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11 October 1552 – 26 June 1553
- Dmitry Ivanovich (Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 11 October 1552 – 26 June 1553) was the eldest son of Ivan the Terrible, the Tsar of all Russia, and as such the first Tsarevich (heir apparent). He died in infancy.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tsarevich_Dmitry_Ivanovich_of_Russia_(1552–1553)Tsarevich Dmitry Ivanovich of Russia (1552–1553) - Wikipedia
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Feb 8, 2023 · When a king dies, their firstborn son, the heir, takes up the throne in his father’s stead. It sounds easy enough, but the royal succession was more complex. Before modern medicine, many children did not live long enough to become the next ruler. The title of heir then will go to the king’s second-born son, and so on.
- Lauren Dillon
Dmitry Ivanovich (Russian: Дмитрий Иванович; 11 October 1552 – 26 June 1553) was the eldest son of Ivan the Terrible, the Tsar of all Russia, and as such the first Tsarevich (heir apparent). He died in infancy.
He was the tsarevich (heir apparent) for close to seven years of his half-brother Feodor I's reign (though his legitimacy as an heir could have been contested by the Russian Orthodox Church). After his death, he was impersonated by a number of imposters to the throne, during the Time of Troubles .
Dmitry Ivanovich, the son of Tsar Ivan IV, was born in 1582 at a time of dynastic crisis. The tsarevich Ivan Ivanovich had been killed in 1581, and his mentally impaired brother Fedor had failed to produce offspring after several years of marriage.
The Life of St. Dimitry Tsarevich. St. Petersburg: liturg. M. M. Osipova, 1879.
Nov 5, 2018 · During Russia's "Time of Troubles" at the turn of the seventeenth century, a prince just wouldn't stay dead. The History Guy remembers the many death of Tsar...
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- The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered
Tsarevich Demetrius, or Tsarevich Dimitri, or Dmitriy Ivanovich, also known as Dmitry of Uglich and Dmitry of Moscow, ("Дмитрий Иванович", "Дмитрий Угличский", "Дмитрий Московский" in Russian) (October 19, 1582 — May 15, 1591) was a Russian tsarevich, son of Ivan the Terrible and Maria Nagaya.