-
Drutsk (Belarusian: Друцк, [
drutsk]; Polish: Druck, Russian: Друцк, also
known as Дрютескъ (Dryutesk) or Дрюческъ (Druchesk) in the
Middle Ages), is a...
- of
Drutsk (Belarusian: Княства Друцкае;
obsolete spelling: Druck) was a
small appanage of the Prin****lity of Polotsk,
centred in the city of
Drutsk. It...
-
language and
Eastern Orthodoxy in this part of Europe. It is
thought that the
Drutsk and
related princely families may also
descend from
Roman the Great.[citation...
-
evidenced by a
survey of gl****ware
found in over 30
sites ranging from Suzdal,
Drutsk and Beloozero,
which found that a
substantial majority was manufactured...
- High Duke of Poland. daughter, in 1143
married Rogvold Rogvoldovich of
Drutsk. Iziaslav's
second wife was
Bagrationi daughter of King Demetrius I of Georgia...
- Latvia,
including (besides
Polotsk itself) the
following towns: Vitebsk,
Drutsk, Minsk,
Izjaslaw (now Zaslawye), Lahoysk, Barysaw,
Brachyslaw (now Braslaw)...
-
Rogvolod Vseslavich,
baptismal name Boris, was the
Prince of
Drutsk and Polotsk. He was the son of
Vseslav of Polotsk,
Grand Prince of Rus.
Rogvolod probably...
- origin. They
branched from the
dukes of the
autonomous prin****lity of
Drutsk (themselves a
branch of the
Izyaslavichi of Polotsk),
sometime in mid-15th...
-
Ivanovich of
Halshany 9.
Sophia of
Halshany 19.
Alexandra Dmitrievna of
Drutsk 2.
Vladislas II of
Bohemia and
Hungary 20.
Albert IV, Duke of
Austria 10...
- (Babadishvili) (Georgian nobility)
Princes Babichevy (a
branch of the
Princes of
Drutsk,
descendants of
Prince Ivan
Semyonovich Baba-Drutsky)
Princes Bagration...