Kumaragupta I
(noun)
Son of Chandragupta II; the emperor of the Gupta Dynasty from c. 415-455 CE.
Examples of Kumaragupta I in the following topics:
-
Decline of the Gupta Empire
- Yet the succeeding rulers, beginning with Kumaragupta I and then Skandagupta, oversaw the eventual end of the Gupta Empire through military defeats, devalued money and withering leadership.
- In 415 CE, Chandragupta II was succeeded by his second son, Kumaragupta I, who ruled successfully until 455 CE.
- As his grandfather and father did before him, Kumaragupta also issued news coins to mark his reign.
- Upon Kumaragupta’s death in 455 CE, his son, Skandagupta, assumed the throne and ruled until c. 467 CE.
- A silver coin from the reign of Gupta Emperor Kumaragupta I, c. 415-455 CE.
-
Alexander I's Domestic Reforms
-
Territorial Gains Under Alexander I
-
The Wars of Nicholas I
-
New Technology in World War I
-
Ivan I and the Rise of Moscow
- Ivan I (also known as Ivan Kalita) was born around 1288 to the Prince of Moscow, Daniil Aleksandrovich.
- Ivan I stepped into a role that had already been expanded by his predecessors.
- Ivan I, on the other hand, garnered the title from Khan Muhammad Ozbeg in 1328.
- Three major contributing factors helped Ivan I relocate power to this area:
- Ivan I also spurred on the growth of Moscow by actively recruiting people to move to the region.
-
The Romanovs
- The Romanov Dynasty was officially founded at the coronation of Michael I in 1613.
- It was founded in 1613 with the coronation of Michael I and ended in 1917 with the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II.
- Sources say he was a boyar under the leadership of the Rurikid prince Semyon I of Moscow in 1347.
- Michael I's father was forced to take monastic vows and adopt the name Philaret.
- Alexis I’s legacy paints him as a peaceful and reflective ruler, with a propensity for progressive ideas.
-
Rise of the Holy Roman Empire
- The formation of the Holy Roman Empire was initiated by Charlemagne's coronation as "Emperor of the Romans" in 800, and consolidated by Otto I when he was crowned emperor in 962 by Pope John XII.
- Some historians refer to the coronation of Charlemagne as the origin of the empire, while others prefer the coronation of Otto I as its beginning.
- The last such emperor was Berengar I of Italy, who died in 924.
- Upon Henry's death, Otto I, his son and designated successor, was elected King in Aachen in 936.
- Replica of the Magdeburger Reiter, equestrian monument traditionally regarded as portrait of Otto I (Magdeburg, original c. 1240).
-
The First Stuarts and Catholicism
- Believing that their power is God-given right, James I and his son and successor, Charles I of England, reigned England in the atmosphere of repeated escalating conflicts with the English Parliament.
- The break with Rome was effected by a series of acts of Parliament but Catholic Mary I restored papal jurisdiction in 1553.
- However, Mary's successor, Elizabeth I, restored the Church of England and reasserted the royal supremacy in 1559.
- Charles I of England, portrait from the studio of Anthony van Dyck, 1636.
- James I of England, Portrait attributed to John de Critz, c. 1605
-
Vladimir I and Christianization
- Vladimir I ruled from 980 to 1015 and was the first Kievan Rus' ruler to officially establish Orthodox Christianity as the new religion of the region.
- Vladimir I, also known as Vladimir the Great or Vladimir Sviatoslavich the Great, ruled Kievan Rus' from 980 to 1015 and is famous for Christianizing this territory during his reign.
- The major player in the Christianization of the Rus' world is traditionally considered Vladimir I.
- A Christian representation of Vladimir I, who was the first Rus' leader to officially bring Christianity to the region.
- Outline the shift from pagan culture to Orthodox Christianity under the rule of Vladimir I