Daniil Aleksandrovich, the youngest son of Alexander …

Years: 1302 - 1302

Daniil Aleksandrovich, the youngest son of Alexander Nevsky and forefather of all the Grand Princes of Moscow, had been born in 1261 in Vladimir, the capital of the Great Vladimir principality.

One of the most junior princes in the House of Rurik, Daniel is thought to have been named after his celebrated relative, Daniel of Galicia.

His father died when he was only two years young.

Of his father's patrimonies, he had received the least valuable, Moscow.

When he was a child, the tiny principality was being governed by tiuns (deputies), appointed by his paternal uncle, Grand Prince Yaroslav III.

During the Mongol occupation and internecine wars among the Rus' princes, Daniel has created peace in Moscow without bloodshed, participating in battle only once during thirty years of rule.

(According to legend, Daniel was popular and respected by his subjects for his meekness, humbleness and peacefulness.)

Daniel had taken part in the struggle of his brothers—Dmitri of Pereslavl and Andrey of Gorodets— for the right to govern Vladimir and Novgorod, respectively.

After Dmitry's death in 1294, Daniel had made an alliance with Mikhail of Tver and Ivan of Pereslavl against Andrey of Gorodets of Novgorod.

Daniel's participation in the struggle for Novgorod in 1296 indicates Moscow's increasing political influence.

Constantine, the prince of Ryazan, had decided to capture the Moscow lands with the help of a Mongol force, but Prince Daniel had defeated it near Pereyaslavl.

In 1300, he had imprisoned the ruler of the Ryazan Principality, "by some ruse", as the chronicle says.

To secure his release, the prisoner had ceded to Daniel his fortress of Kolomna.

It is an important acquisition, as now Daniel controls all the length of the Moskva River.

His childless cousin and ally, Ivan of Pereslavl, bequeaths to Daniel all his lands, including Pereslavl-Zalessky, in 1302.

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