St. Alexander Nevsky was Russia's "knight in shining armor." His reputation as a man of exceptional valor and surpassing virtue inspired a visit by a German commander who told his people when he returned: "I went through many countries and saw many people, but I have never met such a king among kings, nor such a prince among princes." The Russians called him their "prince without sin."

The baneful
effect of internal dissension was a lesson which came early to Prince
Alexander, as he witnessed his father, Prince Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, struggle
with the proudly independent spirited boyars of Novgorod, It was there that the
boy grew up. Like most noble youth s of his time, he had barely learned to walk
before he was lifted into the saddle. Training in the martial arts was combined
with an education based upon the Scriptures. Under the influence of his mother,
who was popularly called "the holy queen" on account of her piety and
charitable deeds, the young prince developed a profound spiritual life. He engrossed
himself for hours in reading the Old and New Testaments.

Encouraged by
the Roman Pope who desired the conversion of Russia to Catholicism, the Swedes
and Germans took advantage of Russia's weakened state and prepared to attack.
As a staunch Orthodox Christian, Alexander recognized that conquest from the
west would deal a mortal blow at the very heart of Russia — the Orthodox Church,
a fate incomparably worse than political subjugation by the Tatars. In 1210,
well armed Swedish troops moved onto Novgorod territory. Preparing his men to
repel the invaders, St. Alexander encouraged them with his now famous
affirmation: "God is not in might but in Truth. 'Some trust in princes and
some in horses, but we will call upon the Lord our God.'" The Russian
forces, their Prince in the lead, were crowned with success after a fierce battle
on the shores of the Neva.
Victories
followed against the Livonian Germans and the Lithuanians. The Russian north-east,
devastated by the Tatars, looked with hope upon the young warrior prince. His
fame reached the ears of the Mongol lord, Khan Batu, who desired to see this
Russian hero. It was a perilous honor. Before being presented to the Khan, the
Russian princes - whose authority depended on his approval - were required to
fulfill certain pagan traditions: walk through fire, bow down to a bush and to
the shadows of deceased khans, etc. Alexander would in nowise consent to such
idolatry and, strengthened by Holy Unction, prepared himself to accept the
death penalty which Prince Michael of Chernigov had paid under similar
circumstances.

Gaining the
respect of the Khan was a triumph for Alexander, but it did not insure peace.
The remaining course of his life as Grand Prince of Russia was spent in
securing its western borders against persistent German campaigns, in subduing
the Novgorodians' defiant opposition to the Khan's poll tax, and in
diplomatically placating the Khan’s anger which flared intermittently in
response to indiscretions committed by the lesser princes. Although it was 200
years before Russia was free of Tatar control, St. Alexander’s skill and
self-sacrificing devotion which he brought to the Herculean task set before him
as ruler, and his commitment to the preservation of Orthodoxy at the core of a
growing national consciousness, made him a hero of both historic and spiritual
dimensions.

Source: http://www.roca.org/OA/79/79h.htm
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