Family and Byzantine Ties
Anna was the daughter of the Kievan Grand Prince Vsevolod I Yaroslavich and his first wife, Anastasia, who is described in the sources as a daughter or relative of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine IX Monomachos. According to one account, Vsevolod's marriage to Anastasia was arranged to support an armistice signed with Constantine IX Monomachos in 1046; the naming of their son Vladimir Monomakh after the emperor has been taken to suggest close family ties between the two houses. Anastasia died in 1067.
Anna's brother was Vladimir II Monomakh, who would later become Grand Prince of Kiev. These connections placed Anna at the center of the diplomatic and cultural exchange between Kievan Rus and Byzantium that shaped much of her life and work.
Monastic Foundation and Service to the Church
After her intended marriage to Konstantios Doukas came to nothing, Anna chose monastic life and took the veil around 1086 at the Andreiev Yanchinov Monastery, which her father built for her in Kiev. She became the monastery's first abbess.
In 1089 she led an embassy to Constantinople to select a new Metropolitan for Kiev, returning the following year with the newly consecrated Metropolitan John the Eunuch. Her exposure to Byzantine scholarship during this journey is connected in the sources with the educational work she undertook on her return.
School for Girls and Educational Legacy
After her embassy to Constantinople, Anna started a school for girls at her monastery, described in the sources as the first school for girls in Russia. The curriculum is said to have included writing, needlework and other useful crafts, as well as rhetoric and singing.
This initiative is credited with establishing an educational tradition in Kievan Rus: during the 12th and 13th centuries, convent schools became common, founded and managed by princesses, noblewomen and abbesses.
Relics & Shrines
Anna was buried at the Andreiev Yanchinov Monastery in Kiev following her repose in 1112. The monastery was later destroyed during the Tatar invasion.