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| 0893 | Oleg |  |
| Succeeds as King of Russia, Viking Prince of Novgorod rules the new Princedom of Kiev
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| 0912 | Igor I |  |
| Succeeds as Grand Prince of Kiev
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| 0924 | Igor I |  |
| Succeeds as King of Russia
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| 0970 | Vladimir I |  |
| Succeeds as Prince of Novgorod
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| 0980 | Vladimir I |  |
| Succeeds as Grand Prince of Kiev
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| 1078 | Vladimir II |  |
| Succeeds as Prince of Chernigov, 1078-1094
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| 1113 | Vladimir II |  |
| Succeeds his cousin Svyatopok II in Kiev as Prince of Russia
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| 1125 | Mstislav I |  |
| Succeeds as Prince of Russia
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| 1132 | Yaropolk II |  |
| Succeeds as Prince of Russia
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| 1169 | Bogoliubskii |  |
| Assunmes the title Grand Prince
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| 1176 | Vsevolod III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1206 | Daniel |  |
| Galicia Inherits the Principalities of Galicia & Volhynia
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| 1212 | Yurii II |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir, 4th Grand Prince
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| 1216 | Constantine |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1218 | Yuri II |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir, restored
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| 1236 | Nevski of Novgorod |  |
| Elected Prince of Novgorod
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| 1247 | Andrew II |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1247 | Svyatoslav III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1249 | Andrei II of Russia |  |
| Succeeds his uncle Svyatoslav III as the Grand Duke of Vladimir, Andrey and Alexander went to Karakorum in Mongolia, where Andrey is appointed the next Grand Duke of Vladimir
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| 1252 | Alexander I |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1252 | Nevski of Novgorod |  |
| Succeeds as Grand Duke of Kiev & Vladimir, remains a vassal of the Mongols
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| 1263 | Daniel |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1264 | Yaroslav III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1272 | Vasilii |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1277 | Dimitri I |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1282 | Andrew III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1283 | Dimitri I |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir, restored
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| 1294 | Andrew III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir, restored
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| 1303 | Yuri |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1305 | Michael |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1318 | Yurii III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1322 | Dimitri II |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1326 | Alexander II |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1328 | Alexander III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1328 | Ivan I |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Grand Prince of Moscow, son of Prince Daniel of Moscow
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| 1331 | Ivan I |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1332 | Ivan I |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1340 | Simeon the Proud |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1353 | Ivan II the Red |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Grand Prince of Moscow, son of Ivan I
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| 1359 | Dimitri |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Prince of Moscow
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| 1360 | Dimitri III |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1362 | Dimitri |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1362 | Dimitri IV |  |
| Vladimir Succeeds as Grand Prince of Vladimir
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| 1389 | Basil I |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1389 | Vasily I |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Prince of Moscow
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| 1425 | Basil II the Blind |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1452 | Vasily II |  |
| Succeeds as Grand Prince of Moscow, son of Vasily I
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| 1462 | Ivan III the Great |  |
| Moscow Calls himself "sole ruler, Tsar of all Russia"
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| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1502 | Ivan III the Great |  |
| Moscow Decides to make his son Vasily his successor in preference to his nephew Dmitry
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| 1505 | Vasily III |  |
| Succeeds as Grand Prince of Moscow
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| 1533 | Ivan IV the Terrible |  |
| Moscow Rules under the Regency of his Mother, 1533-1538
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| 1546 | Ivan IV the Terrible |  |
| Moscow Assumes full power
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| 1584 | Theodore I |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar
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| 1598 | Boris Godunov |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar
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| 1605 | Dmitry I |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia on the death of Boris Godunov
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| 1605 | Theodore II |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar
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| 1606 | Basil IV |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar
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| 1613 | Michael |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, 1st of the Romanov line
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| 1645 | Alexis I Mikhaylovich |  |
| Moscow Alexis's tutor, Morozov, runs the government, 1645-1659
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| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1676 | Theodore III |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1682 | Ivan V |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, but affairs are administered by his half-sister Sophia
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| 1682 | Peter I the Great |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, son of Alexis, reigns jointly with half-brother Ivan
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| 1689 | Peter I the Great |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, Assumes control of the Government & sole rule of Russia
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| 1715 | Alexis Petrovitch |  |
| Denied permission to renounce succession & enter a monastery
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| 1721 | Peter I the Great |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1724 | Catherine I |  |
| A Lithuanian peasant who married a Swedish dragoon & then married Peter the Great
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| Succeeds as Empress of Russia
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| 1727 | Peter II |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, son of Peter I the Great
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| 1740 | Ivan VI |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar, son of Anna Leopoldovna & Prince Anton Ulrich
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| 1741 | Elizabeth |  |
| Overthrows the government of Anna Leopoldovna acting as Regent for Ivan VI
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| Succeeds as Empress of Russia
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| 1762 | Catherine II the Great |  |
| 14th July In the course of July 13 and July 14, the revolt of the Leib Guard removes Peter from the throne and proclaimes Catherine as reigning Empress
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| 17th July Although not descended from any Russian Emperor, Catherine succeeds her husband and becomes reigning Empress, following an earlier precedent when Catherine I succeeded Peter I in 1725
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| 17th July Catherine's ascension manifesto justifies her succession by citing the "unanimous election" but many regard her reign as a usurpation, tolerable only during the minority of Grand Duke Paul
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| 25th Dec Peter succeeds to the throne as Peter III of Russia and moves into the new Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, Catherine thus becomes Empress Consort of Russia
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| 1762 | Peter III |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1787 | Potemkin |  |
| Tauris Suceeds as Prince of Tauris
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| 1796 | Paul I |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, son of Peter III & Catherine the Great
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| 1801 | Alexander I |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1855 | Alexander II |  |
| Moscow Succeeds as Tsar of Russia
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| 1865 | Alexander III |  |
| Becomes heir apparrent on the death of his elder brother Nikolay
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| 1881 | Alexander III |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, Succeeds his father Alexander II
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| 1894 | Nicholas II |  |
| Succeeds as Tsar of Russia, Eldest son of Alexander III
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| 1918 | Alexis Nikolayevich |  |
| 27th April Declared the ruler of Russia by the Whites
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