Volodymyr Monomakh [Monomax] (Volodymyr I Vsevolodovych),
b 1053, d 19 May 1125 in
Kyiv. Grand prince of Kyiv (1113–25); son of Vsevolod Yaroslavych. He was
named Monomakh after his mother, who was the daughter of the Byzantine emperor
Constantine Monomachos (some 20th-century historians dispute the relation,
alleging that Soviet scholars invented it for their own purposes). While his
father was alive, Volodymyr ruled the Smolensk principality (from 1067) and
Chernihiv principality (1078–94), led 13 successful military campaigns in
his father's name, and participated in diplomatic missions. He became prince of
Pereiaslav in 1094. After the death of Sviatopolk II Iziaslavych and the Kyiv
Uprising of 1113, he ascended to the Kyivan throne. Volodymyr was one of the outstanding statesmen of the
medieval period in Ukraine. He sought to strengthen the unity of Rus’ and
the central authority of the Kyivan prince. He struggled against the
deterioration of dynastic solidarity in Kyiv and attempted to unite the princes
against the Cuman threat. He initiated the Liubech congress of princes (1097),
at which the order of succession (rota system) was radically reformed,
and he organized the Vytychiv congress of princes (1100) and Dolobske council
of princes (1103), at which joint campaigns against the Cumans were agreed
upon. During his tenure in
Kyiv, Volodymyr introduced a number of legal and economic reforms. He called a
meeting to address the social problems which had caused the Kyiv Uprising of
1113, and issued Volodymyr Monomakh's Statute (which was added to Ruskaia
Pravda). The reforms, including the limitation of interest on loans and the
abolition of servitude as a method of debt payment, brought about radical
improvements to terms of credit in Rus’. Volodymyr was also the author of
Poucheniie ditiam (Instruction for [My] Children, ca 1117), which was
entered into the Laurentian Chronicle along with a letter he wrote to Oleh
(Mykhail) Sviatoslavych, the prince of Chernihiv. His Poucheniie was a
didactic and autobiographical work of high literary quality, in which he
condemned the internecine struggles of princes and promoted the idea of a
unified state. The narrative voice of the testament is that of a courageous
warrior and a wise and judicious ruler. Volodymyr married Gytha, the daughter of the English king Harold II, and
founded the Kyivan, Smolensk, and Suzdal lines of the Riurykide dynasty. In
1966 Debrett's Peerage, Baronage, Knightage, and Companionage published
the statement that Queen Elizabeth II was descended from Volodymyr
Monomakh. He was the last prince of Rus’ to preside over a
unified state. He is buried in the Saint Sophia Cathedral in Kyiv.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Shliakov, N. O Pouchenii Vladimira Monomakha (Saint Petersburg 1900)
Ivakin, I. Kniaz’ Vladimir Monomakh i ego Pouchenie, part 1
(Moscow 1901)
Orlov, A. Vladimir Monomakh (Moscow–Leningrad 1946; repr, The
Hague–Paris 1969)
Sakharov, A. ‘Vladimir Monomakh,’ in Polkovodtsy Drevnei Rusi
(Moscow 1985)
Arkadii Zhukovsky