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Marina Mniszech

Marina Mniszech or Marina Mnishek (Polish: Maryna Mniszech, IPA: [maˈrɨna ˈmɲiʂɛk]; Russian: Марина Мнишек, IPA: [mɐˈrʲinə ˈmnʲiʂɨk]; c. 1588 – 24 December 1614) was a Polish noblewoman who was the tsaritsa of all Russia in May 1606 as the wife of False Dmitry I during the Time of Troubles. Following his death, she later married another imposter to the throne, False Dmitry II. A devout Catholic, she hoped to convert Russia's population to Catholicism.

Marina Mniszech
Portrait, early 17th century
Tsaritsa consort of all Russia
Tenure18 May [O.S. 8 May] 1606 – 27 May [O.S. 17 May] 1606
Coronation18 May [O.S. 8 May] 1606
PredecessorMaria Skuratova-Belskaya
SuccessorMaria Buynosova-Rostovskaya
Born1588
Laszki Murowane, Crown of the Kingdom of Poland[1]
Died24 December 1614(1614-12-24) (aged 25–26)
Kolomna Kremlin, Tsardom of Russia
Spouses
IssueIvan Dmitriyevich
Names
Maryna Mniszech
HouseMniszech
FatherJerzy Mniszech
MotherJadwiga Tarło-Mniszech
ReligionRoman Catholicism

Life edit

 
Official portrait of False Dmitry I

Marina Mniszech was a daughter of Jadwiga Tarło and Polish Voivode-Governor of Sandomierz Jerzy Mniszech, who was one of the organizers of the Dimitriads, which were instigated by the appearance of a man who claimed to be Ivan the Terrible's son. Marina Mniszech's marriage to False Dmitriy I provided an opportunity for the Polish magnates to control their protégé. Mniszech met False Dmitry I around 1604 or 1605, at the court of one of the Commonwealth magnates, and agreed to marry him. In return for her hand Dmitri promised her Pskov and Novgorod, and her father Smolensk and Severia. After the death of Boris Godunov, Dmitri captured Moscow in June 1605. In November he sent a diplomatic mission to Poland, asking for Marina's hand and proposing a military alliance to defeat the Ottoman Empire.

Tsaritsa edit

 
Coronation of Maryna Mniszech in Moscow by Tommaso Dolabella.

The first wedding ceremony, performed in November 1605 by the Bishop of Kraków, Cardinal Bernard Maciejowski was held per procura in Kraków, at the Montelupi complex (Pod Jaszczurami and Firlejowska) and was attended by the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa himself, as well as hundreds of high-ranking szlachta members and foreign guests. Dmitri was represented by Muscovite envoy Afanasy Vlasiev. Afterwards, Marina went with her father and a retinue of approximately 4,000 to Moscow. At the beginning of May 1606, Marina entered Moscow in a triumphant parade, and on 8 May was crowned in Ascension Cathedral when Patriarch Ignatius confirmed their marriage and put the Rurikids crown on her head. It is unknown whether Marina converted from Catholicism to Orthodoxy. She wore a Polish wedding dress, and Dmitri wore the armor of a Polish hussar.

However, Marina did not reign long. On the morning of 17 May 1606, about two weeks after the coronation, conspirators opposed to Dmitri and his policy of close cooperation with Poland stormed the Kremlin. Dmitri tried to flee through a window but broke his leg in the fall. One of the plotters shot him dead on the spot. At first the body was put on display, then cremated and the ashes were shot from a cannon towards Poland. Dmitri's reign had lasted a mere ten months. Vasili Shuisky, whom Dmitri earlier pardoned for conspiring against him, took his place as Tsar. This coup d'état caused thousands of deaths, including many from the Polish entourage. Marina and her father Jerzy Mniszech were imprisoned. However, the story of the False Dmitri was just beginning.

Later life edit

After the death of False Dmitry I, Marina Mniszech was spared her life – after she had rejected her royal title – and sent back to Poland in July 1608.[2] However, her father Jerzy Mniszech didn't give up on his plan to become father-in-law of the Tsar. Exiled to Yaroslavl, he searched for a way to regain his favours. With his help, Marina turned up in Tushino, where she would secretly marry another impostor False Dmitry II, after supposedly recognizing him as her husband. Polish hetman Stanisław Żółkiewski wrote in his memoirs that the only two things False Dmitris I and II had in common was that "they were both human and usurpers". False Dmitry II was killed in December 1610.

Marina Mniszech then found herself a protector in the person of ataman Ivan Zarutsky, who would try to support the nomination of her son Ivan (born in January 1611) for the Russian throne. His henchmen called Marina Mniszech's son "Ivan Dmitriyevich" (literally Ivan, son of Dmitri), however, Patriarch Hermogenes would later dub[citation needed] him an "offspring of the rebel/criminal" (voryonok; at the time, the word "vor" which now means thief, meant "political criminal"). In the summer of 1613, after having lost their supporters, Mniszech and Zarutsky fled to Astrakhan but with the election of Michael Romanov as tsar, the citizens of Astrakhan wanted the pretender and his family gone from their city. In 1614, an uprising of townspeople was aimed solely at capturing the family and they fled into the steppes. Near the Yaik River in May 1614, after failing to gather support for a Cossack uprising, they were captured by the Cossacks and handed over to the new Tsar the following month.

Ivan Zarutsky and Mniszech's little son were executed in 1614. Marina Mniszech died in prison in Kolomna Kremlin fortress, soon afterwards.[3] According to some sources she was found strangled.

In popular culture edit

 
Marina Mniszech in coronation robes, 1606.

Marina Mniszech appears as a character in Alexander Pushkin's blank verse drama Boris Godunov and Modest Mussorgsky's opera of the same name. Although both depict Marina's impending marriage to False Dmitriy I, the depictions of the future Tsaritsa are quite different. Pushkin wrote, "A tragedy without love attracted my imagination. But apart from love entering a great deal into the character of my adventurer, I made Dmitri fall in love with Marina to make the strange character of the latter stand out better. It is barely outlined in Karamzin. But certainly, she was an odd and pretty woman. She had only one passion and that was ambition, but with such a degree of energy, or fury, that it is difficult to imagine it. Look how having sampled royalty, drunk on a dream, she prostitutes herself to one adventurer after another -- shares now the disgusting bed of a Jew, now the tent of a Cossack, always ready to give herself to whoever can show her a faint hope of a throne which no longer exists. Look at her brave war, poverty, shame, at the same time negotiating with the King of Poland like one crowned head to another, and then end her most stormy and most extraordinary existence so miserably. I have only one scene for her, but I will return to her if God lets me live long enough. She upsets me like a violent emotion. She is horribly Polish, as Mme. Lubomirska's cousin said."[4]

 
Marinkina Tower in the Kolomna Kremlin where Mniszech died

In Mussorgsky's opera, however, Marina Mniszech's ambitious manipulation of her future husband is shown to be instigated by a Jesuit priest Ercole Rangoni, who eventually threatens her with hellfire unless she seduces the Pretender. Then Rangoni informs False Dmitry about Marina coming to the garden and secretly being in love with him [with False Dmitry]. The Pretender confesses his feelings but the proud Marina rejects the love of a 'daring vagabond', and promises to share his feelings only after he becomes a Tsar to make her a Tsaritsa of all Russias.[5][6]

In folklore edit

When Marina's three-year-old son, Tsarevich Ivan Dmitriyevich, was publicly hanged, Marina – according to the Russian ambassador to the Polish royal court – “died of longing for her own fate”. According to other sources, she either was hanged or was drowned.

A popular legend in Russian folklore has it that Mnishek, a powerful witch known as Marinka the Witch,[7] put a curse on the Romanov dynasty because of the execution of her son by the new Tsar Mikhail and his father, Patriarch Filaret of Moscow. The boy's body had been left hanging near the Serpukhov Gate for months. Marina said: "Damn you! In the Ipatiev's [Monastery] you started, in the Ipatiev's [House] you will end! You began with the death of a tsarevich, you will end with the death of a tsarevich!" Thus, according to the legend, the barbaric[8] murder of Tsar Nicholas II and his family, including his twelve-year-old son the tsarevich, was Marinka the Witch's revenge for the barbaric public execution of her tsarevich-son.[9][10]

See also edit


References edit

  1. ^ "Laszki Murowane". Dawne Kresy (Former Kresy) (in Polish). Retrieved 2010-02-09.
  2. ^ Renegades, rebels and rogues under the Tsars. 2004-04-01.
  3. ^ Heretz, Leonid (2008), "The sectarians: dualism and secret history", Russia on the Eve of Modernity, Cambridge University Press, pp. 76–101, doi:10.1017/cbo9780511497179.004, ISBN 978-0-511-49717-9
  4. ^ The Critical Prose of Alexander Pushkin, edited and translated by Carl R. Proffer. University of Indiana Press, 1969. Pages 96-97.
  5. ^ Smirnova, Esther (2001). "Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky : Boris Godunov". Русская музыкальная литература: Для VI—VII кл. ДМШ: Учебник [Russian Music Literature: For VI-VII grades. Children's Music School [ru]: Textbook] (PDF) (in Russian). Moscow: Muzyka (publisher) [ru]. p. 68. ISBN 5-7140-0142-7.
  6. ^ "Борис Годунов - второй обзор - заговор, шизофрения и голод - 3 действие 1 картин" [Boris Godunov - Second Review - Conspiracy, Schizophrenia and Hunger - Part 3 Act 1]. YouTube (in Russian). ANGE (humorous and educational programme). 8 August 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  7. ^ Ivanits, Linda J. (1992). Russian folk belief (in Polish). M.E. Sharpe. p. 88. ISBN 0-87332-889-2.
  8. ^ "Putin's Russia and the ghost of the Romanovs". The Economist official YouTube channel. July 17, 2018. Retrieved November 24, 2018.
  9. ^ [' Gorelova L.E. Monuments of Russian medical writing]. Archived from the original on January 2, 2017.
  10. ^ "Проклятие Марины Мнишек: сказ о лжецарице, русском пире и русском бунте" [The Curse by Marina Mnishek: A Tale of the False Queen, Russian Feast and Russian Rebellion] (in Russian). June 29, 2018. Retrieved November 24, 2019.

External links edit

  • (in Polish)
Marina Mniszech
Born: 1588 Died: 1614
Russian royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Maria Grigorievna Skuratova-Belskaya
Tsaritsa of Russia
1605–1606
Vacant
Title next held by
Maria Buynosova-Rostovskaya

marina, mniszech, marina, mnishek, polish, maryna, mniszech, maˈrɨna, ˈmɲiʂɛk, russian, Марина, Мнишек, mɐˈrʲinə, ˈmnʲiʂɨk, 1588, december, 1614, polish, noblewoman, tsaritsa, russia, 1606, wife, false, dmitry, during, time, troubles, following, death, later, . Marina Mniszech or Marina Mnishek Polish Maryna Mniszech IPA maˈrɨna ˈmɲiʂɛk Russian Marina Mnishek IPA mɐˈrʲine ˈmnʲiʂɨk c 1588 24 December 1614 was a Polish noblewoman who was the tsaritsa of all Russia in May 1606 as the wife of False Dmitry I during the Time of Troubles Following his death she later married another imposter to the throne False Dmitry II A devout Catholic she hoped to convert Russia s population to Catholicism Marina MniszechPortrait early 17th centuryTsaritsa consort of all RussiaTenure18 May O S 8 May 1606 27 May O S 17 May 1606Coronation18 May O S 8 May 1606PredecessorMaria Skuratova BelskayaSuccessorMaria Buynosova RostovskayaBorn1588Laszki Murowane Crown of the Kingdom of Poland 1 Died24 December 1614 1614 12 24 aged 25 26 Kolomna Kremlin Tsardom of RussiaSpousesFalse Dmitriy I False Dmitriy II Ivan ZarutskyIssueIvan DmitriyevichNamesMaryna MniszechHouseMniszechFatherJerzy MniszechMotherJadwiga Tarlo MniszechReligionRoman Catholicism Contents 1 Life 1 1 Tsaritsa 1 2 Later life 2 In popular culture 3 In folklore 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksLife edit nbsp Official portrait of False Dmitry IMarina Mniszech was a daughter of Jadwiga Tarlo and Polish Voivode Governor of Sandomierz Jerzy Mniszech who was one of the organizers of the Dimitriads which were instigated by the appearance of a man who claimed to be Ivan the Terrible s son Marina Mniszech s marriage to False Dmitriy I provided an opportunity for the Polish magnates to control their protege Mniszech met False Dmitry I around 1604 or 1605 at the court of one of the Commonwealth magnates and agreed to marry him In return for her hand Dmitri promised her Pskov and Novgorod and her father Smolensk and Severia After the death of Boris Godunov Dmitri captured Moscow in June 1605 In November he sent a diplomatic mission to Poland asking for Marina s hand and proposing a military alliance to defeat the Ottoman Empire Tsaritsa edit nbsp Coronation of Maryna Mniszech in Moscow by Tommaso Dolabella The first wedding ceremony performed in November 1605 by the Bishop of Krakow Cardinal Bernard Maciejowski was held per procura in Krakow at the Montelupi complex Pod Jaszczurami and Firlejowska and was attended by the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa himself as well as hundreds of high ranking szlachta members and foreign guests Dmitri was represented by Muscovite envoy Afanasy Vlasiev Afterwards Marina went with her father and a retinue of approximately 4 000 to Moscow At the beginning of May 1606 Marina entered Moscow in a triumphant parade and on 8 May was crowned in Ascension Cathedral when Patriarch Ignatius confirmed their marriage and put the Rurikids crown on her head It is unknown whether Marina converted from Catholicism to Orthodoxy She wore a Polish wedding dress and Dmitri wore the armor of a Polish hussar However Marina did not reign long On the morning of 17 May 1606 about two weeks after the coronation conspirators opposed to Dmitri and his policy of close cooperation with Poland stormed the Kremlin Dmitri tried to flee through a window but broke his leg in the fall One of the plotters shot him dead on the spot At first the body was put on display then cremated and the ashes were shot from a cannon towards Poland Dmitri s reign had lasted a mere ten months Vasili Shuisky whom Dmitri earlier pardoned for conspiring against him took his place as Tsar This coup d etat caused thousands of deaths including many from the Polish entourage Marina and her father Jerzy Mniszech were imprisoned However the story of the False Dmitri was just beginning Later life edit After the death of False Dmitry I Marina Mniszech was spared her life after she had rejected her royal title and sent back to Poland in July 1608 2 However her father Jerzy Mniszech didn t give up on his plan to become father in law of the Tsar Exiled to Yaroslavl he searched for a way to regain his favours With his help Marina turned up in Tushino where she would secretly marry another impostor False Dmitry II after supposedly recognizing him as her husband Polish hetman Stanislaw Zolkiewski wrote in his memoirs that the only two things False Dmitris I and II had in common was that they were both human and usurpers False Dmitry II was killed in December 1610 Marina Mniszech then found herself a protector in the person of ataman Ivan Zarutsky who would try to support the nomination of her son Ivan born in January 1611 for the Russian throne His henchmen called Marina Mniszech s son Ivan Dmitriyevich literally Ivan son of Dmitri however Patriarch Hermogenes would later dub citation needed him an offspring of the rebel criminal voryonok at the time the word vor which now means thief meant political criminal In the summer of 1613 after having lost their supporters Mniszech and Zarutsky fled to Astrakhan but with the election of Michael Romanov as tsar the citizens of Astrakhan wanted the pretender and his family gone from their city In 1614 an uprising of townspeople was aimed solely at capturing the family and they fled into the steppes Near the Yaik River in May 1614 after failing to gather support for a Cossack uprising they were captured by the Cossacks and handed over to the new Tsar the following month Ivan Zarutsky and Mniszech s little son were executed in 1614 Marina Mniszech died in prison in Kolomna Kremlin fortress soon afterwards 3 According to some sources she was found strangled In popular culture edit nbsp Marina Mniszech in coronation robes 1606 Marina Mniszech appears as a character in Alexander Pushkin s blank verse drama Boris Godunov and Modest Mussorgsky s opera of the same name Although both depict Marina s impending marriage to False Dmitriy I the depictions of the future Tsaritsa are quite different Pushkin wrote A tragedy without love attracted my imagination But apart from love entering a great deal into the character of my adventurer I made Dmitri fall in love with Marina to make the strange character of the latter stand out better It is barely outlined in Karamzin But certainly she was an odd and pretty woman She had only one passion and that was ambition but with such a degree of energy or fury that it is difficult to imagine it Look how having sampled royalty drunk on a dream she prostitutes herself to one adventurer after another shares now the disgusting bed of a Jew now the tent of a Cossack always ready to give herself to whoever can show her a faint hope of a throne which no longer exists Look at her brave war poverty shame at the same time negotiating with the King of Poland like one crowned head to another and then end her most stormy and most extraordinary existence so miserably I have only one scene for her but I will return to her if God lets me live long enough She upsets me like a violent emotion She is horribly Polish as Mme Lubomirska s cousin said 4 nbsp Marinkina Tower in the Kolomna Kremlin where Mniszech diedIn Mussorgsky s opera however Marina Mniszech s ambitious manipulation of her future husband is shown to be instigated by a Jesuit priest Ercole Rangoni who eventually threatens her with hellfire unless she seduces the Pretender Then Rangoni informs False Dmitry about Marina coming to the garden and secretly being in love with him with False Dmitry The Pretender confesses his feelings but the proud Marina rejects the love of a daring vagabond and promises to share his feelings only after he becomes a Tsar to make her a Tsaritsa of all Russias 5 6 In folklore editWhen Marina s three year old son Tsarevich Ivan Dmitriyevich was publicly hanged Marina according to the Russian ambassador to the Polish royal court died of longing for her own fate According to other sources she either was hanged or was drowned A popular legend in Russian folklore has it that Mnishek a powerful witch known as Marinka the Witch 7 put a curse on the Romanov dynasty because of the execution of her son by the new Tsar Mikhail and his father Patriarch Filaret of Moscow The boy s body had been left hanging near the Serpukhov Gate for months Marina said Damn you In the Ipatiev s Monastery you started in the Ipatiev s House you will end You began with the death of a tsarevich you will end with the death of a tsarevich Thus according to the legend the barbaric 8 murder of Tsar Nicholas II and his family including his twelve year old son the tsarevich was Marinka the Witch s revenge for the barbaric public execution of her tsarevich son 9 10 See also editUrszula Mayerin Elzbieta Sieniawska Izabela CzartoryskaReferences edit Laszki Murowane Dawne Kresy Former Kresy in Polish Retrieved 2010 02 09 Renegades rebels and rogues under the Tsars 2004 04 01 Heretz Leonid 2008 The sectarians dualism and secret history Russia on the Eve of Modernity Cambridge University Press pp 76 101 doi 10 1017 cbo9780511497179 004 ISBN 978 0 511 49717 9 The Critical Prose of Alexander Pushkin edited and translated by Carl R Proffer University of Indiana Press 1969 Pages 96 97 Smirnova Esther 2001 Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky Boris Godunov Russkaya muzykalnaya literatura Dlya VI VII kl DMSh Uchebnik Russian Music Literature For VI VII grades Children s Music School ru Textbook PDF in Russian Moscow Muzyka publisher ru p 68 ISBN 5 7140 0142 7 Boris Godunov vtoroj obzor zagovor shizofreniya i golod 3 dejstvie 1 kartin Boris Godunov Second Review Conspiracy Schizophrenia and Hunger Part 3 Act 1 YouTube in Russian ANGE humorous and educational programme 8 August 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Ivanits Linda J 1992 Russian folk belief in Polish M E Sharpe p 88 ISBN 0 87332 889 2 Putin s Russia and the ghost of the Romanovs The Economist official YouTube channel July 17 2018 Retrieved November 24 2018 Gorelova L E Pamyatniki russkoj medicinskoj pismennosti Russkij medicinskij zhurnal 14 02 2000 T 8 5 Gorelova L E Monuments of Russian medical writing Archived from the original on January 2 2017 Proklyatie Mariny Mnishek skaz o lzhecarice russkom pire i russkom bunte The Curse by Marina Mnishek A Tale of the False Queen Russian Feast and Russian Rebellion in Russian June 29 2018 Retrieved November 24 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marina Mniszech Maryna Mniszchowna caryca Rosji in Polish Marina MniszechBorn 1588 Died 1614Russian royaltyVacantTitle last held byMaria Grigorievna Skuratova Belskaya Tsaritsa of Russia1605 1606 VacantTitle next held byMaria Buynosova Rostovskaya Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marina Mniszech amp oldid 1180328291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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