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Ivan the Terrible

Ivan IV Vasilyevich (Russian: Иван Васильевич; 25 August 1530 – 28 March [O.S. 18 March] 1584),[2] commonly known in English as Ivan the Terrible,[3][4][5][6] was the grand prince of Moscow from 1533 to 1547 and the first Tsar of all Russia from 1547 to 1584. Ivan came from the imperial bloodline of Byzantine Palaiologos family through his grandmother Sophia Palaiologina.

Ivan IV
Tsar of Russia
Reign16 (26) January 1547 – 1575
Coronation16 (26) January 1547
PredecessorMonarchy established
SuccessorSimeon Bekbulatovich
Reign1576 – 28 March 1584
PredecessorSimeon Bekbulatovich
SuccessorFeodor I
Grand Prince of Moscow
Reign3 December 1533 – 16 January 1547
PredecessorVasili III
SuccessorHimself as Tsar of Russia
Born25 August 1530
Kolomenskoye, Grand Duchy of Moscow
Died28 March [O.S. 18 March] 1584 (aged 53)
Moscow, Tsardom of Russia
Burial
Spouses
Issue
more...
Names
Ivan Vasilyevich
DynastyRurik
FatherVasili III of Russia
MotherElena Glinskaya
ReligionRussian Orthodox

Ivan was the son of Vasili III, the Rurikid ruler of the Grand Duchy of Moscow. He was appointed grand prince after his father's death, when he was three years old. A group of reformers known as the "Chosen Council" united around the young Ivan, declaring him tsar (emperor) of all Rus' in 1547 at the age of 16 and establishing the Tsardom of Russia with Moscow as the predominant state. Ivan's reign was characterised by Russia's transformation from a medieval state to an empire under the tsar but at an immense cost to its people and its broader, long-term economy.

During his youth, he conquered the khanates of Kazan and Astrakhan. After he had consolidated his power, Ivan rid himself of the advisers from the "Chosen Council" and triggered the Livonian War, which ravaged Russia and resulted in the loss of Livonia and Ingria but allowed him to establish greater autocratic control over Russia's nobility, which he violently purged with the Oprichnina. The later years of Ivan's reign were marked by the Massacre of Novgorod and the burning of Moscow by Tatars.

Contemporary sources present disparate accounts of Ivan's complex personality. He was described as intelligent and devout, but also prone to paranoia, rage, and episodic outbreaks of mental instability that increased with age.[7][8][9] In one fit of anger, he murdered his eldest son and heir, Ivan Ivanovich, and he might also have caused the miscarriage of the latter's unborn child. This left his younger son, the politically ineffectual Feodor Ivanovich, to inherit the throne, a man whose rule and subsequent childless death led directly to the end of the Rurikid dynasty and the beginning of the Time of Troubles.

Nickname

The English word terrible is usually used to translate the Russian word Грозный (grozny) in Ivan's nickname, but this is a somewhat archaic translation. The Russian word Грозный reflects the older English usage of terrible as in "inspiring fear or terror; dangerous; powerful" (i.e., similar to modern English terrifying). It does not convey the more modern connotations of English terrible such as "defective" or "evil".[10] Vladimir Dal defines grozny specifically in archaic usage and as an epithet for tsars: "courageous, magnificent, magisterial and keeping enemies in fear, but people in obedience".[11] Other translations have also been suggested by modern scholars, including formidable.[12][13][14]

Early life

 

Ivan was the first son of Vasili III and his second wife, Elena Glinskaya. Vasili's mother was an Eastern Roman princess and member of the Byzantine Palaiologos family. She was a daughter of Thomas Palaiologos, the younger brother of the last Byzantine Emperor, Constantine XI Palaiologos (r. 1449–1453).[15] Elena's mother was a Serbian princess and her father's family, the Glinski clan (nobles based in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania), claimed descent both from Orthodox Hungarian nobles and the Mongol ruler Mamai (1335–1380.)[16][17][18][19] Born on August 25, he received the name Ivan in honor of St. John the Baptist, the day of the Beheading of which falls on August 29. In some texts of that era, it is also occasionally mentioned with the names Titus and Smaragd, in accordance with the tradition of polyonyms among the Rurikovich. Baptized in the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius by Abbot Joasaph (Skripitsyn), two elders of the Joseph-Volotsk monastery were elected as recipients—the monk Cassian Bossoy and the hegumen Daniel. Tradition says that in honor of the birth of Ivan, the Church of the Ascension was built in Kolomenskoye.

When Ivan was three years old, his father died from an abscess and inflammation on his leg that developed into blood poisoning. The closest contenders to the throne, except for the young Ivan, were the younger brothers of Vasily. Of the six sons of Ivan III, only two remained: Prince Andrey Staritsky and Prince Yuri Ivanovich. Ivan was proclaimed the Grand Prince of Moscow at the request of his father. His mother Elena Glinskaya initially acted as regent, but she died[20][21] in 1538 when Ivan was only eight years old; many believe that she was poisoned. The regency then alternated between several feuding boyar families that fought for control. According to his own letters, Ivan, along with his younger brother Yuri, often felt neglected and offended by the mighty boyars from the Shuisky and Belsky families. In a letter to Prince Kurbski Ivan remembered, "My brother Iurii, of blessed memory, and me they brought up like vagrants and children of the poorest. What have I suffered for want of garments and food!"[22] That account has been challenged by the historian Edward Keenan, who doubts the authenticity of the source in which the quotations are found.[23]

On 16 January 1547, at 16, Ivan was crowned at the Cathedral of the Dormition of the Moscow Kremlin. The Metropolitan placed on Ivan the signs of royal dignity: the Cross of the Life-Giving Tree, barmas, and the cap of Monomakh; Ivan Vasilievich was anointed with myrrh, and then the metropolitan blessed the tsar. He was the first to be crowned as "Tsar of All the Russias", partly imitating his grandfather, Ivan III the Great, who had claimed the title of Grand Prince of all Rus'. Until then, rulers of Muscovy were crowned as Grand Princes, but Ivan III the Great had styled himself "tsar" in his correspondence. Two weeks after his coronation, Ivan married his first wife, Anastasia Romanovna, a member of the Romanov family, who became the first Russian tsaritsa.

By being crowned tsar, Ivan was sending a message to the world and to Russia that he was now the only supreme ruler of the country, and his will was not to be questioned. "The new title symbolized an assumption of powers equivalent and parallel to those held by former Byzantine Emperor and the Tatar Khan, both known in Russian sources as Tsar. The political effect was to elevate Ivan's position".[24] The new title not only secured the throne but also granted Ivan a new dimension of power that was intimately tied to religion. He was now a "divine" leader appointed to enact God's will, as "church texts described Old Testament kings as 'Tsars' and Christ as the Heavenly Tsar".[25] The newly appointed title was then passed on from generation to generation, and "succeeding Muscovite rulers... benefited from the divine nature of the power of the Russian monarch... crystallized during Ivan's reign".[26]

Domestic policy

 
Portrait of Ivan IV by Viktor Vasnetsov, 1897 (Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow)

Despite calamities triggered by the Great Fire of 1547, the early part of Ivan's reign was one of peaceful reforms and modernization. Ivan revised the law code, creating the Sudebnik of 1550, founded a standing army (the streltsy),[27] established the Zemsky Sobor (the first Russian parliament of feudal estates) and the council of the nobles (known as the Chosen Council) and confirmed the position of the Church with the Council of the Hundred Chapters (Stoglavy Synod), which unified the rituals and ecclesiastical regulations of the whole country. He introduced local self-government to rural regions, mainly in northeastern Russia, populated by the state peasantry.

In 1553, Ivan suffered a near-fatal illness and was thought not able to recover. While on his presumed deathbed, Ivan had asked the boyars to swear an oath of allegiance to his eldest son, an infant at the time. Many boyars refused since they deemed the tsar's health too hopeless for him to survive. This angered Ivan and added to his distrust of the boyars. There followed brutal reprisals and assassinations, including those of Metropolitan Philip and Prince Alexander Gorbatyi-Shuisky.[28]

Ivan ordered in 1553 the establishment of the Moscow Print Yard, and the first printing press was introduced to Russia. Several religious books in Russian were printed during the 1550s and 1560s. The new technology provoked discontent among traditional scribes, which led to the Print Yard being burned in an arson attack. The first Russian printers, Ivan Fedorov and Pyotr Mstislavets, were forced to flee from Moscow to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Nevertheless, the printing of books resumed from 1568 onwards, with Andronik Timofeevich Nevezha and his son Ivan now heading the Print Yard.

Ivan had St. Basil's Cathedral constructed in Moscow to commemorate the seizure of Kazan. There is a legend that he was so impressed with the structure that he had the architect, Postnik Yakovlev, blinded so that he could never design anything as beautiful again. However, in reality Postnik Yakovlev went on to design more churches for Ivan and the walls of the Kazan Kremlin in the early 1560s as well as the chapel over St. Basil's grave, which was added to St. Basil's Cathedral in 1588, several years after Ivan's death. Although more than one architect was associated with that name, it is believed that the principal architect is the same person.[29][30][31]

Other events of the period include the introduction of the first laws restricting the mobility of the peasants, which would eventually lead to serfdom and were instituted during the rule of the future Tsar Boris Godunov in 1597.[32] (See also Serfdom in Russia.)

The combination of bad harvests, devastation brought by the oprichnina and Tatar raids, the prolonged war and overpopulation caused a severe social and economic crisis in the second half of Ivan's reign.

Oprichnina

The 1560s brought to Russia hardships that led to a dramatic change of Ivan's policies. Russia was devastated by a combination of drought, famine, unsuccessful wars against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Tatar invasions, and the sea-trading blockade carried out by the Swedes, the Poles, and the Hanseatic League. His first wife, Anastasia Romanovna, died in 1560, which was suspected to be a poisoning. The personal tragedy deeply hurt Ivan and is thought to have affected his personality, if not his mental health. At the same time, one of Ivan's advisors, Prince Andrei Kurbsky, defected to the Lithuanians, took command of the Lithuanian troops and devastated the Russian region of Velikiye Luki. This series of treasons made Ivan paranoically suspicious of nobility.

 
The Oprichniki by Nikolai Nevrev (1888). The painting shows the last minutes of boyarin Feodorov, who was arrested for treason. To mock his alleged ambitions on the tsar's title, the nobleman was given tsar's regalia before his execution.

On 3 December 1564, Ivan departed Moscow for Aleksandrova Sloboda, where he sent two letters in which he announced his abdication because of the alleged embezzlement and treason of the aristocracy and the clergy. The boyar court was unable to rule in Ivan's absence and feared the wrath of the Muscovite citizens. A boyar envoy departed for Aleksandrova Sloboda to beg Ivan to return to the throne.[33][34] Ivan agreed to return on condition of being granted absolute power. He demanded the right to condemn and execute traitors and confiscate their estates without interference from the boyar council or church. Ivan decreed the creation of the oprichnina.[35]

Alexsandrova Sloboda was a separate territory within the borders of Russia, mostly in the territory of the former Novgorod Republic in the north. Ivan held exclusive power over the territory. The Boyar Council ruled the zemshchina ('land'), the second division of the state. Ivan also recruited a personal guard known as the Oprichniki. Originally, it numbered 1000.[34][36] The oprichniki were headed by Malyuta Skuratov. One known oprichnik was the German adventurer Heinrich von Staden. The oprichniki enjoyed social and economic privileges under the oprichnina. They owed their allegiance and status to Ivan, not heredity or local bonds.[34]

The first wave of persecutions targeted primarily the princely clans of Russia, notably the influential families of Suzdal. Ivan executed, exiled or forcibly tonsured prominent members of the boyar clans on questionable accusations of conspiracy. Among those who were executed were the Metropolitan Philip and the prominent warlord Alexander Gorbaty-Shuisky. In 1566, Ivan extended the oprichnina to eight central districts. Of the 12,000 nobles, 570 became oprichniki and the rest were expelled.[37]

Under the new political system, the oprichniki were given large estates but, unlike the previous landlords, could not be held accountable for their actions. The men "took virtually all the peasants possessed, forcing them to pay 'in one year as much as [they] used to pay in ten.'"[38] This degree of oppression resulted in increasing cases of peasants fleeing, which, in turn, reduced the overall production. The price of grain increased ten-fold.

Sack of Novgorod

Conditions under the Oprichnina were worsened by the 1570 epidemic, a plague that killed 10,000 people in Novgorod and 600 to 1,000 daily in Moscow. During the grim conditions of the epidemic, a famine and the ongoing Livonian War, Ivan grew suspicious that noblemen of the wealthy city of Novgorod were planning to defect and to place the city itself into the control of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. A Novgorod citizen Petr Volynets warned the tsar about the alleged conspiracy, which modern historians believe to be false. In 1570, Ivan ordered the oprichniki to raid the city. The oprichniki burned and pillaged Novgorod and the surrounding villages, and the city has never regained its former prominence.[39]

Casualty figures vary greatly from different sources. The First Pskov Chronicle estimates the number of victims at 60,000.[39][40][41] According to the Third Novgorod Chronicle, the massacre lasted for five weeks. The massacre of Novgorod consisted of men, women and children who were tied to sleighs and run into the freezing waters of the Volkhov River, which Ivan ordered on the basis of unproved accusations of treason. He then tortured its inhabitants and killed thousands in a pogrom. The archbishop was also hunted to death.[42] Almost every day, 500 or 600 people were killed or drowned, but the official death toll named 1,500 of Novgorod's "big" people (nobility) and mentioned only about the same number of "smaller" people.[citation needed] Many modern researchers estimate the number of victims to range from 2,000 to 3,000 since after the famine and epidemics of the 1560s, the population of Novgorod most likely did not exceed 10,000–20,000.[43] Many survivors were deported elsewhere.

The Oprichnina did not live long after the sack of Novgorod. During the 1571–72 Russo-Crimean War, the oprichniki failed to prove themselves worthy against a regular army. In 1572, Ivan abolished the Oprichnina and disbanded his oprichniki.

Pretended resignation

In 1575, Ivan once again pretended to resign from his title and proclaimed Simeon Bekbulatovich, his statesman of Tatar origin, the new Grand Prince of All Rus'. Simeon reigned as a figurehead leader for about a year. According to the English envoy Giles Fletcher, the Elder, Simeon acted under Ivan's instructions to confiscate all of the lands that belonged to monasteries, and Ivan pretended to disagree with the decision. When the throne was returned to Ivan in 1576, he returned some of the confiscated land and kept the rest.

Foreign policy

Diplomacy and trade

 
Ivan the Terrible Showing His Treasures to Jerome Horsey by Alexander Litovchenko (1875)

In 1547, Hans Schlitte, the agent of Ivan, recruited craftsmen in Germany for work in Russia. However, all of the craftsmen were arrested in Lübeck at the request of Poland and Livonia. The German merchant companies ignored the new port built by Ivan on the River Narva in 1550 and continued to deliver goods in the Baltic ports owned by Livonia. Russia remained isolated from sea trade.

Ivan established close ties with the Kingdom of England. Russian-English relations can be traced to 1551, when the Muscovy Company was formed by Richard Chancellor, Sebastian Cabot, Sir Hugh Willoughby and several London merchants. In 1553, Chancellor sailed to the White Sea and continued overland to Moscow, where he visited Ivan's court. Ivan opened up the White Sea and the port of Arkhangelsk to the company and granted it privilege of trading throughout his reign without paying the standard customs fees.[44]

With the use of English merchants, Ivan engaged in a long correspondence with Elizabeth I of England. While the queen focused on commerce, Ivan was more interested in a military alliance.[45] Ivan even proposed to her once, and during his troubled relations with the boyars, he even asked her for a guarantee to be granted asylum in England if his rule was jeopardised.[46] Elizabeth agreed if he provided for himself during his stay.[47]

Ivan corresponded with overseas Orthodox leaders. In response to a letter of Patriarch Joachim of Alexandria asking him for financial assistance for the Saint Catherine's Monastery, in the Sinai Peninsula, which had suffered by the Turks, Ivan sent in 1558 a delegation to Egypt Eyalet by Archdeacon Gennady, who, however, died in Constantinople before he could reach Egypt. From then on, the embassy was headed by Smolensk merchant Vasily Poznyakov, whose delegation visited Alexandria, Cairo and Sinai; brought the patriarch a fur coat and an icon sent by Ivan and left an interesting account of his two-and-a-half years of travels.[48]

Ivan was the first ruler to begin cooperating with the free cossacks on a large scale. Relations were handled through the Posolsky Prikaz diplomatic department; Moscow sent them money and weapons, while tolerating their freedoms, to draw them into an alliance against the Tatars. The first evidence of cooperation surfaces in 1549 when Ivan ordered the Don Cossacks to attack Crimea.[49]

Conquest of Kazan and Astrakhan

 
Ivan IV under the walls of Kazan by Pyotr Korovin (1890)

While Ivan was a child, armies of the Kazan Khanate repeatedly raided northeastern Russia.[50] In the 1530s, the Crimean khan formed an offensive alliance with Safa Giray of Kazan, his relative. When Safa Giray invaded Muscovy in December 1540, the Russians used Qasim Tatars to contain him. After his advance was stalled near Murom, Safa Giray was forced to withdraw to his own borders.

The reverses undermined Safa Giray's authority in Kazan. A pro-Russian party, represented by Shahgali, gained enough popular support to make several attempts to take over the Kazan throne. In 1545, Ivan mounted an expedition to the River Volga to show his support for the pro-Russians.

In 1551, the tsar sent his envoy to the Nogai Horde, and they promised to maintain neutrality during the impending war. The Ar begs and Udmurts submitted to Russian authority as well. In 1551, the wooden fort of Sviyazhsk was transported down the Volga from Uglich all the way to Kazan. It was used as the Russian place d'armes during the decisive campaign of 1552.

On 16 June 1552, Ivan led a strong Russian army towards Kazan. The last siege of the Tatar capital commenced on 30 August. Under the supervision of Prince Alexander Gorbaty-Shuisky, the Russians used battering rams and a siege tower, undermining and 150 cannons. The Russians also had the advantage of efficient military engineers. The city's water supply was blocked and the walls were breached. Kazan finally fell on 2 October, its fortifications were razed and much of the population massacred. Many Russian prisoners and slaves were released. Ivan celebrated his victory over Kazan by building several churches with oriental features, most famously Saint Basil's Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow. The fall of Kazan was only the beginning of a series of so-called "Cheremis wars". The attempts of the Moscow government to gain a foothold on the Middle Volga kept provoking uprisings of local peoples, which was suppressed only with great difficulty. In 1557, the First Cheremis War ended, and the Bashkirs accepted Ivan's authority.

In campaigns in 1554 and 1556, Russian troops conquered the Astrakhan Khanate at the mouths of the Volga River, and the new Astrakhan fortress was built in 1558 by Ivan Vyrodkov to replace the old Tatar capital. The annexation of the Tatar khanates meant the conquest of vast territories, access to large markets and control of the entire length of the Volga River. Subjugating Muslim khanates turned Muscovy into an empire.[51]

After his conquest of Kazan, Ivan is said to have ordered the crescent, a symbol of Islam, to be placed underneath the Christian cross on the domes of Orthodox Christian churches.[52][53][54]

Russo-Turkish War

In 1568, Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmet Paşa, who was the real power in the administration of the Ottoman Empire under Sultan Selim, initiated the first encounter between the Ottoman Empire and its future northern rival. The results presaged the many disasters to come. A plan to unite the Volga and Don by a canal was detailed in Constantinople. In the summer of 1569, a large force under Kasim Paşa of 1,500 Janissaries, 2,000 Sipahis and a few thousand Azaps and Akıncıs were sent to lay siege to Astrakhan and to begin the canal works while an Ottoman fleet besieged Azov.

In early 1570, Ivan's ambassadors concluded a treaty at Constantinople that restored friendly relations between the Sultan and the Tsar.

Livonian War

 
Ioannes Basilius Magnus Imperator Russiae, Dux Moscoviae, by Abraham Ortelius (1574)

In 1558, Ivan launched the Livonian War in an attempt to gain access to the Baltic Sea and its major trade routes. The war ultimately proved unsuccessful and stretched on for 24 years, engaging the Kingdom of Sweden, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Teutonic Knights of Livonia. The prolonged war had nearly destroyed the economy, and the Oprichnina had thoroughly disrupted the government. Meanwhile, the Union of Lublin had united the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Kingdom of Poland, and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth acquired an energetic leader, Stephen Báthory, who was supported by Russia's southern enemy, the Ottoman Empire. Ivan's realm was being squeezed by two of the time's great powers.

After rejecting peace proposals from his enemies, Ivan had found himself in a difficult position by 1579. The displaced refugees fleeing the war compounded the effects of the simultaneous drought, and the exacerbated war engendered epidemics causing much loss of life.

Báthory then launched a series of offensives against Muscovy in the campaign seasons of 1579–81 to try to cut the Kingdom of Livonia from Muscovy. During his first offensive in 1579, he retook Polotsk with 22,000 men. During the second, in 1580, he took Velikie Luki with a 29,000-strong force. Finally, he began the Siege of Pskov in 1581 with a 100,000-strong army. Narva, in Estonia, was reconquered by Sweden in 1581.

Unlike Sweden and Poland, Frederick II of Denmark had trouble continuing the fight against Muscovy. He came to an agreement with John III of Sweden in 1580 to transfer the Danish titles of Livonia to John III. Muscovy recognised Polish–Lithuanian control of Livonia only in 1582. After Magnus von Lyffland, the brother of Fredrick II and a former ally of Ivan, died in 1583, Poland invaded his territories in the Duchy of Courland, and Frederick II decided to sell his rights of inheritance. Except for the island of Saaremaa, Denmark had left Livonia by 1585.

Crimean raids

 
Ivan's throne (ivory, metal, wood)

In the later years of Ivan's reign, the southern borders of Muscovy were disturbed by Crimean Tatars, mainly to capture slaves.[55] (See also Slavery in the Ottoman Empire.) Khan Devlet I Giray of Crimea repeatedly raided the Moscow region. In 1571, the 40,000-strong Crimean and Turkish army launched a large-scale raid. The ongoing Livonian War made Moscow's garrison to number only 6,000 and could not even delay the Tatar approach. Unresisted, Devlet devastated unprotected towns and villages around Moscow and caused the Fire of Moscow (1571). Historians have estimated the number of casualties of the fire to be 10,000 to 80,000.

To buy peace from Devlet Giray, Ivan was forced to relinquish his claims on Astrakhan for the Crimean Khanate, but the proposed transfer was only a diplomatic maneuver and was never actually completed. The defeat angered Ivan. Between 1571 and 1572, preparations were made upon his orders. In addition to Zasechnaya cherta, innovative fortifications were set beyond the Oka River, which defined the border.

The following year, Devlet launched another raid on Moscow, now with a numerous horde,[56] reinforced by Turkish janissaries equipped with firearms and cannons. The Russian army, led by Prince Mikhail Vorotynsky, was half the size but was experienced and supported by streltsy, equipped with modern firearms and gulyay-gorods. In addition, it was no longer artificially divided into two parts (the "oprichnina" and "zemsky"), unlike during the 1571 defeat.[57] On 27 July, the horde broke through the defensive line along the Oka River and moved towards Moscow. The Russian troops did not have time to intercept it, but the regiment of Prince Khvorostinin vigorously attacked the Tatars from the rear. The Khan stopped only 30 km from Moscow and brought down his entire army back on the Russians, who managed to take up defense near the village of Molodi. After several days of heavy fighting, Mikhail Vorotynsky with the main part of the army flanked the Tatars and dealt a sudden blow on 2 August, and Khvorostinin made a sortie from the fortifications. The Tatars were completely defeated and fled.[58] The next year, Ivan, who had sat out in distant Novgorod during the battle, killed Mikhail Vorotynsky.[59]

Conquest of Siberia

During Ivan's reign, Russia started a large-scale exploration and colonization of Siberia. In 1555, shortly after the conquest of Kazan, the Siberian khan Yadegar and the Nogai Horde, under Khan Ismail, pledged their allegiance to Ivan in the hope that he would help them against their opponents. However, Yadegar failed to gather the full sum of tribute that he proposed to the tsar and so Ivan did nothing to save his inefficient vassal. In 1563, Yadegar was overthrown and killed by Khan Kuchum, who denied any tribute to Moscow.

In 1558, Ivan gave the Stroganov merchant family the patent for colonising "the abundant region along the Kama River", and, in 1574, lands over the Ural Mountains along the rivers Tura and Tobol. The family also received permission to build forts along the Ob River and the Irtysh River. Around 1577, the Stroganovs engaged the Cossack leader Yermak Timofeyevich to protect their lands from attacks of the Siberian Khan Kuchum.

In 1580, Yermak started his conquest of Siberia. With some 540 Cossacks, he started to penetrate territories that were tributary to Kuchum. Yermak pressured and persuaded the various family-based tribes to change their loyalties and to become tributaries of Russia. Some agreed voluntarily because they were offered better terms than with Kuchum, but others were forced. He also established distant forts in the newly conquered lands. The campaign was successful, and the Cossacks managed to defeat the Siberian army in the Battle of Chuvash Cape, but Yermak still needed reinforcements. He sent an envoy to Ivan the Terrible with a message that proclaimed Yermak-conquered Siberia to be part of Russia to the dismay of the Stroganovs, who had planned to keep Siberia for themselves. Ivan agreed to reinforce the Cossacks with his streltsy, but the detachment sent to Siberia died of starvation without any benefit. The Cossacks were defeated by the local peoples, Yermak died and the survivors immediately left Siberia. Only in 1586, two years after the death of Ivan, would the Russians manage to gain a foothold in Siberia by founding the city of Tyumen.

Personal life

Marriages and children

 
Tsar Ivan IV admires his sixth wife Vasilisa Melentyeva. 1875 painting by Grigory Sedov.

Ivan the Terrible had at least six (possibly eight) wives, although only four of them were recognised by the Church. Three of them were allegedly poisoned by his enemies or by rivaling aristocratic families who wanted to promote their daughters to be his brides.[10] He also had 9 children.

Confirmed marriages

  1. Anastasia Romanovna (in 1547–1560, death):
    • Tsarevna Anna Ivanovna (10 August 1548 – 20 July 1550)
    • Tsarevna Maria Ivanovna (17 March 1551 – young)
    • Tsarevich Dmitri Ivanovich (October 1552 – 26 June 1553)
    • Tsarevich Ivan Ivanovich (28 March 1554 – 19 November 1581)
    • Tsarevna Eudoxia Ivanovna (26 February 1556 – June 1558)
    • Tsar Feodor I of Russia (31 May 1557 – 6 January 1598)
  2. Maria Temryukovna (in 1561–1569, death):
    • Tsarevich Vasili Ivanovich (21 March 1563 – 3 May 1563)
  3. Marfa Sobakina (28 October – 13 November 1571, death)
  4. Anna Koltovskaya (in 1572, sent to monastery). This was the last of his church-authorized weddings. She was later canonized as Saint Daria (locally-venerated saint).[60]
  5. Anna Vasilchikova (in 1575/76, sent to monastery)
  6. Maria Nagaya (from 1580), widow:

Unconfirmed marriages

  1. Vasilisa Melentyeva (?–1579) (existence disputed)
  2. Maria Dolgorukaya (1580) (existence disputed)

In 1581, Ivan beat his pregnant daughter-in-law, Yelena Sheremeteva, for wearing immodest clothing, which may have caused her to suffer a miscarriage. Upon learning of the altercation, his second son, also named Ivan, engaged in a heated argument with his father. The argument ended with the elder Ivan fatally striking his son in the head with his pointed staff.[62] The event is depicted in the famous painting by Ilya Repin, Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, 16 November 1581, better known as Ivan the Terrible killing his son.

Arts

Ivan was a poet and a composer of considerable talent. His Orthodox liturgical hymn, "Stichiron No. 1 in Honor of St. Peter", and fragments of his letters were put into music by the Soviet composer Rodion Shchedrin. The recording, the first Soviet-produced CD, was released in 1988 to mark the millennium of Christianity in Russia.[63][64]

Epistles

D. S. Mirsky called Ivan "a pamphleteer of genius".[65] The letters are often the only existing source on Ivan's personality and provide crucial information on his reign, but Harvard professor Edward L. Keenan has argued that the letters are 17th-century forgeries. That contention, however, has not been widely accepted, and most other scholars, such as John Fennell and Ruslan Skrynnikov, have continued to argue for their authenticity. Recent archival discoveries of 16th-century copies of the letters strengthen the argument for their authenticity.[66][67]

Religion

 
Death of Ivan the Terrible by Ivan Bilibin (1935)

Ivan was a devoted[42] follower of Christian Orthodoxy but in his own specific manner. He placed the most emphasis on defending the divine right of the ruler to unlimited power under God.[68] Some scholars explain the sadistic and brutal deeds of Ivan the Terrible with the religious concepts of the 16th century,[69] which included drowning and roasting people alive or torturing victims with boiling or freezing water, corresponding to the torments of hell. That was consistent with Ivan's view of being God's representative on Earth with a sacred right and duty to punish. He may also have been inspired by the model of Archangel Michael with the idea of divine punishment.[69]

Despite the absolute prohibition of the Church for even the fourth marriage, Ivan had seven wives, and even while his seventh wife was alive, he was negotiating to marry Mary Hastings, a distant relative of Queen Elizabeth of England. Of course, polygamy was also prohibited by the Church, but Ivan planned to "put his wife away".[70] Ivan freely interfered in church affairs by ousting Metropolitan Philip and ordering him to be killed and accusing of treason and deposing the second-oldest hierarch, Novgorod Archbishop Pimen. Many monks were tortured to death during the Massacre of Novgorod.[71]

Ivan was somewhat tolerant of Islam, which was widespread in the territories of the conquered Tatar khanates, since he was afraid of the wrath of the Ottoman sultan. However, his anti-Semitism was so fierce that no pragmatic considerations could hold him back. For example, after the capture of Polotsk, all unconverted Jews were drowned, despite their role in the city's economy.[72]

Death

Ivan died from a stroke while he was playing chess with Bogdan Belsky[73] on 28 March [O.S. 18 March] 1584.[73] Upon Ivan's death, the Russian throne was left to his middle son, Feodor,[62] a weak-minded figure.[74] Feodor died childless in 1598, which ushered in the Time of Troubles.

Appearance

 
The only authentic lifetime portrait of Ivan IV is embossed on the binding of the first printed Apostle of 1564.

Little is known about Ivan's appearance, as virtually all existing portraits were made after his death and contain uncertain amounts of artist's impression.[1] In 1567, the ambassador Daniel Prinz von Buchau described Ivan as follows: "He is tall, stout and full of energy. His eyes are big, observing and restless. His beard is reddish-black, long and thick, but most other hairs on his head are shaved off according to the Russian habits of the time".[62]

According to Ivan Katyryov-Rostovsky, the son-in-law of Michael I of Russia, Ivan had an unpleasant face with a long and crooked nose. He was tall and athletically built, with broad shoulders and a narrow waist.[62]

In 1963, the graves of Ivan and his sons were excavated and examined by Soviet scientists. Chemical and structural analysis of his remains disproved earlier suggestions that Ivan suffered from syphilis or that he was poisoned by arsenic or strangled. At the time of his death, he was 178 cm tall (5 ft. 10 in.) and weighed 85–90 kg (187–198 lb.). His body was rather asymmetrical, had a large amount of osteophytes uncharacteristic of his age and contained excessive concentration of mercury. Researchers concluded that Ivan was athletically built in his youth but, in his last years, had developed various bone diseases and could barely move. They attributed the high mercury content in his body to his use of ointments to heal his joints.[1]

Legacy

 
Emperor Ivan IV as found in the University of Texas Portrait Gallery (published in 1901)
 
Coins of Ivan IV: kopecks and dengas, in silver.

Ivan completely altered Russia's governmental structure, establishing the character of modern Russian political organisation.[75] Ivan's creation of the Oprichnina, answerable only to him, afforded him personal protection and curtailed the traditional powers and rights of the boyars.[76] Henceforth, Tsarist autocracy and despotism would lie at the heart of the Russian state.[77] Ivan bypassed the Mestnichestvo system and offered positions of power to his supporters among the minor gentry.[78] The empire's local administration combined both locally and centrally appointed officials; the system proved durable and practical and sufficiently flexible to tolerate later modification.[26]

Ivan's expedition against Poland failed at a military level, but it helped extend Russia's trade, political and cultural links with other European states. Peter the Great built on those connections in his bid to make Russia a major European power. At Ivan's death, the empire encompassed the Caspian to the southwest and Western Siberia to the east. His southern conquests ignited several conflicts with the expansionist Turkey, whose territories were thus confined to the Balkans and the Black Sea regions.[79]

Ivan's management of Russia's economy proved disastrous, both in his lifetime and afterward. He had inherited a government in debt, and in an effort to raise more revenue for his expansionist wars, he instituted a series of increasingly-unpopular and burdensome taxes.[80] Successive wars drained Russia of manpower and resources and brought it "to the brink of ruin".[81] After Ivan's death, his empire's nearly-ruined economy contributed to the decline of his own Rurik dynasty, leading to the "Time of Troubles".

Posthumous reputation

Ivan's notorious outbursts and autocratic whims helped characterise the position of tsar as one accountable to no earthly authority but only to God.[26] Tsarist absolutism faced few serious challenges until the 19th century. The earliest and most influential account of his reign prior to 1917 was by the historian N.M. Karamzin, who described Ivan as a 'tormentor' of his people, particularly from 1560, though even after that date Karamzin believed there was a mix of 'good' and 'evil' in his character. In 1922, the historian Robert Wipper - who later returned to his native Latvia to avoid living under communist rule - wrote a biography that reassessed Ivan as a monarch "who loved the ordinary people" and praised his agrarian reforms.[82]

In the 1920s, Mikhail Pokrovsky, who dominated the study of history in the Soviet Union, attributed the success of the Oprichnina to their being on the side of the small state owners and townsfolk in a decades-long class struggle against the large landowners, and downgraded Ivan's role to that of the instrument of the emerging Russian bourgeoisie. But in February 1941, the poet Boris Pasternak observantly remarked in a letter to his cousin that "the new cult, openly proselytized, is Ivan the Terrible, the Oprichnina, the brutality."[83] Joseph Stalin, who had read Wipper's biography had decided that Soviet historians should praise the role of strong leaders, such as Ivan, Alexander Nevsky and Peter the Great, who had strengthened and expanded Russia.[84] In post-Soviet Russia, a campaign has been run to seek the granting of sainthood to Ivan IV,[85] but the Russian Orthodox Church opposed the idea.[86]

A consequence was that the writer Alexei Tolstoy began work on a stage version of Ivan's life, and Sergei Eisenstein began what was to be a three part film tribute to Ivan. Both projects were personally supervised by Stalin, at a time when the Soviet Union was engaged in a war with Nazi Germany. He read the scripts of Tolstoy's play and the first of Eisenstein's films in tandem after the Battle of Kursk in 1943, praised Eisenstein's version but rejected Tolstoy's. It took Tolstoy until 1944 to write a version that satisfied the dictator.[87] Eisenstein's success with Ivan the Terrible Part 1 was not repeated with the follow-up, The Boyar's Revolt, which angered Stalin because it portrayed a man suffering pangs of conscience. Stalin told Eisenstein: "Ivan the Terrible was very cruel. You can show that he was cruel, but you have to show why it was essential to be cruel. One of Ivan the Terrible's mistakes was that he didn't finish off the five major families."[88] The film was suppressed until 1958.

The first statue of Ivan the Terrible was officially open in Oryol, Russia in 2016. Formally, the statue was unveiled in honor of the 450th anniversary of the founding of Oryol, a Russian city of about 310,000 that was established as a fortress to defend Moscow's southern borders. Informally, there was a big political subtext. The opposition thinks that Ivan the Terrible's rehabilitation echoes of Stalin's era. The erection of the statue was vastly covered in international media like The Guardian,[89] The Washington Post,[90] Politico,[91] and others.

The Russian Orthodox Church officially supported the erection of the monument.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Gerasimov, M.M. (1965). . Краткие сообщения института археологии Академии наук СССР (in Russian). 100: 139–42. Archived from the original on 4 January 2010. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  2. ^ . Webcitation.org. Retrieved 7 December 2011
  3. ^ (from Russian:  Ива́н Гро́зный​ , romanized: Ivan Grozny, lit.'Ivan the Formidable' or 'Ivan the Fearsome', Latin: Ioannes Severus, monastic name: Jonah)
  4. ^ "Иван Васильевич Грозный". www.hrono.ru. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  5. ^ ""Иван Грозный — первый русский модернист"". Год Литературы (in Russian). Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Ioannes Severus dictus (1530–1584), inde ab anno 1533 magnus princeps Moscoviensis"[1].
  7. ^ Shvidkovskiĭ, Dmitriĭ Olegovich (2007) Russian Architecture and the West. Yale University Press. p. 147. ISBN 0300109121.
  8. ^ Yanov, p. 208
  9. ^ Del Testa, David W. (2001) Government Leaders, Military Rulers and Political Activists. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 91. ISBN 1573561533
  10. ^ a b Manaev, G. (7 January 2019). "The madness of 3 Russian tsars, and the truth behind it". Russia Beyond the Headlines. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
  11. ^ Dal, Vladimir, Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language, article ГРОЗИТЬ. Available in many editions as well as online, for example at slovardalja.net
  12. ^ Jacobsen, C.G. (1993). "Myths, Politics and the Not-so-New World Order". Journal of Peace Research. 30 (3): 241–250. doi:10.1177/0022343393030003001. JSTOR 424804. S2CID 146782336.
  13. ^ Noth, Ernst Erich (1941). "Books Abroad: An International Literary Quarterly". Books Abroad. University of Oklahoma Press. 15: 343. ISSN 0006-7431.
  14. ^ McConnell, Frank D. (1979). Storytelling and Mythmaking: Images from Film and Literature. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-502572-5; p. 78: "But Ivan IV, Ivan the Terrible, or as the Russian has it, Ivan groznyi, 'Ivan the Magnificent' or 'Ivan the Great' is precisely a man who has become a legend".
  15. ^ Talbot, Alice-Mary (1991). "Sophia Palaiologina". In Kazhdan, Alexander (ed.). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. p. 1928. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  16. ^ Madariaga, Isabel De (2006). Ivan the Terrible. Yale University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-300-11973-2.
  17. ^ Maureen Perrie & Andrei Pavlov, Ivan the Terrible, Routledge (2014), p. 26
  18. ^ Francis Carr, Ivan the Terrible, David & Charles Publishers (1981), p. 61
  19. ^ Walter G. Moss, A History of Russia : To 1917, Volume 1, Anthem Press (2003), p. 130
  20. ^ Martin, p. 331
  21. ^ Pushkareva, N. (1997) Women in Russian History. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 65–67. ISBN 0765632705.
  22. ^ Kurbsky, Andrey, Ivan IV, The Correspondence Between Prince A.M. Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV, of Russia, 1564–1579, Cambridge University Press, 1955, 275 pp., ASIN B000X81MHO, p. 75.
  23. ^ "The Kurbskii-Groznyi Apocrypha – Edward L. Keenan | Harvard University Press".
  24. ^ Martin, p. 377
  25. ^ Bogatyrev, p. 245
  26. ^ a b c Bogatyrev, p. 263.
  27. ^ Paul, Michael C. (2004). "The Military Revolution in Russia 1550–1682". The Journal of Military History. 68 (1): 9–45 [esp. pp. 20–22]. doi:10.1353/jmh.2003.0401. S2CID 159954818.
  28. ^ Riasanovsky, Nicholas V. (2000). "The Second Part of Ivan the Terrible's Rule". A History of Russia. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195121791.
  29. ^ Постник. Great Soviet Encyclopedia
  30. ^ Барма и Постник (Постник Яковлев). ecology-mef.narod.ru.
  31. ^ Постник Барма – строитель собора Василия Блаженного в Москве и Казанского кремля. russiancity.ru.
  32. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBain, Robert (1911). "Boris Fedorovich Godunov". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 254. This cites:
    • Platon Vasilievich Pavlov, On the Historical Significance of the Reign of Boris Godunov (Rus.) (Moscow, 1850)
    • Sergyei Mikhailivich Solovev, History of Russia (Rus.) (2nd ed., vols. vii–viii, St. Petersburg, 1897).
  33. ^ Madariaga, pp. 176–178
  34. ^ a b c Pavlov, Andrei and Perrie, Maureen (2003) Ivan the Terrible (Profiles in Power). Harlow, UK: Longman. pp. 112–113. ISBN 058209948X.
  35. ^ Madariaga, pp. 179–80
  36. ^ Madariaga, pp. 182–183
  37. ^ Madariaga, p. 183. As the tonsure was the distinctive hairstyle of monastic orders, a forcibly-tonsured boyar was effectively exiled from power by being made to enter a monastic life.
  38. ^ Martin, p. 410
  39. ^ a b Kropotkin, Peter; Bealby, John Thomas (1911). "Novgorod" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 839–840.
  40. ^ Ivan the Terrible, Russia, (r. 1533–84). Users.erols.com. Retrieved 7 December 2011
  41. ^ According to the Third Novgorod Chronicle, the massacre lasted for five weeks. Almost every day, 500 or 600 people were killed or drowned.
  42. ^ a b Hays, Jeffrey. Ivan the Terrible. Facts and Details.
  43. ^ Having investigated the report of Maljuta Skuratov and commemoration lists (sinodiki), R. Skrynnikov considers that the number of victims was 2,000–3,000. (Skrynnikov R.G., "Ivan Grosny", M., AST, 2001)
  44. ^ Martin, p. 407.
  45. ^ Dmytryshyn, Basil (2000). Medieval Russia: A Source Book, 850–1700. Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International Press. p. 301. ISBN 0-875-69-218-4. OCLC 21443219.
  46. ^ Crankshaw, Edward, Russia and Britain, Collins, The Nations and Britain series.
  47. ^ "Russians in London: Government in exile". The Economist. 12 February 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2016.
  48. ^ ХОЖДЕНИЕ НА ВОСТОК ГОСТЯ ВАСИЛИЯ ПОЗНЯКОВА С ТОВАРИЩИ (The travels to the Orient by the merchant Vasily Poznyakov and his companions) (in Russian)
  49. ^ Alexander Filjushkin (2008). "Chapter 1 Russian Military Forces in the Sixteenth Century: Infrastructure of the Russian Army". Ivan the Terrible: A Military History. Frontline Books. ISBN 978-1473815599.
  50. ^ Russian chronicles record about 40 attacks of Kazan Khans on Russian territories (the regions of Nizhniy Novgorod, Murom, Vyatka, Vladimir, Kostroma and Galich) in the first half of the 16th century. In 1521, the combined forces of Khan Mehmed Giray and his Crimean allies attacked Russia, captured more than 150,000 slaves. The Full Collection of the Russian Annals, vol. 13, SPb, 1904
  51. ^ Janet Martin, Medieval Russia: 980–1584, (Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 396
  52. ^ Chaudet, Didier (2009). "When the Bear Confronts the Crescent: Russia and the Jihadist Issue". China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly. Central Asia-Caucasus Institute & Silk Road Studies Program. 7 (2): 37–58. ISSN 1653-4212. It would be convenient to characterize the relationship between Russia and Islam by its history of conquest and tension. After all, the emblem of the Orthodox Church is a cross on top on a crescent. It is said that this symbol was devised by Ivan the Terrible, after the conquest of the city of Kazan, as a symbol of the victory of Christianity over Islam through his soldiers.
  53. ^ "Russian Orthodox Church". Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies. 17: 4. 1993. Retrieved 20 May 2015. Finally, the Russians, under Ivan the Terrible, defeated the Tatars in 1552 and firmly established Russian rule. In celebration of this conquest, the czar built two churches in the Moscow Kremlin and on the spires of the Church installed the Orthodox Cross over an upside down crescent, the symbol of Islam.
  54. ^ "Church Building and Its Services". Orthodox World. Retrieved 28 March 2014. Sometimes the bottoms of the Crosses found on Russian churches will be adorned with a crescent. In 1486, Tsar Ivan IV (the Terrible) conquered the city of Kazan which had been under the rule of Moslem Tatars, and in remembrance of this, he decreed that from henceforth the Islamic crescent be placed at the bottom of the Crosses to signify the victory of the Cross (Christianity) over the Crescent (Islam).
  55. ^ Kizilov, Mikhail (2007). "Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian, Muslim and Jewish Sources". Journal of Early Modern History. 11 (1–2): 1. doi:10.1163/157006507780385125.
  56. ^ 120,000-strong, according to Russian cronicles // Новгородская вторая летопись. Год 7080(1572). ПСРЛ т. III, СПб, 1841
  57. ^ Skrynnikov 2015, p. 427.
  58. ^ Skrynnikov 2015, pp. 417–21.
  59. ^ Skrynnikov 2015, pp. 439–41.
  60. ^ "ДАРИЯ". www.pravenc.ru. Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  61. ^ "Благоверный Дими́трий Угличский и Московский, царевич". azbyka.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 20 August 2021.
  62. ^ a b c d Zimin, A.A; Khoroshkevich, A.L. (1982). . Россия времен Ивана Грозного (in Russian). Moscow. pp. 147–51. Archived from the original on 20 March 2008.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  63. ^ "Иван IV Грозный / Родион Константинович Щедрин – Стихиры (Первый отечественный компакт-диск)". intoclassics.net. 9 August 2009.
  64. ^ Kuzin, Viktor. "Первый русский компакт-диск". rarity.ru.
  65. ^ Mirsky, D. S.; Whitfield, Francis James (1958). A History of Russian Literature: From Its Beginnings to 1900. ISBN 978-0810116795.
  66. ^ Keenan, Edward L. (1971) The Kurbskii-Groznyi Apocrypha: the 17th Century Genesis of the "Correspondence" Attributed to Prince A.M. Kurbskii and Tsar Ivan IV. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press
  67. ^ Martin, pp. 328–29.
  68. ^ "Ivan IV | Tsar of Russia". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  69. ^ a b Perrie, Maureen; Pavlov, Andrei (2014). Ivan the Terrible. Routledge. ISBN 978-1317894674.
  70. ^ Skrynnikov 2015, pp. 423, 492–93.
  71. ^ Skrynnikov 2015, pp. 350, 361–64.
  72. ^ Halperin, Charles J. (2019). Ivan the Terrible: Free to Reward and Free to Punish. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8229-8722-2.
  73. ^ a b Waliszewski, Kazimierz; Mary Loyd (1904). Ivan the Terrible. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott. pp. 377–78.
  74. ^ "Fyodor I | tsar of Russia". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  75. ^ Yanov, p. 31
  76. ^ Yanov, p. 69.
  77. ^ Yanov, p. 68.
  78. ^ Riasanovsky, Nicholas V., and Mark D. Steinberg (2011). "Russia at the Time of Ivan IV, 1533–1598" in A History of Russia 8th ed. Vol. 1. New York: Oxford University Press, p. 151. ISBN 978-0195341973.
  79. ^ Shrynnikov, Ruslan G. (1975) "Conclusion", p. 199 in Ivan the Formidable, translated by Hugh F. Graham. Moscow: Academic International.
  80. ^ Martin, p. 404.
  81. ^ Martin, p. 415.
  82. ^ Maureen, Perrie (2001). The Cult of Ivan the Formidable in Stalin's Russia. New York: Palgrava. pp. 6, 12-17
  83. ^ McSmith, Andy (2015). Fear and the Muse Kept Watch, The Russian Masters - from Akhmatova and Pasternak to Shostakovich and Eisenstein - Under Stalin. New York: New Press. p. 233. ISBN 978-1-59558-056-6.
  84. ^ Perrie, Maureen (1987). The Image of Ivan the Formidable in Russian Folklore. Cambridge, UK: Pitt Building.
  85. ^ . The Washington Post, 10 November 2003.
  86. ^ "Church says nyet to St. Rasputin". UPI NewsTrack. 4 October 2004
  87. ^ McSmith. Fear and the Muse. p. 236.
  88. ^ McSmith. Fear and the Muse. p. 240.
  89. ^ "Russia's first monument to Ivan the Terrible inaugurated". The Guardian, 14 October 2016.
  90. ^ "Russia just gave Ivan the Terrible his first statue ever". The Washington Post, 14 October 2016.
  91. ^ "Russia falls back in love with Ivan the Terrible". Politico, 14 October 2016.
  92. ^ Leaders of distribution 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine. kinokultura.com (in Russian)
  93. ^ Drama, Tsar, Ivan the Terrible: Absolute Power. BBC Radio 4 (17 September 2016). Retrieved on 2016-11-21.

Bibliography

  • Bogatyrev, Sergei (2006). . In Maureen Perrie (ed.). The Cambridge History of Russia. Vol. 1: From Early Rus' to 1689. Cambridge Histories Online. pp. 240–63. doi:10.1017/CHOL9780521812276.011. ISBN 978-0-521-81227-6. Archived from the original on 17 September 2012. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  • Madariaga, Isabel de (2005). Ivan the Terrible. First Tsar of Russia. New Haven; London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09757-3.
  • Martin, Janet (2007). "Ivan IV the Terrible". Medieval Russia 980–1584 (2nd ed.). New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85916-5.
  • Yanov, Alexander (1981). The Origins of Autocracy. Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-04282-7.
  • Skrynnikov, Ruslan G. (2015). Reign of Terror: Ivan IV. Brill. pp. 439–41. ISBN 978-90-04-30401-7.

General references

Further reading

  • Bain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Ivan" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 15 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 87–91, see page 89.
  • Cherniavsky, Michael. "Ivan the Terrible as Renaissance Prince", Slavic Review, Vol. 27, No. 2. (Jun. 1968), pp. 195–211.
  • Hunt, Priscilla. "Ivan IV's Personal Mythology of Kingship", Slavic Review, Vol. 52, No. 4. (Winter, 1993), pp. 769–809.
  • Menken, Jules. "Ivan the Terrible." History Today (Mar 1953) 3#3, Vol. 3 Issue 3, pp. 167–73.
  • Perrie, Maureen. The Image of Ivan the Terrible in Russian Folklore(Cambridge University Press, 1987; ISBN 0-521-33075-0, 0-521-89100-0).
  • Perrie, Maureen. The Cult of Ivan the Terrible in Stalin's Russia. (New York: Palgrave, 2001 ISBN 0-333-65684-9).
  • Platt, Kevin M.F.; Brandenberger, David. "Terribly Romantic, Terribly Progressive, or Terribly Tragic: Rehabilitating Ivan IV under I.V. Stalin", Russian Review, Vol. 58, No. 4. (Oct. 1999), pp. 635–54.
  • Isolde Thyrêt, "The Royal Women of Ivan IV's Family and the Meaning of Forced Tonsure," in Anne Walthall (ed), Servants of the Dynasty: Palace Women in World History (Berkeley, Univ. California Press, 2008), 159–71.

External links

  • Ivan the Terrible with videos, images and translations from the Russian Archives and State Museums
  •   Ivan the Czar., versions of a poem by Felicia Hemans.
Ivan the Terrible
Born: 3 September 1530 Died: 28 March 1584
Regnal titles
Preceded by Grand Prince of Moscow
3 December 1533 – 16 January 1547
Tsardom created
Tsardom created Tsar of Russia
16 January 1547 – 28 March 1584
Succeeded by

ivan, terrible, other, uses, disambiguation, ivan, redirects, here, also, ivan, ryazan, ivan, grozny, redirects, here, volcano, grozny, group, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, vasilyevich, ivan, vasilyevich, russian,. For other uses see Ivan the Terrible disambiguation Ivan IV redirects here See also Ivan IV of Ryazan Ivan Grozny redirects here For the volcano see Grozny Group In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Vasilyevich Ivan IV Vasilyevich Russian Ivan Vasilevich 25 August 1530 28 March O S 18 March 1584 2 commonly known in English as Ivan the Terrible 3 4 5 6 was the grand prince of Moscow from 1533 to 1547 and the first Tsar of all Russia from 1547 to 1584 Ivan came from the imperial bloodline of Byzantine Palaiologos family through his grandmother Sophia Palaiologina Ivan IVForensic facial reconstruction of Ivan IV by Mikhail Gerasimov 1 Tsar of RussiaReign16 26 January 1547 1575Coronation16 26 January 1547PredecessorMonarchy establishedSuccessorSimeon BekbulatovichReign1576 28 March 1584PredecessorSimeon BekbulatovichSuccessorFeodor IGrand Prince of MoscowReign3 December 1533 16 January 1547PredecessorVasili IIISuccessorHimself as Tsar of RussiaBorn25 August 1530Kolomenskoye Grand Duchy of MoscowDied28 March O S 18 March 1584 aged 53 Moscow Tsardom of RussiaBurialCathedral of the Archangel MoscowSpousesSee list Anastasia RomanovnaMaria TemryukovnaMarfa SobakinaAnna KoltovskayaAnna VasilchikovaVasilisa MelentyevaMaria DolgorukayaMaria NagayaIssuemore See list Dmitry IvanovichIvan IvanovichFeodor I of RussiaDmitry IvanovichNamesIvan VasilyevichDynastyRurikFatherVasili III of RussiaMotherElena GlinskayaReligionRussian OrthodoxIvan was the son of Vasili III the Rurikid ruler of the Grand Duchy of Moscow He was appointed grand prince after his father s death when he was three years old A group of reformers known as the Chosen Council united around the young Ivan declaring him tsar emperor of all Rus in 1547 at the age of 16 and establishing the Tsardom of Russia with Moscow as the predominant state Ivan s reign was characterised by Russia s transformation from a medieval state to an empire under the tsar but at an immense cost to its people and its broader long term economy During his youth he conquered the khanates of Kazan and Astrakhan After he had consolidated his power Ivan rid himself of the advisers from the Chosen Council and triggered the Livonian War which ravaged Russia and resulted in the loss of Livonia and Ingria but allowed him to establish greater autocratic control over Russia s nobility which he violently purged with the Oprichnina The later years of Ivan s reign were marked by the Massacre of Novgorod and the burning of Moscow by Tatars Contemporary sources present disparate accounts of Ivan s complex personality He was described as intelligent and devout but also prone to paranoia rage and episodic outbreaks of mental instability that increased with age 7 8 9 In one fit of anger he murdered his eldest son and heir Ivan Ivanovich and he might also have caused the miscarriage of the latter s unborn child This left his younger son the politically ineffectual Feodor Ivanovich to inherit the throne a man whose rule and subsequent childless death led directly to the end of the Rurikid dynasty and the beginning of the Time of Troubles Contents 1 Nickname 2 Early life 3 Domestic policy 3 1 Oprichnina 3 2 Sack of Novgorod 3 3 Pretended resignation 4 Foreign policy 4 1 Diplomacy and trade 4 2 Conquest of Kazan and Astrakhan 4 3 Russo Turkish War 4 4 Livonian War 4 5 Crimean raids 4 6 Conquest of Siberia 5 Personal life 5 1 Marriages and children 5 1 1 Confirmed marriages 5 1 2 Unconfirmed marriages 5 2 Arts 5 3 Epistles 6 Religion 7 Death 8 Appearance 9 Legacy 10 Posthumous reputation 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Notes 12 2 Bibliography 12 3 General references 13 Further reading 14 External linksNickname EditThe English word terrible is usually used to translate the Russian word Groznyj grozny in Ivan s nickname but this is a somewhat archaic translation The Russian word Groznyj reflects the older English usage of terrible as in inspiring fear or terror dangerous powerful i e similar to modern English terrifying It does not convey the more modern connotations of English terrible such as defective or evil 10 Vladimir Dal defines grozny specifically in archaic usage and as an epithet for tsars courageous magnificent magisterial and keeping enemies in fear but people in obedience 11 Other translations have also been suggested by modern scholars including formidable 12 13 14 Early life Edit Birth of Ivan Ivanovich son of Ivan the Terrible and Anastasia Romanovna from Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible Ivan was the first son of Vasili III and his second wife Elena Glinskaya Vasili s mother was an Eastern Roman princess and member of the Byzantine Palaiologos family She was a daughter of Thomas Palaiologos the younger brother of the last Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos r 1449 1453 15 Elena s mother was a Serbian princess and her father s family the Glinski clan nobles based in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania claimed descent both from Orthodox Hungarian nobles and the Mongol ruler Mamai 1335 1380 16 17 18 19 Born on August 25 he received the name Ivan in honor of St John the Baptist the day of the Beheading of which falls on August 29 In some texts of that era it is also occasionally mentioned with the names Titus and Smaragd in accordance with the tradition of polyonyms among the Rurikovich Baptized in the Trinity Lavra of St Sergius by Abbot Joasaph Skripitsyn two elders of the Joseph Volotsk monastery were elected as recipients the monk Cassian Bossoy and the hegumen Daniel Tradition says that in honor of the birth of Ivan the Church of the Ascension was built in Kolomenskoye When Ivan was three years old his father died from an abscess and inflammation on his leg that developed into blood poisoning The closest contenders to the throne except for the young Ivan were the younger brothers of Vasily Of the six sons of Ivan III only two remained Prince Andrey Staritsky and Prince Yuri Ivanovich Ivan was proclaimed the Grand Prince of Moscow at the request of his father His mother Elena Glinskaya initially acted as regent but she died 20 21 in 1538 when Ivan was only eight years old many believe that she was poisoned The regency then alternated between several feuding boyar families that fought for control According to his own letters Ivan along with his younger brother Yuri often felt neglected and offended by the mighty boyars from the Shuisky and Belsky families In a letter to Prince Kurbski Ivan remembered My brother Iurii of blessed memory and me they brought up like vagrants and children of the poorest What have I suffered for want of garments and food 22 That account has been challenged by the historian Edward Keenan who doubts the authenticity of the source in which the quotations are found 23 On 16 January 1547 at 16 Ivan was crowned at the Cathedral of the Dormition of the Moscow Kremlin The Metropolitan placed on Ivan the signs of royal dignity the Cross of the Life Giving Tree barmas and the cap of Monomakh Ivan Vasilievich was anointed with myrrh and then the metropolitan blessed the tsar He was the first to be crowned as Tsar of All the Russias partly imitating his grandfather Ivan III the Great who had claimed the title of Grand Prince of all Rus Until then rulers of Muscovy were crowned as Grand Princes but Ivan III the Great had styled himself tsar in his correspondence Two weeks after his coronation Ivan married his first wife Anastasia Romanovna a member of the Romanov family who became the first Russian tsaritsa By being crowned tsar Ivan was sending a message to the world and to Russia that he was now the only supreme ruler of the country and his will was not to be questioned The new title symbolized an assumption of powers equivalent and parallel to those held by former Byzantine Emperor and the Tatar Khan both known in Russian sources as Tsar The political effect was to elevate Ivan s position 24 The new title not only secured the throne but also granted Ivan a new dimension of power that was intimately tied to religion He was now a divine leader appointed to enact God s will as church texts described Old Testament kings as Tsars and Christ as the Heavenly Tsar 25 The newly appointed title was then passed on from generation to generation and succeeding Muscovite rulers benefited from the divine nature of the power of the Russian monarch crystallized during Ivan s reign 26 Domestic policy Edit Portrait of Ivan IV by Viktor Vasnetsov 1897 Tretyakov Gallery Moscow Despite calamities triggered by the Great Fire of 1547 the early part of Ivan s reign was one of peaceful reforms and modernization Ivan revised the law code creating the Sudebnik of 1550 founded a standing army the streltsy 27 established the Zemsky Sobor the first Russian parliament of feudal estates and the council of the nobles known as the Chosen Council and confirmed the position of the Church with the Council of the Hundred Chapters Stoglavy Synod which unified the rituals and ecclesiastical regulations of the whole country He introduced local self government to rural regions mainly in northeastern Russia populated by the state peasantry In 1553 Ivan suffered a near fatal illness and was thought not able to recover While on his presumed deathbed Ivan had asked the boyars to swear an oath of allegiance to his eldest son an infant at the time Many boyars refused since they deemed the tsar s health too hopeless for him to survive This angered Ivan and added to his distrust of the boyars There followed brutal reprisals and assassinations including those of Metropolitan Philip and Prince Alexander Gorbatyi Shuisky 28 Ivan ordered in 1553 the establishment of the Moscow Print Yard and the first printing press was introduced to Russia Several religious books in Russian were printed during the 1550s and 1560s The new technology provoked discontent among traditional scribes which led to the Print Yard being burned in an arson attack The first Russian printers Ivan Fedorov and Pyotr Mstislavets were forced to flee from Moscow to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Nevertheless the printing of books resumed from 1568 onwards with Andronik Timofeevich Nevezha and his son Ivan now heading the Print Yard Ivan had St Basil s Cathedral constructed in Moscow to commemorate the seizure of Kazan There is a legend that he was so impressed with the structure that he had the architect Postnik Yakovlev blinded so that he could never design anything as beautiful again However in reality Postnik Yakovlev went on to design more churches for Ivan and the walls of the Kazan Kremlin in the early 1560s as well as the chapel over St Basil s grave which was added to St Basil s Cathedral in 1588 several years after Ivan s death Although more than one architect was associated with that name it is believed that the principal architect is the same person 29 30 31 Other events of the period include the introduction of the first laws restricting the mobility of the peasants which would eventually lead to serfdom and were instituted during the rule of the future Tsar Boris Godunov in 1597 32 See also Serfdom in Russia The combination of bad harvests devastation brought by the oprichnina and Tatar raids the prolonged war and overpopulation caused a severe social and economic crisis in the second half of Ivan s reign Oprichnina Edit Main article Oprichnina The 1560s brought to Russia hardships that led to a dramatic change of Ivan s policies Russia was devastated by a combination of drought famine unsuccessful wars against the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth Tatar invasions and the sea trading blockade carried out by the Swedes the Poles and the Hanseatic League His first wife Anastasia Romanovna died in 1560 which was suspected to be a poisoning The personal tragedy deeply hurt Ivan and is thought to have affected his personality if not his mental health At the same time one of Ivan s advisors Prince Andrei Kurbsky defected to the Lithuanians took command of the Lithuanian troops and devastated the Russian region of Velikiye Luki This series of treasons made Ivan paranoically suspicious of nobility The Oprichniki by Nikolai Nevrev 1888 The painting shows the last minutes of boyarin Feodorov who was arrested for treason To mock his alleged ambitions on the tsar s title the nobleman was given tsar s regalia before his execution On 3 December 1564 Ivan departed Moscow for Aleksandrova Sloboda where he sent two letters in which he announced his abdication because of the alleged embezzlement and treason of the aristocracy and the clergy The boyar court was unable to rule in Ivan s absence and feared the wrath of the Muscovite citizens A boyar envoy departed for Aleksandrova Sloboda to beg Ivan to return to the throne 33 34 Ivan agreed to return on condition of being granted absolute power He demanded the right to condemn and execute traitors and confiscate their estates without interference from the boyar council or church Ivan decreed the creation of the oprichnina 35 Alexsandrova Sloboda was a separate territory within the borders of Russia mostly in the territory of the former Novgorod Republic in the north Ivan held exclusive power over the territory The Boyar Council ruled the zemshchina land the second division of the state Ivan also recruited a personal guard known as the Oprichniki Originally it numbered 1000 34 36 The oprichniki were headed by Malyuta Skuratov One known oprichnik was the German adventurer Heinrich von Staden The oprichniki enjoyed social and economic privileges under the oprichnina They owed their allegiance and status to Ivan not heredity or local bonds 34 The first wave of persecutions targeted primarily the princely clans of Russia notably the influential families of Suzdal Ivan executed exiled or forcibly tonsured prominent members of the boyar clans on questionable accusations of conspiracy Among those who were executed were the Metropolitan Philip and the prominent warlord Alexander Gorbaty Shuisky In 1566 Ivan extended the oprichnina to eight central districts Of the 12 000 nobles 570 became oprichniki and the rest were expelled 37 Under the new political system the oprichniki were given large estates but unlike the previous landlords could not be held accountable for their actions The men took virtually all the peasants possessed forcing them to pay in one year as much as they used to pay in ten 38 This degree of oppression resulted in increasing cases of peasants fleeing which in turn reduced the overall production The price of grain increased ten fold Sack of Novgorod Edit Main article Massacre of Novgorod Conditions under the Oprichnina were worsened by the 1570 epidemic a plague that killed 10 000 people in Novgorod and 600 to 1 000 daily in Moscow During the grim conditions of the epidemic a famine and the ongoing Livonian War Ivan grew suspicious that noblemen of the wealthy city of Novgorod were planning to defect and to place the city itself into the control of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania A Novgorod citizen Petr Volynets warned the tsar about the alleged conspiracy which modern historians believe to be false In 1570 Ivan ordered the oprichniki to raid the city The oprichniki burned and pillaged Novgorod and the surrounding villages and the city has never regained its former prominence 39 Casualty figures vary greatly from different sources The First Pskov Chronicle estimates the number of victims at 60 000 39 40 41 According to the Third Novgorod Chronicle the massacre lasted for five weeks The massacre of Novgorod consisted of men women and children who were tied to sleighs and run into the freezing waters of the Volkhov River which Ivan ordered on the basis of unproved accusations of treason He then tortured its inhabitants and killed thousands in a pogrom The archbishop was also hunted to death 42 Almost every day 500 or 600 people were killed or drowned but the official death toll named 1 500 of Novgorod s big people nobility and mentioned only about the same number of smaller people citation needed Many modern researchers estimate the number of victims to range from 2 000 to 3 000 since after the famine and epidemics of the 1560s the population of Novgorod most likely did not exceed 10 000 20 000 43 Many survivors were deported elsewhere The Oprichnina did not live long after the sack of Novgorod During the 1571 72 Russo Crimean War the oprichniki failed to prove themselves worthy against a regular army In 1572 Ivan abolished the Oprichnina and disbanded his oprichniki Pretended resignation Edit In 1575 Ivan once again pretended to resign from his title and proclaimed Simeon Bekbulatovich his statesman of Tatar origin the new Grand Prince of All Rus Simeon reigned as a figurehead leader for about a year According to the English envoy Giles Fletcher the Elder Simeon acted under Ivan s instructions to confiscate all of the lands that belonged to monasteries and Ivan pretended to disagree with the decision When the throne was returned to Ivan in 1576 he returned some of the confiscated land and kept the rest Foreign policy EditDiplomacy and trade Edit Ivan the Terrible Showing His Treasures to Jerome Horsey by Alexander Litovchenko 1875 In 1547 Hans Schlitte the agent of Ivan recruited craftsmen in Germany for work in Russia However all of the craftsmen were arrested in Lubeck at the request of Poland and Livonia The German merchant companies ignored the new port built by Ivan on the River Narva in 1550 and continued to deliver goods in the Baltic ports owned by Livonia Russia remained isolated from sea trade Ivan established close ties with the Kingdom of England Russian English relations can be traced to 1551 when the Muscovy Company was formed by Richard Chancellor Sebastian Cabot Sir Hugh Willoughby and several London merchants In 1553 Chancellor sailed to the White Sea and continued overland to Moscow where he visited Ivan s court Ivan opened up the White Sea and the port of Arkhangelsk to the company and granted it privilege of trading throughout his reign without paying the standard customs fees 44 With the use of English merchants Ivan engaged in a long correspondence with Elizabeth I of England While the queen focused on commerce Ivan was more interested in a military alliance 45 Ivan even proposed to her once and during his troubled relations with the boyars he even asked her for a guarantee to be granted asylum in England if his rule was jeopardised 46 Elizabeth agreed if he provided for himself during his stay 47 Ivan corresponded with overseas Orthodox leaders In response to a letter of Patriarch Joachim of Alexandria asking him for financial assistance for the Saint Catherine s Monastery in the Sinai Peninsula which had suffered by the Turks Ivan sent in 1558 a delegation to Egypt Eyalet by Archdeacon Gennady who however died in Constantinople before he could reach Egypt From then on the embassy was headed by Smolensk merchant Vasily Poznyakov whose delegation visited Alexandria Cairo and Sinai brought the patriarch a fur coat and an icon sent by Ivan and left an interesting account of his two and a half years of travels 48 Ivan was the first ruler to begin cooperating with the free cossacks on a large scale Relations were handled through the Posolsky Prikaz diplomatic department Moscow sent them money and weapons while tolerating their freedoms to draw them into an alliance against the Tatars The first evidence of cooperation surfaces in 1549 when Ivan ordered the Don Cossacks to attack Crimea 49 Conquest of Kazan and Astrakhan Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ivan the Terrible news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Siege of Kazan 1552 Ivan IV under the walls of Kazan by Pyotr Korovin 1890 While Ivan was a child armies of the Kazan Khanate repeatedly raided northeastern Russia 50 In the 1530s the Crimean khan formed an offensive alliance with Safa Giray of Kazan his relative When Safa Giray invaded Muscovy in December 1540 the Russians used Qasim Tatars to contain him After his advance was stalled near Murom Safa Giray was forced to withdraw to his own borders The reverses undermined Safa Giray s authority in Kazan A pro Russian party represented by Shahgali gained enough popular support to make several attempts to take over the Kazan throne In 1545 Ivan mounted an expedition to the River Volga to show his support for the pro Russians In 1551 the tsar sent his envoy to the Nogai Horde and they promised to maintain neutrality during the impending war The Ar begs and Udmurts submitted to Russian authority as well In 1551 the wooden fort of Sviyazhsk was transported down the Volga from Uglich all the way to Kazan It was used as the Russian place d armes during the decisive campaign of 1552 On 16 June 1552 Ivan led a strong Russian army towards Kazan The last siege of the Tatar capital commenced on 30 August Under the supervision of Prince Alexander Gorbaty Shuisky the Russians used battering rams and a siege tower undermining and 150 cannons The Russians also had the advantage of efficient military engineers The city s water supply was blocked and the walls were breached Kazan finally fell on 2 October its fortifications were razed and much of the population massacred Many Russian prisoners and slaves were released Ivan celebrated his victory over Kazan by building several churches with oriental features most famously Saint Basil s Cathedral on Red Square in Moscow The fall of Kazan was only the beginning of a series of so called Cheremis wars The attempts of the Moscow government to gain a foothold on the Middle Volga kept provoking uprisings of local peoples which was suppressed only with great difficulty In 1557 the First Cheremis War ended and the Bashkirs accepted Ivan s authority In campaigns in 1554 and 1556 Russian troops conquered the Astrakhan Khanate at the mouths of the Volga River and the new Astrakhan fortress was built in 1558 by Ivan Vyrodkov to replace the old Tatar capital The annexation of the Tatar khanates meant the conquest of vast territories access to large markets and control of the entire length of the Volga River Subjugating Muslim khanates turned Muscovy into an empire 51 After his conquest of Kazan Ivan is said to have ordered the crescent a symbol of Islam to be placed underneath the Christian cross on the domes of Orthodox Christian churches 52 53 54 Russo Turkish War Edit Main article Russo Turkish War 1568 1570 In 1568 Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmet Pasa who was the real power in the administration of the Ottoman Empire under Sultan Selim initiated the first encounter between the Ottoman Empire and its future northern rival The results presaged the many disasters to come A plan to unite the Volga and Don by a canal was detailed in Constantinople In the summer of 1569 a large force under Kasim Pasa of 1 500 Janissaries 2 000 Sipahis and a few thousand Azaps and Akincis were sent to lay siege to Astrakhan and to begin the canal works while an Ottoman fleet besieged Azov In early 1570 Ivan s ambassadors concluded a treaty at Constantinople that restored friendly relations between the Sultan and the Tsar Livonian War Edit Main article Livonian War Ioannes Basilius Magnus Imperator Russiae Dux Moscoviae by Abraham Ortelius 1574 In 1558 Ivan launched the Livonian War in an attempt to gain access to the Baltic Sea and its major trade routes The war ultimately proved unsuccessful and stretched on for 24 years engaging the Kingdom of Sweden the Grand Duchy of Lithuania the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Teutonic Knights of Livonia The prolonged war had nearly destroyed the economy and the Oprichnina had thoroughly disrupted the government Meanwhile the Union of Lublin had united the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Kingdom of Poland and the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth acquired an energetic leader Stephen Bathory who was supported by Russia s southern enemy the Ottoman Empire Ivan s realm was being squeezed by two of the time s great powers After rejecting peace proposals from his enemies Ivan had found himself in a difficult position by 1579 The displaced refugees fleeing the war compounded the effects of the simultaneous drought and the exacerbated war engendered epidemics causing much loss of life Bathory then launched a series of offensives against Muscovy in the campaign seasons of 1579 81 to try to cut the Kingdom of Livonia from Muscovy During his first offensive in 1579 he retook Polotsk with 22 000 men During the second in 1580 he took Velikie Luki with a 29 000 strong force Finally he began the Siege of Pskov in 1581 with a 100 000 strong army Narva in Estonia was reconquered by Sweden in 1581 Unlike Sweden and Poland Frederick II of Denmark had trouble continuing the fight against Muscovy He came to an agreement with John III of Sweden in 1580 to transfer the Danish titles of Livonia to John III Muscovy recognised Polish Lithuanian control of Livonia only in 1582 After Magnus von Lyffland the brother of Fredrick II and a former ally of Ivan died in 1583 Poland invaded his territories in the Duchy of Courland and Frederick II decided to sell his rights of inheritance Except for the island of Saaremaa Denmark had left Livonia by 1585 Crimean raids Edit Main articles Russo Crimean Wars and Crimean Nogai raids into East Slavic lands Ivan s throne ivory metal wood In the later years of Ivan s reign the southern borders of Muscovy were disturbed by Crimean Tatars mainly to capture slaves 55 See also Slavery in the Ottoman Empire Khan Devlet I Giray of Crimea repeatedly raided the Moscow region In 1571 the 40 000 strong Crimean and Turkish army launched a large scale raid The ongoing Livonian War made Moscow s garrison to number only 6 000 and could not even delay the Tatar approach Unresisted Devlet devastated unprotected towns and villages around Moscow and caused the Fire of Moscow 1571 Historians have estimated the number of casualties of the fire to be 10 000 to 80 000 To buy peace from Devlet Giray Ivan was forced to relinquish his claims on Astrakhan for the Crimean Khanate but the proposed transfer was only a diplomatic maneuver and was never actually completed The defeat angered Ivan Between 1571 and 1572 preparations were made upon his orders In addition to Zasechnaya cherta innovative fortifications were set beyond the Oka River which defined the border The following year Devlet launched another raid on Moscow now with a numerous horde 56 reinforced by Turkish janissaries equipped with firearms and cannons The Russian army led by Prince Mikhail Vorotynsky was half the size but was experienced and supported by streltsy equipped with modern firearms and gulyay gorods In addition it was no longer artificially divided into two parts the oprichnina and zemsky unlike during the 1571 defeat 57 On 27 July the horde broke through the defensive line along the Oka River and moved towards Moscow The Russian troops did not have time to intercept it but the regiment of Prince Khvorostinin vigorously attacked the Tatars from the rear The Khan stopped only 30 km from Moscow and brought down his entire army back on the Russians who managed to take up defense near the village of Molodi After several days of heavy fighting Mikhail Vorotynsky with the main part of the army flanked the Tatars and dealt a sudden blow on 2 August and Khvorostinin made a sortie from the fortifications The Tatars were completely defeated and fled 58 The next year Ivan who had sat out in distant Novgorod during the battle killed Mikhail Vorotynsky 59 Conquest of Siberia Edit Main article Russian conquest of Siberia During Ivan s reign Russia started a large scale exploration and colonization of Siberia In 1555 shortly after the conquest of Kazan the Siberian khan Yadegar and the Nogai Horde under Khan Ismail pledged their allegiance to Ivan in the hope that he would help them against their opponents However Yadegar failed to gather the full sum of tribute that he proposed to the tsar and so Ivan did nothing to save his inefficient vassal In 1563 Yadegar was overthrown and killed by Khan Kuchum who denied any tribute to Moscow In 1558 Ivan gave the Stroganov merchant family the patent for colonising the abundant region along the Kama River and in 1574 lands over the Ural Mountains along the rivers Tura and Tobol The family also received permission to build forts along the Ob River and the Irtysh River Around 1577 the Stroganovs engaged the Cossack leader Yermak Timofeyevich to protect their lands from attacks of the Siberian Khan Kuchum In 1580 Yermak started his conquest of Siberia With some 540 Cossacks he started to penetrate territories that were tributary to Kuchum Yermak pressured and persuaded the various family based tribes to change their loyalties and to become tributaries of Russia Some agreed voluntarily because they were offered better terms than with Kuchum but others were forced He also established distant forts in the newly conquered lands The campaign was successful and the Cossacks managed to defeat the Siberian army in the Battle of Chuvash Cape but Yermak still needed reinforcements He sent an envoy to Ivan the Terrible with a message that proclaimed Yermak conquered Siberia to be part of Russia to the dismay of the Stroganovs who had planned to keep Siberia for themselves Ivan agreed to reinforce the Cossacks with his streltsy but the detachment sent to Siberia died of starvation without any benefit The Cossacks were defeated by the local peoples Yermak died and the survivors immediately left Siberia Only in 1586 two years after the death of Ivan would the Russians manage to gain a foothold in Siberia by founding the city of Tyumen Personal life EditMarriages and children Edit Tsar Ivan IV admires his sixth wife Vasilisa Melentyeva 1875 painting by Grigory Sedov Ivan the Terrible and His Son Ivan 1885 painting by Ilya Repin Ivan the Terrible had at least six possibly eight wives although only four of them were recognised by the Church Three of them were allegedly poisoned by his enemies or by rivaling aristocratic families who wanted to promote their daughters to be his brides 10 He also had 9 children Confirmed marriages Edit Anastasia Romanovna in 1547 1560 death Tsarevna Anna Ivanovna 10 August 1548 20 July 1550 Tsarevna Maria Ivanovna 17 March 1551 young Tsarevich Dmitri Ivanovich October 1552 26 June 1553 Tsarevich Ivan Ivanovich 28 March 1554 19 November 1581 Tsarevna Eudoxia Ivanovna 26 February 1556 June 1558 Tsar Feodor I of Russia 31 May 1557 6 January 1598 Maria Temryukovna in 1561 1569 death Tsarevich Vasili Ivanovich 21 March 1563 3 May 1563 Marfa Sobakina 28 October 13 November 1571 death Anna Koltovskaya in 1572 sent to monastery This was the last of his church authorized weddings She was later canonized as Saint Daria locally venerated saint 60 Anna Vasilchikova in 1575 76 sent to monastery Maria Nagaya from 1580 widow Tsarevich Dmitri Ivanovich 19 October 1582 15 May 1591 He was later canonized as Saint Right Believing Demetrius of Uglich and Moscow tsarevich 61 Unconfirmed marriages Edit Vasilisa Melentyeva 1579 existence disputed Maria Dolgorukaya 1580 existence disputed In 1581 Ivan beat his pregnant daughter in law Yelena Sheremeteva for wearing immodest clothing which may have caused her to suffer a miscarriage Upon learning of the altercation his second son also named Ivan engaged in a heated argument with his father The argument ended with the elder Ivan fatally striking his son in the head with his pointed staff 62 The event is depicted in the famous painting by Ilya Repin Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday 16 November 1581 better known as Ivan the Terrible killing his son Arts Edit Ivan was a poet and a composer of considerable talent His Orthodox liturgical hymn Stichiron No 1 in Honor of St Peter and fragments of his letters were put into music by the Soviet composer Rodion Shchedrin The recording the first Soviet produced CD was released in 1988 to mark the millennium of Christianity in Russia 63 64 Epistles Edit D S Mirsky called Ivan a pamphleteer of genius 65 The letters are often the only existing source on Ivan s personality and provide crucial information on his reign but Harvard professor Edward L Keenan has argued that the letters are 17th century forgeries That contention however has not been widely accepted and most other scholars such as John Fennell and Ruslan Skrynnikov have continued to argue for their authenticity Recent archival discoveries of 16th century copies of the letters strengthen the argument for their authenticity 66 67 Religion Edit Death of Ivan the Terrible by Ivan Bilibin 1935 Ivan was a devoted 42 follower of Christian Orthodoxy but in his own specific manner He placed the most emphasis on defending the divine right of the ruler to unlimited power under God 68 Some scholars explain the sadistic and brutal deeds of Ivan the Terrible with the religious concepts of the 16th century 69 which included drowning and roasting people alive or torturing victims with boiling or freezing water corresponding to the torments of hell That was consistent with Ivan s view of being God s representative on Earth with a sacred right and duty to punish He may also have been inspired by the model of Archangel Michael with the idea of divine punishment 69 Despite the absolute prohibition of the Church for even the fourth marriage Ivan had seven wives and even while his seventh wife was alive he was negotiating to marry Mary Hastings a distant relative of Queen Elizabeth of England Of course polygamy was also prohibited by the Church but Ivan planned to put his wife away 70 Ivan freely interfered in church affairs by ousting Metropolitan Philip and ordering him to be killed and accusing of treason and deposing the second oldest hierarch Novgorod Archbishop Pimen Many monks were tortured to death during the Massacre of Novgorod 71 Ivan was somewhat tolerant of Islam which was widespread in the territories of the conquered Tatar khanates since he was afraid of the wrath of the Ottoman sultan However his anti Semitism was so fierce that no pragmatic considerations could hold him back For example after the capture of Polotsk all unconverted Jews were drowned despite their role in the city s economy 72 Death EditIvan died from a stroke while he was playing chess with Bogdan Belsky 73 on 28 March O S 18 March 1584 73 Upon Ivan s death the Russian throne was left to his middle son Feodor 62 a weak minded figure 74 Feodor died childless in 1598 which ushered in the Time of Troubles Appearance Edit The only authentic lifetime portrait of Ivan IV is embossed on the binding of the first printed Apostle of 1564 Little is known about Ivan s appearance as virtually all existing portraits were made after his death and contain uncertain amounts of artist s impression 1 In 1567 the ambassador Daniel Prinz von Buchau described Ivan as follows He is tall stout and full of energy His eyes are big observing and restless His beard is reddish black long and thick but most other hairs on his head are shaved off according to the Russian habits of the time 62 According to Ivan Katyryov Rostovsky the son in law of Michael I of Russia Ivan had an unpleasant face with a long and crooked nose He was tall and athletically built with broad shoulders and a narrow waist 62 In 1963 the graves of Ivan and his sons were excavated and examined by Soviet scientists Chemical and structural analysis of his remains disproved earlier suggestions that Ivan suffered from syphilis or that he was poisoned by arsenic or strangled At the time of his death he was 178 cm tall 5 ft 10 in and weighed 85 90 kg 187 198 lb His body was rather asymmetrical had a large amount of osteophytes uncharacteristic of his age and contained excessive concentration of mercury Researchers concluded that Ivan was athletically built in his youth but in his last years had developed various bone diseases and could barely move They attributed the high mercury content in his body to his use of ointments to heal his joints 1 Legacy Edit Emperor Ivan IV as found in the University of Texas Portrait Gallery published in 1901 Coins of Ivan IV kopecks and dengas in silver Ivan completely altered Russia s governmental structure establishing the character of modern Russian political organisation 75 Ivan s creation of the Oprichnina answerable only to him afforded him personal protection and curtailed the traditional powers and rights of the boyars 76 Henceforth Tsarist autocracy and despotism would lie at the heart of the Russian state 77 Ivan bypassed the Mestnichestvo system and offered positions of power to his supporters among the minor gentry 78 The empire s local administration combined both locally and centrally appointed officials the system proved durable and practical and sufficiently flexible to tolerate later modification 26 Ivan s expedition against Poland failed at a military level but it helped extend Russia s trade political and cultural links with other European states Peter the Great built on those connections in his bid to make Russia a major European power At Ivan s death the empire encompassed the Caspian to the southwest and Western Siberia to the east His southern conquests ignited several conflicts with the expansionist Turkey whose territories were thus confined to the Balkans and the Black Sea regions 79 Ivan s management of Russia s economy proved disastrous both in his lifetime and afterward He had inherited a government in debt and in an effort to raise more revenue for his expansionist wars he instituted a series of increasingly unpopular and burdensome taxes 80 Successive wars drained Russia of manpower and resources and brought it to the brink of ruin 81 After Ivan s death his empire s nearly ruined economy contributed to the decline of his own Rurik dynasty leading to the Time of Troubles Posthumous reputation EditIvan s notorious outbursts and autocratic whims helped characterise the position of tsar as one accountable to no earthly authority but only to God 26 Tsarist absolutism faced few serious challenges until the 19th century The earliest and most influential account of his reign prior to 1917 was by the historian N M Karamzin who described Ivan as a tormentor of his people particularly from 1560 though even after that date Karamzin believed there was a mix of good and evil in his character In 1922 the historian Robert Wipper who later returned to his native Latvia to avoid living under communist rule wrote a biography that reassessed Ivan as a monarch who loved the ordinary people and praised his agrarian reforms 82 In the 1920s Mikhail Pokrovsky who dominated the study of history in the Soviet Union attributed the success of the Oprichnina to their being on the side of the small state owners and townsfolk in a decades long class struggle against the large landowners and downgraded Ivan s role to that of the instrument of the emerging Russian bourgeoisie But in February 1941 the poet Boris Pasternak observantly remarked in a letter to his cousin that the new cult openly proselytized is Ivan the Terrible the Oprichnina the brutality 83 Joseph Stalin who had read Wipper s biography had decided that Soviet historians should praise the role of strong leaders such as Ivan Alexander Nevsky and Peter the Great who had strengthened and expanded Russia 84 In post Soviet Russia a campaign has been run to seek the granting of sainthood to Ivan IV 85 but the Russian Orthodox Church opposed the idea 86 A consequence was that the writer Alexei Tolstoy began work on a stage version of Ivan s life and Sergei Eisenstein began what was to be a three part film tribute to Ivan Both projects were personally supervised by Stalin at a time when the Soviet Union was engaged in a war with Nazi Germany He read the scripts of Tolstoy s play and the first of Eisenstein s films in tandem after the Battle of Kursk in 1943 praised Eisenstein s version but rejected Tolstoy s It took Tolstoy until 1944 to write a version that satisfied the dictator 87 Eisenstein s success with Ivan the Terrible Part 1 was not repeated with the follow up The Boyar s Revolt which angered Stalin because it portrayed a man suffering pangs of conscience Stalin told Eisenstein Ivan the Terrible was very cruel You can show that he was cruel but you have to show why it was essential to be cruel One of Ivan the Terrible s mistakes was that he didn t finish off the five major families 88 The film was suppressed until 1958 The first statue of Ivan the Terrible was officially open in Oryol Russia in 2016 Formally the statue was unveiled in honor of the 450th anniversary of the founding of Oryol a Russian city of about 310 000 that was established as a fortress to defend Moscow s southern borders Informally there was a big political subtext The opposition thinks that Ivan the Terrible s rehabilitation echoes of Stalin s era The erection of the statue was vastly covered in international media like The Guardian 89 The Washington Post 90 Politico 91 and others The Russian Orthodox Church officially supported the erection of the monument See also Ivan the Terrible in Russian folklore and Category Cultural depictions of Ivan the Terrible Ivan was a popular character in Russian and Bulgarian folklore In classic Russian literature Ivan appears in such famous works as Prince Serebrenni The Song of the Merchant Kalashnikov The Tsar s Bride and others The image of Ivan is played out in numerous operas The Maid of Pskov The Tsar s Bride Ivan IV of Bizet etc and ballet Ivan the Terrible of Prokofiev The Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein made two films based on Ivan s life and reign Ivan the Terrible The first part is about Ivan s early years The second covers the period of his maturity A third was planned but never completed In Night at the Museum Battle of the Smithsonian Ivan the Terrible is the one the trio of henchmen that assist Kahmunrah to conquer the world alongside Napoleon and Al Capone Tsar is a 2009 Russian drama film directed by Pavel Lungin Ivan the Terrible is a major character in the Soviet era fiction comedy Ivan Vasilievich Back to the Future based on a play by Mikhail Bulgakov It was one of the most popular films in the Soviet Union in 1973 and sold more than 60 million tickets 92 Ivan appears as a major character in the novel The Ringed Castle 1971 the fifth of the six novels in Dorothy Dunnett s historical fiction series the Lymond Chronicles Ivan was portrayed on BBC Radio 4 by David Threlfall in the radio play Ivan the Terrible Absolute Power written by Mike Walker and which was the first play in the first series of Tsar 93 The play was broadcast on 11 September 2016 A monstrous Rider version of Ivan the Terrible was depicted as a major character in the mobile game Fate Grand Order on the second chapter Cosmos in the Lostbelt s first story arc Permafrost Empire Anastasia He appears as a slumbering titan and king of the human monster hybrid locals called Yaga forced into eternal sleep because of the sheer power of his ability to destroy his people and kept it under his rule for nearly 450 years He later appears as a summonable character with the body of the monstrous version from the Lost Belt Ivan was also portrayed in the comedic show Epic Rap Battles of History by series co creator Nice Peter battling against several historic figures See also EditIllustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible Tsars of Russia family tree Tsardom of Russia history of the Tsardom of Russia Crisis of the late 16th century in RussiaReferences EditNotes Edit a b c Gerasimov M M 1965 Dokumentalnyj portret Ivana Groznogo Kratkie soobsheniya instituta arheologii Akademii nauk SSSR in Russian 100 139 42 Archived from the original on 4 January 2010 Retrieved 21 November 2016 28 March This Date in History Webcitation org Retrieved 7 December 2011 from Russian Iva n Gro znyj help info romanized Ivan Grozny lit Ivan the Formidable or Ivan the Fearsome Latin Ioannes Severus monastic name Jonah Ivan Vasilevich Groznyj www hrono ru Retrieved 20 August 2021 Ivan Groznyj pervyj russkij modernist God Literatury in Russian Retrieved 20 August 2021 Ioannes Severus dictus 1530 1584 inde ab anno 1533 magnus princeps Moscoviensis 1 Shvidkovskiĭ Dmitriĭ Olegovich 2007 Russian Architecture and the West Yale University Press p 147 ISBN 0300109121 Yanov p 208 Del Testa David W 2001 Government Leaders Military Rulers and Political Activists Greenwood Publishing Group p 91 ISBN 1573561533 a b Manaev G 7 January 2019 The madness of 3 Russian tsars and the truth behind it Russia Beyond the Headlines Retrieved 29 January 2020 Dal Vladimir Explanatory Dictionary of the Live Great Russian language article GROZIT Available in many editions as well as online for example at slovardalja net Jacobsen C G 1993 Myths Politics and the Not so New World Order Journal of Peace Research 30 3 241 250 doi 10 1177 0022343393030003001 JSTOR 424804 S2CID 146782336 Noth Ernst Erich 1941 Books Abroad An International Literary Quarterly Books Abroad University of Oklahoma Press 15 343 ISSN 0006 7431 McConnell Frank D 1979 Storytelling and Mythmaking Images from Film and Literature Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 502572 5 p 78 But Ivan IV Ivan the Terrible or as the Russian has it Ivan groznyi Ivan the Magnificent or Ivan the Great is precisely a man who has become a legend Talbot Alice Mary 1991 Sophia Palaiologina In Kazhdan Alexander ed The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press p 1928 ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Madariaga Isabel De 2006 Ivan the Terrible Yale University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 300 11973 2 Maureen Perrie amp Andrei Pavlov Ivan the Terrible Routledge 2014 p 26 Francis Carr Ivan the Terrible David amp Charles Publishers 1981 p 61 Walter G Moss A History of Russia To 1917 Volume 1 Anthem Press 2003 p 130 Martin p 331 Pushkareva N 1997 Women in Russian History M E Sharpe pp 65 67 ISBN 0765632705 Kurbsky Andrey Ivan IV The Correspondence Between Prince A M Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV of Russia 1564 1579 Cambridge University Press 1955 275 pp ASIN B000X81MHO p 75 The Kurbskii Groznyi Apocrypha Edward L Keenan Harvard University Press Martin p 377 Bogatyrev p 245 a b c Bogatyrev p 263 Paul Michael C 2004 The Military Revolution in Russia 1550 1682 The Journal of Military History 68 1 9 45 esp pp 20 22 doi 10 1353 jmh 2003 0401 S2CID 159954818 Riasanovsky Nicholas V 2000 The Second Part of Ivan the Terrible s Rule A History of Russia Oxford University Press ISBN 0195121791 Postnik Great Soviet Encyclopedia Barma i Postnik Postnik Yakovlev ecology mef narod ru Postnik Barma stroitel sobora Vasiliya Blazhennogo v Moskve i Kazanskogo kremlya russiancity ru One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Bain Robert 1911 Boris Fedorovich Godunov In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 254 This cites Platon Vasilievich Pavlov On the Historical Significance of the Reign of Boris Godunov Rus Moscow 1850 Sergyei Mikhailivich Solovev History of Russia Rus 2nd ed vols vii viii St Petersburg 1897 Madariaga pp 176 178 a b c Pavlov Andrei and Perrie Maureen 2003 Ivan the Terrible Profiles in Power Harlow UK Longman pp 112 113 ISBN 058209948X Madariaga pp 179 80 Madariaga pp 182 183 Madariaga p 183 As the tonsure was the distinctive hairstyle of monastic orders a forcibly tonsured boyar was effectively exiled from power by being made to enter a monastic life Martin p 410 a b Kropotkin Peter Bealby John Thomas 1911 Novgorod In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 19 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 839 840 Ivan the Terrible Russia r 1533 84 Users erols com Retrieved 7 December 2011 According to the Third Novgorod Chronicle the massacre lasted for five weeks Almost every day 500 or 600 people were killed or drowned a b Hays Jeffrey Ivan the Terrible Facts and Details Having investigated the report of Maljuta Skuratov and commemoration lists sinodiki R Skrynnikov considers that the number of victims was 2 000 3 000 Skrynnikov R G Ivan Grosny M AST 2001 Martin p 407 Dmytryshyn Basil 2000 Medieval Russia A Source Book 850 1700 Gulf Breeze FL Academic International Press p 301 ISBN 0 875 69 218 4 OCLC 21443219 Crankshaw Edward Russia and Britain Collins The Nations and Britain series Russians in London Government in exile The Economist 12 February 2016 Retrieved 12 February 2016 HOZhDENIE NA VOSTOK GOSTYa VASILIYa POZNYaKOVA S TOVARIShI The travels to the Orient by the merchant Vasily Poznyakov and his companions in Russian Alexander Filjushkin 2008 Chapter 1 Russian Military Forces in the Sixteenth Century Infrastructure of the Russian Army Ivan the Terrible A Military History Frontline Books ISBN 978 1473815599 Russian chronicles record about 40 attacks of Kazan Khans on Russian territories the regions of Nizhniy Novgorod Murom Vyatka Vladimir Kostroma and Galich in the first half of the 16th century In 1521 the combined forces of Khan Mehmed Giray and his Crimean allies attacked Russia captured more than 150 000 slaves The Full Collection of the Russian Annals vol 13 SPb 1904 Janet Martin Medieval Russia 980 1584 Cambridge University Press 2007 p 396 Chaudet Didier 2009 When the Bear Confronts the Crescent Russia and the Jihadist Issue China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly Central Asia Caucasus Institute amp Silk Road Studies Program 7 2 37 58 ISSN 1653 4212 It would be convenient to characterize the relationship between Russia and Islam by its history of conquest and tension After all the emblem of the Orthodox Church is a cross on top on a crescent It is said that this symbol was devised by Ivan the Terrible after the conquest of the city of Kazan as a symbol of the victory of Christianity over Islam through his soldiers Russian Orthodox Church Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies 17 4 1993 Retrieved 20 May 2015 Finally the Russians under Ivan the Terrible defeated the Tatars in 1552 and firmly established Russian rule In celebration of this conquest the czar built two churches in the Moscow Kremlin and on the spires of the Church installed the Orthodox Cross over an upside down crescent the symbol of Islam Church Building and Its Services Orthodox World Retrieved 28 March 2014 Sometimes the bottoms of the Crosses found on Russian churches will be adorned with a crescent In 1486 Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible conquered the city of Kazan which had been under the rule of Moslem Tatars and in remembrance of this he decreed that from henceforth the Islamic crescent be placed at the bottom of the Crosses to signify the victory of the Cross Christianity over the Crescent Islam Kizilov Mikhail 2007 Slave Trade in the Early Modern Crimea From the Perspective of Christian Muslim and Jewish Sources Journal of Early Modern History 11 1 2 1 doi 10 1163 157006507780385125 120 000 strong according to Russian cronicles Novgorodskaya vtoraya letopis God 7080 1572 PSRL t III SPb 1841 Skrynnikov 2015 p 427 Skrynnikov 2015 pp 417 21 Skrynnikov 2015 pp 439 41 DARIYa www pravenc ru Retrieved 20 August 2021 Blagovernyj Dimi trij Uglichskij i Moskovskij carevich azbyka ru in Russian Retrieved 20 August 2021 a b c d Zimin A A Khoroshkevich A L 1982 Otechestvennye istoriki o gosudare Ivane IV Groznom Rossiya vremen Ivana Groznogo in Russian Moscow pp 147 51 Archived from the original on 20 March 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Ivan IV Groznyj Rodion Konstantinovich Shedrin Stihiry Pervyj otechestvennyj kompakt disk intoclassics net 9 August 2009 Kuzin Viktor Pervyj russkij kompakt disk rarity ru Mirsky D S Whitfield Francis James 1958 A History of Russian Literature From Its Beginnings to 1900 ISBN 978 0810116795 Keenan Edward L 1971 The Kurbskii Groznyi Apocrypha the 17th Century Genesis of the Correspondence Attributed to Prince A M Kurbskii and Tsar Ivan IV Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Martin pp 328 29 Ivan IV Tsar of Russia Encyclopedia Britannica a b Perrie Maureen Pavlov Andrei 2014 Ivan the Terrible Routledge ISBN 978 1317894674 Skrynnikov 2015 pp 423 492 93 Skrynnikov 2015 pp 350 361 64 Halperin Charles J 2019 Ivan the Terrible Free to Reward and Free to Punish University of Pittsburgh Press p 58 ISBN 978 0 8229 8722 2 a b Waliszewski Kazimierz Mary Loyd 1904 Ivan the Terrible Philadelphia J B Lippincott pp 377 78 Fyodor I tsar of Russia Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 19 November 2019 Yanov p 31 Yanov p 69 Yanov p 68 Riasanovsky Nicholas V and Mark D Steinberg 2011 Russia at the Time of Ivan IV 1533 1598 in A History of Russia 8th ed Vol 1 New York Oxford University Press p 151 ISBN 978 0195341973 Shrynnikov Ruslan G 1975 Conclusion p 199 in Ivan the Formidable translated by Hugh F Graham Moscow Academic International Martin p 404 Martin p 415 Maureen Perrie 2001 The Cult of Ivan the Formidable in Stalin s Russia New York Palgrava pp 6 12 17 McSmith Andy 2015 Fear and the Muse Kept Watch The Russian Masters from Akhmatova and Pasternak to Shostakovich and Eisenstein Under Stalin New York New Press p 233 ISBN 978 1 59558 056 6 Perrie Maureen 1987 The Image of Ivan the Formidable in Russian Folklore Cambridge UK Pitt Building Russians Laud Ivan the Not So Formidable Loose Coalition Presses Orthodox Church to Canonize the Notorious Czar The Washington Post 10 November 2003 Church says nyet to St Rasputin UPI NewsTrack 4 October 2004 McSmith Fear and the Muse p 236 McSmith Fear and the Muse p 240 Russia s first monument to Ivan the Terrible inaugurated The Guardian 14 October 2016 Russia just gave Ivan the Terrible his first statue ever The Washington Post 14 October 2016 Russia falls back in love with Ivan the Terrible Politico 14 October 2016 Leaders of distribution Archived 10 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine kinokultura com in Russian Drama Tsar Ivan the Terrible Absolute Power BBC Radio 4 17 September 2016 Retrieved on 2016 11 21 Bibliography Edit Bogatyrev Sergei 2006 10 Ivan IV 1533 1584 In Maureen Perrie ed The Cambridge History of Russia Vol 1 From Early Rus to 1689 Cambridge Histories Online pp 240 63 doi 10 1017 CHOL9780521812276 011 ISBN 978 0 521 81227 6 Archived from the original on 17 September 2012 Retrieved 7 December 2011 Madariaga Isabel de 2005 Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia New Haven London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09757 3 Martin Janet 2007 Ivan IV the Terrible Medieval Russia 980 1584 2nd ed New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85916 5 Yanov Alexander 1981 The Origins of Autocracy Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 04282 7 Skrynnikov Ruslan G 2015 Reign of Terror Ivan IV Brill pp 439 41 ISBN 978 90 04 30401 7 General references Edit Bobrick Benson Ivan the Terrible Edinburgh Canongate Books 1990 hardcover ISBN 0 86241 288 9 Also published as Fearful Majesty Hosking Geoffrey Russia and the Russians A History Cambridge Harvard University Press 2004 paperback ISBN 0 674 01114 7 Payne Robert Romanoff Nikita Ivan the Terrible Lanham Maryland Cooper Square Press 2002 paperback ISBN 0 8154 1229 0 Troyat Henri Ivan the Terrible New York Buccaneer Books 1988 hardcover ISBN 0 88029 207 5 London Phoenix Press 2001 paperback ISBN 1 84212 419 6 Ivan IV World Book Inc 2000 World Book Encyclopedia Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of Russian history 1223 1613 Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 Ivan In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 15 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 87 91 see page 89 Cherniavsky Michael Ivan the Terrible as Renaissance Prince Slavic Review Vol 27 No 2 Jun 1968 pp 195 211 Hunt Priscilla Ivan IV s Personal Mythology of Kingship Slavic Review Vol 52 No 4 Winter 1993 pp 769 809 Menken Jules Ivan the Terrible History Today Mar 1953 3 3 Vol 3 Issue 3 pp 167 73 Perrie Maureen The Image of Ivan the Terrible in Russian Folklore Cambridge University Press 1987 ISBN 0 521 33075 0 0 521 89100 0 Perrie Maureen The Cult of Ivan the Terrible in Stalin s Russia New York Palgrave 2001 ISBN 0 333 65684 9 Platt Kevin M F Brandenberger David Terribly Romantic Terribly Progressive or Terribly Tragic Rehabilitating Ivan IV under I V Stalin Russian Review Vol 58 No 4 Oct 1999 pp 635 54 Isolde Thyret The Royal Women of Ivan IV s Family and the Meaning of Forced Tonsure in Anne Walthall ed Servants of the Dynasty Palace Women in World History Berkeley Univ California Press 2008 159 71 External links EditIvan the Terrible at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ivan IV of Russia The throne of Ivan the Terrible The holy gospel of Ivan the Terrible Ivan the Terrible with videos images and translations from the Russian Archives and State Museums Ivan the Czar versions of a poem by Felicia Hemans Ivan the TerribleHouse of RurikBorn 3 September 1530 Died 28 March 1584Regnal titlesPreceded byVasili III Grand Prince of Moscow3 December 1533 16 January 1547 Tsardom createdTsardom created Tsar of Russia16 January 1547 28 March 1584 Succeeded byFeodor I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ivan the Terrible amp oldid 1146337240, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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