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Battle on the Nemiga River

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1067 battle near Minsk, Belarus
Battle on the Nemiga River
DateMarch 3, 1067
Location
ResultKievan victory
Belligerents
Principality of PolotskPrincipality of Kiev
Principality of Chernigov
Principality of Pereiaslavl'
Commanders and leaders
Vseslav of PolotskIzyaslav of Kiev
Svyatoslav of Chernigov
Vsevolod of Pereyaslavl'

TheBattle on the Nemiga River (Belarusian:Бітва на Нямізе;Russian:Битва на реке Немиге) was abattle of theKievan Rus' feudal period that occurred on March 3, 1067 on theNiamiha River. The description of the battle is the first reference toMinsk in the chronicles of Belarusian history.

Background

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At the end of the tenth century, PrinceVladimir Svyatoslavich, then ruling overNovgorod the Great, proposed a marriage between himself and the daughter ofRogvolod, the prince ofPolotsk, who had rebuffed him, saying she did not want to take off the shoes of a slave's son.[1] In retaliation, Vladimir attacked and pillaged Polotsk, killed Rogvolod, and took his daughterRogneda by force, adding the city to his territorial possessions.[2] He placed his son,Izyaslav, in Polotsk. Iziaslav's son,Bryachislav of Polotsk, succeeded his father in 1001.

By 1021, Bryacheslav set his sights onNovgorod; he attacked and ransacked the city, but on the journey home, he was overtaken by Vladimir's sonYaroslav I the Wise, then ruling in Novgorod, on the banks of theSudoma River; he was defeated and fled, leaving behind his Novgorodian captives and loot.[3] Yaroslav pursued him and forced Bryachislav to make peace the following year, after which the Polotsk prince settled down. After Bryacheslav's death in 1044, his sonVseslav succeeded him as Prince of Polotsk. While his father had been an irritant to the Rus princes in the MiddleDnieper region, Vseslav's campaigns in the north were much more serious. He unsuccessfully besiegedPskov in 1065,[4] but the following year he drove out the young Novgorodian prince Mstislav, son of the Grand Prince of KievIzyaslav Yaroslavich, and pillagedNovgorod again. The seizure of Novgorod not only was a personal insult to the grand prince, whose son fled back to Kiev, but it threatened the Middle Dnieper princes' ties to the north – to Scandinavia, the Baltic, and tribute from the north. It also threatened the political power of the Yaroslavichi, the sons of Yaroslav the Wise, who had to that point been preeminent.

Progress of the battle

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The three sons of Yaroslav – Iziaslav, Vsevolod, and Sviatoslav – joined forces and marched north through the winter of 1067. They burned Minsk, then held by Polotsk,[5] and as this is the first reference to Minsk in the chronicles, it is celebrated as the founding date of the city. The Yaroslavichi army came upon Vseslav's army in the deep snow on theNiamiha River on March 3 and defeated him.[6] The precise course of battle is unknown, though it has become legendary as a bloodbath;The Tale of Igor's Campaign referred to "the bloody banks of the Nemiga" being sown not with blessings but with bones.[7]

Aftermath

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Vseslav fled back and Polotsk and the Yaroslav princes did not pursue him. However, in June, after the battle, the Yaroslav princes called for negotiations, “kissed the cross” (took an oath) and made promises of future safety; Vseslav was invited to Iziaslav's camp to celebrate the peace and was promptly arrested together with two of his sons and taken to prison in Kiev.[8]

References

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  1. ^Simon Franklin and Jonathan Shephard,The Emergence of Rus 750-1200 (London and New York: Longman, 1996), p. 153.
  2. ^Franklin and Shephard,The Emergence of Rus, pp. 152–153.
  3. ^Lavrentevskaia letopis, Vol. 1 of Polnoe Sobranie Russkikh Letopisei (St. Petersburg: E. Pratsa, 1908), col. 133
  4. ^Roman Jakobson, Marc Szeftel, "The Vseslav Epos," in Roman Jakobson and Ernest J. Simmons, eds.,Russian Epic Studies. Memoirs of the American Folklore Society 42 (Philadelphia: American Folklore Society, 1949 available online atVolkh Vseslav'evich Bylina: A Poem of Vseslav the SorcererArchived 2005-11-22 at theWayback Machine.
  5. ^Ipatevskaia letopis (PSRL 2), col. 156.
  6. ^Ipat. (PSRL 2), col. 156.
  7. ^Povest Literatury Drevnei rusi, vol. 12, p. 382.
  8. ^Ipat. (PSRL 2), col. 157)

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