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Boyar

A boyar or bolyar was a member of the highest rank of the feudal nobility in many Eastern European states, including Kievan Rus', Bulgaria, Russia, Wallachia and Moldavia, and later Romania, Lithuania and among Baltic Germans. Boyars were second only to the ruling princes (in Bulgaria, tsars) from the 10th century to the 17th century. The rank has lived on as a surname in Russia, Finland, Lithuania and Latvia where it is spelled Pajari[1] or Bajārs/-e.

Portrait of Russian boyar Pyotr Potemkin by Godfrey Kneller
Russian boyars in the 16th–17th centuries

Etymology

Also known as bolyar; variants in other languages include Bulgarian: боляр or болярин; Russian: боя́рин, tr. boyarin, IPA: [bɐˈjærʲɪn]; боярин; Romanian: boier, IPA: [boˈjer] ( listen); and Greek: βογιάρος.

The title Boila is predecessor or old form of the title Bolyar (the Bulgarian word for Boyar). Boila was a title worn by some of the Bulgar aristocrats (mostly of regional governors and noble warriors) in the First Bulgarian Empire (681–1018). The plural form of boila ("noble"), bolyare is attested in Bulgar inscriptions[2][3] and rendered as boilades or boliades in the Greek of Byzantine documents.[4][5] Multiple different derivation theories of the word have been suggested by scholars and linguists, such as it having possible roots from old Turkic: bai ("noble, rich"; cf. "bay") plus Turkic är ("man, men"),[4] proto-Slavic "boj" (fight, battle) or romanian "boi" (oxen, cattle) to "Boier" (owner of cattle).[6] The title entered Old Russian as быля (bylya, attested solely in The Tale of Igor's Campaign).[citation needed]

Bolyars in Bulgaria

The oldest Slavic form of boyarbolyarin, pl. bolyari (Bulgarian: болярин, pl. боляри)—dates from the 10th century, and it is found in Bulgaria, also popular as old Bulgar title boila, which denoted a high aristocratic status among the Bulgars. It was probably built from bol- meaning many and yarin, yarki-meanng bright, enlightened. In support of this hypothesis is the 10th-century diplomatic protocol of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII, where the Bulgarian nobles are called boliades,[5] while the 9th-century Bulgar sources call them boila.[3]

A member of the nobility during the First Bulgarian Empire was called a boila, while in the Second Bulgarian Empire, the corresponding title became bolyar or bolyarin. Bolyar, as well as its predecessor, boila, was a hereditary title. The Bulgarian bolyars were divided into veliki ("great") and malki ("minor").

Presently in Bulgaria, the word bolyari is used as a nickname for the inhabitants of Veliko Tarnovo—once the capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire.

Boyars in Serbia

In medieval Serbia, the rank of the boyars (Боjари, bojari) was equivalent to the rank of the baron; meaning "free warrior" (or "free man" in general), it was the first rank after the non-free peasants or serfs. The etymology of the term comes from the word battle (бој, boj); the boyars of Serbia were literally "men for the battle" or the warrior class, in contrast to the peasants; they could own land but were obliged to defend it and fight for the king. With the rule of the Ottoman Empire after 1450, the Ottoman as well as the Austro-Hungarian terms exchanged the Serbian one. Today, it is an archaic term representing the aristocracy (племство, plemstvo).

Boyars in Kievan Rus

 
Mounted Russian boyar from 17th century

From the 9th to 13th century, boyars wielded considerable power through their military support of the Rus's princes. Power and prestige of many of them, however, soon came to depend almost completely on service to the state, family history of service and, to a lesser extent, land ownership. Boyars of Kievan Rus were visually very similar to knights, but after the Mongol invasion, their cultural links were mostly lost.

The boyars occupied the highest state offices and, through a council (duma), advised the grand duke. They received extensive grants of land and, as members of the Boyars' Duma, were the major legislators of Kievan Rus'.

After the Mongol invasion in the 13th century, the boyars from western and southern parts of Kievan Rus' (modern Belarus and Ukraine) were incorporated into Lithuanian and Polish nobility (szlachta) and they were completely polonised and catholicised. In the 16th and 17th centuries, many of those Rus boyars who failed to get the status of a nobleman actively participated in the formation of the Cossack army, based in the south of modern day territory of Eastern Ukraine and Western Russia.

Boyars in Novgorod and Pskov formed a sort of republic, where the power of princes (knyaz) was strongly limited until the conquest by Moscow. Boyars kept their influence in the Russian principalities of Vladimir, Tver and Moscow. Only after the centralization of power by Moscow was the power of the boyars diminished.

Boyars in Tsardom of Russia

During the 14th and 15th centuries, the boyars of Moscow had considerable influence that continued from the Muscovy period. However, starting with the reign of Ivan III, the boyars were starting to lose that influence to the authoritative tsars in Muscovy. Because of Ivan III's expansionist policies, administrative changes were needed in order to ease the burden of governing Muscovy.[7] Small principalities knew their loyal subjects by name, but after the consolidation of territories under Ivan, familial loyalty and friendship with the boyar's subjects turned those same subjects into administrative lists.[7] The face of provincial rule disappeared.

Boyar membership, until the 16th century, did not necessarily require one to be Russian, or even Orthodox, as historians note that many boyars came from places like Lithuania or the Nogais, and some remained Muslims for a generation after the Mongols were ousted.[8] What is interesting about the boyars is their implied duties. Because boyars were not constitutionally instituted, much of their powers and duties came from agreements signed between princes. Agreements, such as one between Ivan III and Mikhail Borisovich in 1484 showed how allegiances needed to be earned and secured, rather than implied and enforced.[9]

Instead of the grand prince personally overseeing his lands, he had to rely on his captains and close advisors to oversee day-to-day operations.[7] Instead of the great voice the boyars had previously in their advisory roles, they now had less bargaining power and mobility.[10] They answered questions posed by the grand prince, and Ivan III even made sure to get their approval on special events, such as his marriage to Zoe Paleologa, or the attack on Novgorod.[11] This was to ensure the boyars and their military power remained loyal to the tsar. The grand duke also made sure that peasants could not leave the princes' lands, or from one place to another, in the mid-1400s, effectively establishing serfdom.[12] The boyars gained rewards and gifts as well. Some boyars were sent to regions as governors, and could “feed off” the locals in this way.[13] Still, by the end of the 15th century, boyar membership had declined, and merit rather than family background decided who became a boyar.[14] When Ivan IV became the tsar, more radical changes were implemented to limit boyar influence.

Ivan IV became the grand prince of all Muscovy in 1533 at the age of three, but various boyar factions tried to compete for control of the regency.[15] When Ivan IV came to power in 1547, much more of the boyars' independent political power became obsolete. The independence and autonomy experienced by the princes of the regions in Muscovy was abolished under Ivan IV by the end of the sixteenth century, making them "the prince's sons", or just simple boyars serving the Grand Prince.[16] Ivan IV divided Muscovy into two parts in 1565, and in the private part, the terror began.[15] The boyars attempted to band together and resist, but instead of constitutionally establishing their role in government, Ivan IV ruthlessly crushed the boyar opposition with the use of the oprichnina terror purges.[17] Land grants were also given to subjects that provided military service, and soon this type of land grant became the more common compared to inherited land among the boyars.[17] Ivan IV consolidated his power, centralized royal power, and made every effort possible to curb the influence of the princes.

After Ivan IV, a time of troubles began when his son Fedor died without an heir, ending the Rurik dynasty.[15] The boyar Boris Godunov tried to proclaim himself tsar, but several boyar factions refused to recognize him.[15] The chaos continued after the first False Dmitriy gained the throne, and civil war erupted.[15] When the Romanovs took over, the seventeenth century became one filled with administrative reform. A comprehensive legal code was introduced, and a merging of the boyars into the elite bureaucracy was beginning to form.[15]

By the end of the Time of Troubles, the boyars had lost nearly all independent power. Instead of going to Moscow to gain more power, the boyars felt defeated, and felt compelled to go to Moscow to maintain a united and strong Russia.[18] Second, the boyars lost their independent principalities, where they maintained all their power, and instead governed districts and regions under the grand prince of the time. Boyars also lost their advisory influence over the grand prince with tools such as the duma, and instead the grand prince no longer felt compelled to listen to the demands of the boyars. Finally, the tsar no longer feared losing their military support, and unification of Muscovy became paramount in importance. With Peter the Great, the final nail in the coffin happened for the boyar's power, and they would never recover from his administrative reforms.

Peter the Great, who took power in 1697, took it upon himself to westernize Russia, and catch it up with the modern world. After the revolt of the streltsy regiments in 1698, Peter the Great returned to Russia, forcing government officials and those that were financially able to have clean shaven faces and wear Western clothing.[19] Peter also reformed the judicial system, and created a senate with members appointed by him, replacing the old council of boyars that originally advised the tsar.[19] This move he made was one of many that dismantled the powers and status the boyars previously possessed. Peter was driving out the conservative and religious faction of the boyars out of the courts, and instead using both foreign and Russian officials to fill the administrative system. Several boyars, as well as other nobility, spoke out against these reforms, including historian Mikhail Shcherbatov, who stated that the reforms Peter made helped destroy Russian tradition, and created people that tried to "worm their way up, by flattering and humoring the monarch and the grandees in every way."[19] Still, the reforms continued, as by this point, the tsar possessed too much power, and Russia became an absolute monarchy more and more with each ruler.

Boyars in Galicia

Being part of Ruthenia (also known as Kievan Rus), the Galician nobility originally were called boyars. With the annexation of Galicia by the Kingdom of Poland as the result of the Galicia-Volhynia wars, local boyars were equated since 1430 in rights along with Polish nobility (szlachta). A great number of boyars fled to the lands of Great Duchy of Lithuania in Volhynia and Podolia.[20]

Boyars in Wallachia and Moldavia

 
Wallachian vornic Șerban Grădișteanu wearing a kalpak, an indication of his boyar rank

In the Carpathian regions inhabited by present day Romanians, the boyar (boier) class emerged from the chiefs (named cneaz ("leader") or jude ("judge") in the areas north of the Danube, and celnic south of the river) of rural communities in the early Middle Ages, who made their judicial and administrative attributions hereditary and gradually expanded them upon other communities. They were approved by the Ottoman Empire, which had suzerainty over the area. After the appearance of more advanced political structures in the area, their privileged status had to be confirmed by the central power, which used this prerogative to include in the boyar class individuals that distinguished themselves in the military or civilian functions they performed (by allocating them lands from the princely domains).

Historian Djuvara explained the hypotheses concerning the origin of the Romanians, such as advancing the theory that the vast majority of the nobility in the medieval states that made up the territory of modern-day Romania was of Cuman origin and not Romanian: "Romanians were called the black Cumans".[21]

The boyar condition

The Romanian social hierarchy was composed of boyar, mazil (turkish: mazul), răzeș (yeoman, freedman) and ruman (serf, slave). Being a boyar implied three things: being a land-owner, having serfs, and having a military and/or administrative function. A boyar could have a state function and/or a court function. These functions were called dregătorie or boierie. Only the prince had the power to assign a boierie. Landowners with serfs but no function were categorized as mazil but were still considered to be of noble origin (din os boieresc, literally "of boyar bone"). Small landowners who possessed a domain without distinction (devălmășie) were called mosneni, razesi, while the serfs (indentured servants) were called rumani.

Origin

Although functions could only be accorded by the prince and were not hereditary, land possession was hereditary. The prince could give land to somebody but could not take it from its possessor except for serious reasons such as treason. Therefore, there were two kinds of boyars: those whose families, as chiefs of the ancient rural communities, had held land before the formation of the feudal states, such that the prince merely confirmed their preexisting status as landowners; and those who acquired their domain from a princely donation or who had inherited it from an ancestor who acquired it through such a donation (cf. the distinction between Uradel and Briefadel in the Holy Roman Empire and in its feudal successor regimes). During the Phanariot régime, there were also boyars who had no land at all, but only a function. This way, the number of boyars could be increased, by selling functions to those who could afford them.

Hierarchy

 
Boyars with gorlatnaya hats in a painting by Andrei Ryabushkin. The higher hats indicated higher social status.

The close alliance between the boyar condition and the military-administrative functions led to a confusion, aggravated by the Phanariots: these functions began to be considered as noble titles, like in the Occident. In fact, this was not at all the case. Traditionally, the boyars were organized in three states: boyars of the first, second, and third states. For example, there was a first or a grand postelnic, a second postelnic, and a third postelnic, each one with his different obligations and rights. The difference of condition was visible even in the vestimentation or physical aspect. Only the boyars of the first state had the right, for example, to grow a beard, the rest being entitled only to a mustache. Within the class of the boyars of the first state, there was the subclass of the "grand boyars". Those were great landowners who also had some very high functions, such as the function of great vornic. Above those grand boyars was only the prince.

The prince

Usually a prince was a boyar before his election or appointment as prince, but this was not an absolute condition. Initially, only princely descendants could be elected princes. During the Phanariot epoch, however, any man could be a prince if appointed by the sultan (and rich enough to buy this appointment from the grand vizier). During the Ottoman suzerainty, and especially during the Phanariot régime, the title of Prince became an administrative function within the imperial Ottoman hierarchy, and thus the ultimate form of boyardness. The title of Prince of Wallachia or Moldavia was equivalent in dignity to that of a Pasha with two horse-tails.

Cultural references

Norwegian composer Johan Halvorsen wrote a march entitled "Bojarenes inntogsmarsj" ("Entry March of the Boyars"), known in Norway as the signal tune for the radio programme Ønskekonserten. Edvard Grieg arranged it for solo piano. August Strindberg requests that this piece be played during his play The Dance of Death, Part One.

See also

References

  1. ^ Campbell, Mike. "Meaning, origin and history of the surname Pajari". Behind the Name. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  2. ^ Bulgarian Etymological Dictionary, Volume I, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences publishing house, 1971, p. 71
  3. ^ a b "PB Language - the Preslav Inscription". groznijat.tripod.com. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  4. ^ a b "Vasmer's Etymological Dictionary : Query result". starling.rinet.ru. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2002-03-20. Retrieved 2006-11-13.
  6. ^ "boier", Wikționar (in Romanian), 2017-05-13, retrieved 2022-05-07
  7. ^ a b c Gustave, Alef (1967). "Reflections on the Boyar Duma". The Slavonic and East European Review. 45 (104): 76–123. JSTOR 4205832.
  8. ^ Bushkovitch, Paul (2004). "Princes Cherkaaskii or Circassian Murzas: The Kabardians in the Russian Boyar Elite, 1560–1700". Cahiers du Monde Russe. 45 (1/2): 10. JSTOR 20174844.
  9. ^ Kleimola, A.M (1972). "The Duty to Denounce in Muscovite Russia". Slavic Review. 31 (4): 762. doi:10.2307/2493761. JSTOR 2493761.
  10. ^ Gustave, Alef (1967). "Reflections on the Boyar Duma". The Slavonic and East European Review. 45 (104): 78. JSTOR 4205832.
  11. ^ Gustave, Alef (1967). "Reflections on the Boyar Duma". The Slavonic and East European Review. 45 (104): 79. JSTOR 4205832.
  12. ^ Vernadsky, George (1939). "Feudalism in Russi". Speculum. 14 (3): 315. doi:10.2307/2848599. JSTOR 2848599. S2CID 162612902.
  13. ^ Alef, Gustave (1967). "Reflections on the Boyar Duma". The Slavonic and East European Review. 45 (104): 79. JSTOR 4205832.
  14. ^ Gustave, Alef (1967). "Reflections on the Boyar Duma". The Slavonic and East European Review. 45 (104): 109. JSTOR 4205832.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Curtis, Glenn. . Sam Houston State University. Library of Congress. Archived from the original on 21 May 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
  16. ^ Vernadsky, George (1939). "Feudalism in Russi". Speculum. 14 (3): 318. doi:10.2307/2848599. JSTOR 2848599. S2CID 162612902.
  17. ^ a b Vernadsky, George (1939). "Feudalism in Russi". Speculum. 14 (3): 319. doi:10.2307/2848599. JSTOR 2848599. S2CID 162612902.
  18. ^ Kliuchevskii, V.O. (1960). A History of Russia, Volume 2 (PDF). New York: Russell and Russell.
  19. ^ a b c Kelley, J. (1991). Makers of the Western Tradition. New York: St. Martin's. p. 29.
  20. ^ . Encyclopedia of Ukraine
  21. ^ (in Romanian) Eugen Istodor, "Revoluția lui Djuvara: „Românii erau numiți cumanii negri" ", interview with Neagu Djuvara in Cotidianul, retrieved June 19, 2007

External links

  • Yaroslav Padokh, Andrii Yakovliv, Boyars in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine, vol. 1 (1984).
  • (archived 17 April 2009)

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This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian January 2021 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Russian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 2 709 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Boyare see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated ru Boyare to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation A boyar or bolyar was a member of the highest rank of the feudal nobility in many Eastern European states including Kievan Rus Bulgaria Russia Wallachia and Moldavia and later Romania Lithuania and among Baltic Germans Boyars were second only to the ruling princes in Bulgaria tsars from the 10th century to the 17th century The rank has lived on as a surname in Russia Finland Lithuania and Latvia where it is spelled Pajari 1 or Bajars e Portrait of Russian boyar Pyotr Potemkin by Godfrey Kneller Russian boyars in the 16th 17th centuries Contents 1 Etymology 2 Bolyars in Bulgaria 3 Boyars in Serbia 4 Boyars in Kievan Rus 5 Boyars in Tsardom of Russia 6 Boyars in Galicia 7 Boyars in Wallachia and Moldavia 7 1 The boyar condition 7 2 Origin 7 3 Hierarchy 7 4 The prince 8 Cultural references 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksEtymology EditAlso known as bolyar variants in other languages include Bulgarian bolyar or bolyarin Russian boya rin tr boyarin IPA bɐˈjaerʲɪn boyarin Romanian boier IPA boˈjer listen and Greek bogiaros The title Boila is predecessor or old form of the title Bolyar the Bulgarian word for Boyar Boila was a title worn by some of the Bulgar aristocrats mostly of regional governors and noble warriors in the First Bulgarian Empire 681 1018 The plural form of boila noble bolyare is attested in Bulgar inscriptions 2 3 and rendered as boilades or boliades in the Greek of Byzantine documents 4 5 Multiple different derivation theories of the word have been suggested by scholars and linguists such as it having possible roots from old Turkic bai noble rich cf bay plus Turkic ar man men 4 proto Slavic boj fight battle or romanian boi oxen cattle to Boier owner of cattle 6 The title entered Old Russian as bylya bylya attested solely in The Tale of Igor s Campaign citation needed Bolyars in Bulgaria EditThe oldest Slavic form of boyar bolyarin pl bolyari Bulgarian bolyarin pl bolyari dates from the 10th century and it is found in Bulgaria also popular as old Bulgar title boila which denoted a high aristocratic status among the Bulgars It was probably built from bol meaning many and yarin yarki meanng bright enlightened In support of this hypothesis is the 10th century diplomatic protocol of the Byzantine Emperor Constantine VII where the Bulgarian nobles are called boliades 5 while the 9th century Bulgar sources call them boila 3 A member of the nobility during the First Bulgarian Empire was called a boila while in the Second Bulgarian Empire the corresponding title became bolyar or bolyarin Bolyar as well as its predecessor boila was a hereditary title The Bulgarian bolyars were divided into veliki great and malki minor Presently in Bulgaria the word bolyari is used as a nickname for the inhabitants of Veliko Tarnovo once the capital of the Second Bulgarian Empire Boyars in Serbia EditIn medieval Serbia the rank of the boyars Bojari bojari was equivalent to the rank of the baron meaning free warrior or free man in general it was the first rank after the non free peasants or serfs The etymology of the term comes from the word battle boј boj the boyars of Serbia were literally men for the battle or the warrior class in contrast to the peasants they could own land but were obliged to defend it and fight for the king With the rule of the Ottoman Empire after 1450 the Ottoman as well as the Austro Hungarian terms exchanged the Serbian one Today it is an archaic term representing the aristocracy plemstvo plemstvo Boyars in Kievan Rus Edit Mounted Russian boyar from 17th century A Boyar Wedding Feast by Konstantin Makovsky 1883 From the 9th to 13th century boyars wielded considerable power through their military support of the Rus s princes Power and prestige of many of them however soon came to depend almost completely on service to the state family history of service and to a lesser extent land ownership Boyars of Kievan Rus were visually very similar to knights but after the Mongol invasion their cultural links were mostly lost The boyars occupied the highest state offices and through a council duma advised the grand duke They received extensive grants of land and as members of the Boyars Duma were the major legislators of Kievan Rus After the Mongol invasion in the 13th century the boyars from western and southern parts of Kievan Rus modern Belarus and Ukraine were incorporated into Lithuanian and Polish nobility szlachta and they were completely polonised and catholicised In the 16th and 17th centuries many of those Rus boyars who failed to get the status of a nobleman actively participated in the formation of the Cossack army based in the south of modern day territory of Eastern Ukraine and Western Russia Boyars in Novgorod and Pskov formed a sort of republic where the power of princes knyaz was strongly limited until the conquest by Moscow Boyars kept their influence in the Russian principalities of Vladimir Tver and Moscow Only after the centralization of power by Moscow was the power of the boyars diminished Boyars in Tsardom of Russia EditDuring the 14th and 15th centuries the boyars of Moscow had considerable influence that continued from the Muscovy period However starting with the reign of Ivan III the boyars were starting to lose that influence to the authoritative tsars in Muscovy Because of Ivan III s expansionist policies administrative changes were needed in order to ease the burden of governing Muscovy 7 Small principalities knew their loyal subjects by name but after the consolidation of territories under Ivan familial loyalty and friendship with the boyar s subjects turned those same subjects into administrative lists 7 The face of provincial rule disappeared Boyar membership until the 16th century did not necessarily require one to be Russian or even Orthodox as historians note that many boyars came from places like Lithuania or the Nogais and some remained Muslims for a generation after the Mongols were ousted 8 What is interesting about the boyars is their implied duties Because boyars were not constitutionally instituted much of their powers and duties came from agreements signed between princes Agreements such as one between Ivan III and Mikhail Borisovich in 1484 showed how allegiances needed to be earned and secured rather than implied and enforced 9 Instead of the grand prince personally overseeing his lands he had to rely on his captains and close advisors to oversee day to day operations 7 Instead of the great voice the boyars had previously in their advisory roles they now had less bargaining power and mobility 10 They answered questions posed by the grand prince and Ivan III even made sure to get their approval on special events such as his marriage to Zoe Paleologa or the attack on Novgorod 11 This was to ensure the boyars and their military power remained loyal to the tsar The grand duke also made sure that peasants could not leave the princes lands or from one place to another in the mid 1400s effectively establishing serfdom 12 The boyars gained rewards and gifts as well Some boyars were sent to regions as governors and could feed off the locals in this way 13 Still by the end of the 15th century boyar membership had declined and merit rather than family background decided who became a boyar 14 When Ivan IV became the tsar more radical changes were implemented to limit boyar influence Ivan IV became the grand prince of all Muscovy in 1533 at the age of three but various boyar factions tried to compete for control of the regency 15 When Ivan IV came to power in 1547 much more of the boyars independent political power became obsolete The independence and autonomy experienced by the princes of the regions in Muscovy was abolished under Ivan IV by the end of the sixteenth century making them the prince s sons or just simple boyars serving the Grand Prince 16 Ivan IV divided Muscovy into two parts in 1565 and in the private part the terror began 15 The boyars attempted to band together and resist but instead of constitutionally establishing their role in government Ivan IV ruthlessly crushed the boyar opposition with the use of the oprichnina terror purges 17 Land grants were also given to subjects that provided military service and soon this type of land grant became the more common compared to inherited land among the boyars 17 Ivan IV consolidated his power centralized royal power and made every effort possible to curb the influence of the princes After Ivan IV a time of troubles began when his son Fedor died without an heir ending the Rurik dynasty 15 The boyar Boris Godunov tried to proclaim himself tsar but several boyar factions refused to recognize him 15 The chaos continued after the first False Dmitriy gained the throne and civil war erupted 15 When the Romanovs took over the seventeenth century became one filled with administrative reform A comprehensive legal code was introduced and a merging of the boyars into the elite bureaucracy was beginning to form 15 By the end of the Time of Troubles the boyars had lost nearly all independent power Instead of going to Moscow to gain more power the boyars felt defeated and felt compelled to go to Moscow to maintain a united and strong Russia 18 Second the boyars lost their independent principalities where they maintained all their power and instead governed districts and regions under the grand prince of the time Boyars also lost their advisory influence over the grand prince with tools such as the duma and instead the grand prince no longer felt compelled to listen to the demands of the boyars Finally the tsar no longer feared losing their military support and unification of Muscovy became paramount in importance With Peter the Great the final nail in the coffin happened for the boyar s power and they would never recover from his administrative reforms Peter the Great who took power in 1697 took it upon himself to westernize Russia and catch it up with the modern world After the revolt of the streltsy regiments in 1698 Peter the Great returned to Russia forcing government officials and those that were financially able to have clean shaven faces and wear Western clothing 19 Peter also reformed the judicial system and created a senate with members appointed by him replacing the old council of boyars that originally advised the tsar 19 This move he made was one of many that dismantled the powers and status the boyars previously possessed Peter was driving out the conservative and religious faction of the boyars out of the courts and instead using both foreign and Russian officials to fill the administrative system Several boyars as well as other nobility spoke out against these reforms including historian Mikhail Shcherbatov who stated that the reforms Peter made helped destroy Russian tradition and created people that tried to worm their way up by flattering and humoring the monarch and the grandees in every way 19 Still the reforms continued as by this point the tsar possessed too much power and Russia became an absolute monarchy more and more with each ruler Boyars in Galicia EditBeing part of Ruthenia also known as Kievan Rus the Galician nobility originally were called boyars With the annexation of Galicia by the Kingdom of Poland as the result of the Galicia Volhynia wars local boyars were equated since 1430 in rights along with Polish nobility szlachta A great number of boyars fled to the lands of Great Duchy of Lithuania in Volhynia and Podolia 20 Boyars in Wallachia and Moldavia Edit Wallachian vornic Șerban Grădișteanu wearing a kalpak an indication of his boyar rank Main article Boyars of Wallachia and Moldavia In the Carpathian regions inhabited by present day Romanians the boyar boier class emerged from the chiefs named cneaz leader or jude judge in the areas north of the Danube and celnic south of the river of rural communities in the early Middle Ages who made their judicial and administrative attributions hereditary and gradually expanded them upon other communities They were approved by the Ottoman Empire which had suzerainty over the area After the appearance of more advanced political structures in the area their privileged status had to be confirmed by the central power which used this prerogative to include in the boyar class individuals that distinguished themselves in the military or civilian functions they performed by allocating them lands from the princely domains Historian Djuvara explained the hypotheses concerning the origin of the Romanians such as advancing the theory that the vast majority of the nobility in the medieval states that made up the territory of modern day Romania was of Cuman origin and not Romanian Romanians were called the black Cumans 21 The boyar condition Edit The Romanian social hierarchy was composed of boyar mazil turkish mazul răzeș yeoman freedman and ruman serf slave Being a boyar implied three things being a land owner having serfs and having a military and or administrative function A boyar could have a state function and or a court function These functions were called dregătorie or boierie Only the prince had the power to assign a boierie Landowners with serfs but no function were categorized as mazil but were still considered to be of noble origin din os boieresc literally of boyar bone Small landowners who possessed a domain without distinction devălmășie were called mosneni razesi while the serfs indentured servants were called rumani Origin Edit Although functions could only be accorded by the prince and were not hereditary land possession was hereditary The prince could give land to somebody but could not take it from its possessor except for serious reasons such as treason Therefore there were two kinds of boyars those whose families as chiefs of the ancient rural communities had held land before the formation of the feudal states such that the prince merely confirmed their preexisting status as landowners and those who acquired their domain from a princely donation or who had inherited it from an ancestor who acquired it through such a donation cf the distinction between Uradel and Briefadel in the Holy Roman Empire and in its feudal successor regimes During the Phanariot regime there were also boyars who had no land at all but only a function This way the number of boyars could be increased by selling functions to those who could afford them Hierarchy Edit Boyars with gorlatnaya hats in a painting by Andrei Ryabushkin The higher hats indicated higher social status The close alliance between the boyar condition and the military administrative functions led to a confusion aggravated by the Phanariots these functions began to be considered as noble titles like in the Occident In fact this was not at all the case Traditionally the boyars were organized in three states boyars of the first second and third states For example there was a first or a grand postelnic a second postelnic and a third postelnic each one with his different obligations and rights The difference of condition was visible even in the vestimentation or physical aspect Only the boyars of the first state had the right for example to grow a beard the rest being entitled only to a mustache Within the class of the boyars of the first state there was the subclass of the grand boyars Those were great landowners who also had some very high functions such as the function of great vornic Above those grand boyars was only the prince The prince Edit Usually a prince was a boyar before his election or appointment as prince but this was not an absolute condition Initially only princely descendants could be elected princes During the Phanariot epoch however any man could be a prince if appointed by the sultan and rich enough to buy this appointment from the grand vizier During the Ottoman suzerainty and especially during the Phanariot regime the title of Prince became an administrative function within the imperial Ottoman hierarchy and thus the ultimate form of boyardness The title of Prince of Wallachia or Moldavia was equivalent in dignity to that of a Pasha with two horse tails Cultural references EditNorwegian composer Johan Halvorsen wrote a march entitled Bojarenes inntogsmarsj Entry March of the Boyars known in Norway as the signal tune for the radio programme Onskekonserten Edvard Grieg arranged it for solo piano August Strindberg requests that this piece be played during his play The Dance of Death Part One See also EditMagnate Okolnichy Russian nobilityReferences Edit Campbell Mike Meaning origin and history of the surname Pajari Behind the Name Retrieved 2023 01 12 Bulgarian Etymological Dictionary Volume I Bulgarian Academy of Sciences publishing house 1971 p 71 a b PB Language the Preslav Inscription groznijat tripod com Retrieved 2023 01 12 a b Vasmer s Etymological Dictionary Query result starling rinet ru Retrieved 2023 01 12 a b Constantine Porphyrogenitus de Cerimoniis aulae Byzantinae II 46 47 Archived from the original on 2002 03 20 Retrieved 2006 11 13 boier Wikționar in Romanian 2017 05 13 retrieved 2022 05 07 a b c Gustave Alef 1967 Reflections on the Boyar Duma The Slavonic and East European Review 45 104 76 123 JSTOR 4205832 Bushkovitch Paul 2004 Princes Cherkaaskii or Circassian Murzas The Kabardians in the Russian Boyar Elite 1560 1700 Cahiers du Monde Russe 45 1 2 10 JSTOR 20174844 Kleimola A M 1972 The Duty to Denounce in Muscovite Russia Slavic Review 31 4 762 doi 10 2307 2493761 JSTOR 2493761 Gustave Alef 1967 Reflections on the Boyar Duma The Slavonic and East European Review 45 104 78 JSTOR 4205832 Gustave Alef 1967 Reflections on the Boyar Duma The Slavonic and East European Review 45 104 79 JSTOR 4205832 Vernadsky George 1939 Feudalism in Russi Speculum 14 3 315 doi 10 2307 2848599 JSTOR 2848599 S2CID 162612902 Alef Gustave 1967 Reflections on the Boyar Duma The Slavonic and East European Review 45 104 79 JSTOR 4205832 Gustave Alef 1967 Reflections on the Boyar Duma The Slavonic and East European Review 45 104 109 JSTOR 4205832 a b c d e f Curtis Glenn Muscovite Period Sam Houston State University Library of Congress Archived from the original on 21 May 2016 Retrieved 12 May 2016 Vernadsky George 1939 Feudalism in Russi Speculum 14 3 318 doi 10 2307 2848599 JSTOR 2848599 S2CID 162612902 a b Vernadsky George 1939 Feudalism in Russi Speculum 14 3 319 doi 10 2307 2848599 JSTOR 2848599 S2CID 162612902 Kliuchevskii V O 1960 A History of Russia Volume 2 PDF New York Russell and Russell a b c Kelley J 1991 Makers of the Western Tradition New York St Martin s p 29 Szlachta Encyclopedia of Ukraine in Romanian Eugen Istodor Revoluția lui Djuvara Romanii erau numiți cumanii negri interview with Neagu Djuvara in Cotidianul retrieved June 19 2007External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boyars Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Boyar Yaroslav Padokh Andrii Yakovliv Boyars in the Encyclopedia of Ukraine vol 1 1984 Wallachian and Moldavian noblemen late sixteenth century archived 17 April 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Boyar amp oldid 1133892769, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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