Anna of Novgorod (c. 1001 - 1050) was a Swedish princess who became Grand Princess of Kiev as the wife of Yaroslav the Wise. Born Ingegerd, the daughter of King Olof Skotkonung of Sweden, she took the name Irene in Rus' and, near the end of her life, the monastic name Anna. She is honored among the first canonized women of Rus' and is commemorated on February 10.
Her father had at first arranged a betrothal to a king of Norway, but that arrangement fell through, and in 1019 Ingegerd was instead given in marriage to Yaroslav the Wise, Grand Prince of Novgorod and later of Kiev. According to sagas she received Ladoga and the surrounding lands as a marriage gift. Her marriage joined the ruling houses of Sweden and Rus', and she became the mother of a large family of princes and princesses.
As Grand Princess she was associated with the building of two of the principal churches of early Rus': the Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Kiev, whose foundation was laid in 1037, and the Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Novgorod, constructed between 1045 and 1050. Shortly before her death she was tonsured a nun, taking the name Anna. She reposed in 1050 and, according to the tradition, was buried in the Cathedral of Saint Sophia.