Eudoxia of Moscow

Grand Duchess of Muscovy
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroGrand Duchess of Muscovy
A.K.A.Euphrosyne of Moscow
A.K.A.Euphrosyne of Moscow
PlacesRussia
wasNoble
Work fieldRoyals
Gender
Female
Birth1 January 1353
Death1 January 1407Moscow, Russia (aged 54 years)
Family
Father:Dmitry of Suzdal
Spouse:Dmitry Donskoy
Children:Vasily I of Moscow Yury of Zvenigorod Andrew of Mozhaysk Konstantin of Uglich Peter of Dmitrov
The details

Biography

Eudoxia of Moscow (Russian: Евдокия Дмитриевна, Yevdokia Dmitriyevna)—monastic name Euphrosyne— (? – 1407) was a Grand Duchess of Muscovy and wife of Dmitry Donskoy.

Biography

Eudoxia was a daughter of Dmitry Konstantinovich, Grand Prince of Nizhny Novgorod and Vasilisa of Rostov.

Her maternal grandparents were Konstantin Vasilievich, Prince of Rostov and Maria of Moscow.

Maria was a daughter of Ivan I of Moscow and his first wife Yelena.

On 18 January 1367, Eudoxia married Grand Prince Dmitry Donskoy. In 1382, she stayed in Moscow in the absence of her husband, while the army of khan Tokhtamysh was approaching the capital. After the birth of her son Andrey Dmitriyevich, she attempted to leave Moscow, but was detained by the Muscovites, who agreed to let her go only after long negotiations.

Religious works

Shrine (Raka) of Eudoxia of Moscow

After her husband's death, Eudoxia became known for her piety; legend has it that she possessed the gift of healing. In 1393, she founded the Church of the Nativity of the Theotokos (Церковь Рождества Богородицы), the oldest surviving building in Moscow. The church was dedicated to the Virgin's Nativity, because on this feast her husband defeated the Tatars in the Battle of Kulikovo.

Four years later, Eudoxia established the Ascension Monastery next to the Frolovskaya (Spasskaya) Tower of the Moscow Kremlin. Later in her life, Eudoxia Dmitriyevna took the veil at the Ascension Monastery under the name of Yefrosiniya (Euphrosyne) and remained there until her death in 1407.

Rzhev monasticism in just a few weeks, July 7, 1407 the nun Euphrosyne died, and her relics were buried in the cathedral under construction, Ascension Convent. In 1929 the authorities ordered the destruction of the church and her relics were lost, but were uncovered in 2002, and then transferred to the Cathedral of the Archangel located inside the Moscow Kremlin).

She was canonized by the Russian Orthodox Church.

Children

Eudoxia and Dmitri Donskoi had at least 12 children:

  • Daniil Dmitrievich (c. 1370 – 15 September 1379).
  • Vasily I of Moscow (30 September 1371 – 27 February 1425).
  • Sofia Dmitrievna. Married Fyodor Olegovich, Prince of Ryazan (reigned 1402–1427).
  • Yury Dmitrievich, Duke of Zvenigorod and Galich (26 November 1374 – 5 June 1434). Claimed the throne of Moscow against his nephew Vasily II of Moscow.
  • Maria Dmitrievna (d. 15 May 1399). Married Lengvenis.
  • Anastasia Dmitrievna. Married Ivan Vsevolodich, Prince of Kholm.
  • Simeon Dmitrievich (d. 11 September 1379).
  • Ivan Dmitrievich (d. 1393).
  • Andrei Dmitrievich, Prince of Mozhaysk (14 August 1382 – 9 July 1432).
  • Piotr Dmitrievich, Prince of Dmitrov (29 July 1385 – 10 August 1428).
  • Anna Dmitrievna (born 8 January 1387). Married Yuri Patrikievich. Her husband was a son of Patrikei, Prince of Starodub and his wife Yelena. His paternal grandfather was Narimantas. The marriage solidified his role as a Boyar attached to Moscow.
  • Konstantin Dmitrievich, Prince of Pskov (14 May/15 May 1389 – 1433).

Legacy

On 15 August 2007, the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church instituted the Order of St. Euphrosyne, named after Eudoxia, who was the first noblewoman of Moscow to enter monasticism. The award was established to commemorate the 600th anniversary of Euphrosyne's death. According to the synod's ukase (decree), the new decoration will be given to women for special contributions towards the strengthening of spiritual and moral traditions in society, development of the church's social activities, maintaining relations between church and state or church and society, and other fields of work for the betterment of the Orthodox faith. The Order of St. Euphrosyne will be the second women's decoration of the Russian Orthodox Church after the Order of Saint Catherine.

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