sfn

Early life and family

Oleg was a younger son of Sviatoslav Iaroslavich, Prince of Chernigov and his first wife, Killikiya.Template:Sfn He might have been either the second or the fourth among the four sons of Sviatoslav Iaroslavich by Killikiya, because their order of seniority is uncertain.Template:Sfn According to historian Martin Dimnik, Oleg was born around 1050.Template:Sfn Oleg was named after his grand uncle.Template:Citation needed His baptismal name was Michael.Template:Sfn The Tale of Igor's Campaign styles him Gorislavich, poetically deriving his patronymic from the Russian word for sorrow. His descendants, known as Olgovichi,Template:Efn were archrivals of Vladimir's descendants (known as Monomakhovichi) in their struggle for supremacy in Rus'.

Oleg's children were:

Military career

Dimnik writes that "it is highly probable" that Oleg succeeded his brother, Gleb in Tmutarakan after their father appointed the latter Prince of Novgorod in about 1068.Template:Sfn Oleg's father and uncle, Vsevolod Iaroslavich made an alliance against their elder brother, Iziaslav Iaroslavich, Grand Prince of Kiev and dethroned him on 22 March 1073.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn According to Dimnik, Oleg received the Principality of Vladimir from his father who succeeded Iziaslav Iaroslavich in Kiev.Template:Sfn In short, Oleg and his cousin, Vladimir MonomachTemplate:Mdashson of Vsevolod IaroslavichTemplate:Mdashbecame close friends.Template:Sfn Monomach writes in his Instruction that Oleg was the godfather of his eldest son, Mstislav.Template:Sfn The two cousins together commanded the troops Oleg's father sent to assist Boleslav II of Poland in Bohemia in 1076, according to the Russian Primary Chronicle.Template:Sfn

Sviatoslav Iaroslavich died in Kiev on 27 December 1077.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He was succeeded by his brother, Vsevolod Iaroslavich.Template:Sfn The new grand prince seems to have confirmed Oleg's rule in Vladimir, because no source makes mention of a conflict between them.Template:Sfn However, the dethroned Iziaslav IaroslavichTemplate:MdashVsevolod's brother and Oleg's uncleTemplate:Mdashreturned with Polish reinforcements.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Iziaslav and Vsevolod had a meeting where they reached an agreement: Vsevolod renounced of Kiev, but received Chernigov, the one-time domain of Oleg's father.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Iziaslav marched in Kiev on 15 July 1077, while Oleg "was with Vsevolod at Chernigov",<ref>Russian Primary Chronicle (year 6585), p. 165.</ref> according to the Primary Chronicle.Template:Sfn The chronicler's remark suggests that Oleg had by that time been forced to leave Vladimir.Template:Sfn

Failing to get along with his uncle, on 10 April 1077 Oleg fled to his brother Roman who reigned in Tmutarakan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Together with his cousin, Boris Vyacheslavich, who had also settled in Tmutarakan, Oleg made an alliance with the Cumans and invaded Rus' in the summer of 1078.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn They routed their uncle, Vsevolod on the Sozh River and entered Chernigov on 25 August.Template:Sfn The Russian Primary Chronicle accuses Oleg and Boris of being the first to lead "the pagans to attack the land of Rus'".<ref>Russian Primary Chronicle (year 6586), p. 165.</ref>Template:Sfn However, Vladimir Monomach, in his Instruction, reveals that he and his father, Vsevolod had hired Cumans when attacking Polotsk in the previous year.Template:Sfn

Expelled from Chernigov, Vsevolod fled to Kiev and sought assistance from his brother, Iziaslav.Template:Sfn They united their forces and marched against Chernigov.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Although Oleg and Boris were not in the town when their uncles arrived, the citizens decided to resist.Template:Sfn Oleg was willing to start negotiations with his uncles, but Boris refused his proposal.Template:Sfn The decisive battle was fought "at a place near a village on the meadow of Nezhata"<ref>Russian Primary Chronicle (year 6586), p. 166.</ref> on 3 October.Template:Sfn

He was defeated and escaped to Tmutarakan, where the Khazars had him imprisoned and sent in chains to Constantinople. The emperor, who was a relative and ally of Vsevolod, exiled him to Rhodes. There he married a noble lady, Theophano Mouzalonissa, who bore him several children.

Chernigov war of succession

Four years later, sources again find him active in Tmutarakan, where he adopted the title "archon of Khazaria". There ensued a prolonged internecine struggle with his cousins Sviatopolk II Iziaslavich and Vladimir II Monomakh. The war broke out due to the death (13 April 1093) of Vsevolod I Yaroslavich, grand prince of Kiev, and prince of Chernigov and Pereyaslavl.Template:Sfn Sviatopolk inherited the throne of Kiev as the eldest son of the senior branch; all parties accepted his accession, but they disagreed which branch would succeed him.Template:Sfn

The three warring factions were related dynastic princely branches, each descended from three sons of Yaroslav the Wise, and each of whom had reigned as grand prince of Kiev:Template:Sfn

While he was still alive, Vsevolod had appointed his son Vladimir Monomakh as governor over Chernigov, while the Sviatoslavichi probably still controlled the eastern half of Chernigov centred around Murom (split off as the Principality of Murom decades later).Template:Sfn Although Oleg's father Sviatoslav II had reigned as grand prince of Kiev from 1073 until his death in 1076, he had seized power out of order by driving out his brother Iziaslav I.Template:Sfn However, the latter regained the Kievan throne from 1076 until his death in 1078, to be succeeded by their youngest brother Vsevolod.Template:Sfn While Sviatoslav's sons, the Sviatoslavichi (including Oleg), considered their father's reign to have been legitimate, Vsevolod's son Vladimir Monomakh regarded it as illegitimate.Template:Sfn Upon Vsevolod's death, Monomakh therefore refused to hand over Chernigov to the sons of Sviatoslav II of Kiev, and even appointed his own son to govern Murom.Template:Sfn

Oleg decided to aggressively press his claim to Chernigov, and in 1094, he returned from Tmutarakan with an armed force of Kipchaks to Rus', drove out Monomakh and captured Chernigov.Template:Sfn While Monomakh resettled in Pereyaslavl, his sons still controlled eastern Chernigovia, including Murom on the river Oka, resisting Oleg.Template:Sfn A 1096 campaign by Oleg succeeded in killing Monomakh's son Iziaslav in Murom, but when he invaded Rostov-Suzdal (a Pereyaslavl possession), he was pushed back to Murom by Monomakh's other son Mstislav.Template:Sfn

The war ended with a compromise agreement at the 1097 Council of Liubech.Template:Sfn

Reign in Chernigov

One of the most prominent princes of Kievan period who never attained the Kievan throne, he died on 1 August 1115, and was buried in Chernigov.

Legacy

The Tale of Igor's Campaign criticized Oleg for contributing to the escalation of internal strife between Rurikid princes, as well as for his alliance with Cumans, who plundered the southern regions of Rus', which resulted in his monicker "Gorislavich" (from Old East Slavic горе - "woe").<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Notes

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References

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Bibliography

Primary sources

Literature

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