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Oprichnina

The oprichnina (Russian: опри́чнина, IPA: [ɐˈprʲitɕnʲɪnə]) was a state policy implemented by Tsar Ivan the Terrible in Russia between 1565 and 1572. The policy included mass repression of the boyars (Russian aristocrats), including public executions and confiscation of their land and property. In this context the term can also refer to:[1][2]

Oprichnik Forces
Russian: Опричные войска, romanizedOprichnie voyska
Active1565—1572;
de jure to 1584
CountryTsardom of Russia
AllegianceTsar
Size6,000
Nickname(s)Oprichnina
The Oprichniks by Nikolai Nevrev shows mock coronation of Ivan Fyodorov-Chelyadnin [ru] (enthroned) accused of conspiracy, before his execution by oprichniks.

The term oprichnina, which Ivan coined for this policy, derives from the Russian word oprich (Russian: опричь, apart from, except).

Causes edit

In 1558, Tsar Ivan IV started the Livonian War. A broad coalition, which included Poland, Lithuania and Sweden, became drawn into the war against Russia. The war became drawn-out (it continued until 1583) and expensive; raids by Crimean Tatars, Polish and Lithuanian invasions, famines, a trading blockade and escalating costs of war ravaged Russia.

In 1564, Prince Andrey Kurbsky defected to the Lithuanians and commanded the Lithuanian army against Russia, devastating the Russian region of Velikiye Luki.

Tsar Ivan began to suspect other aristocrats of readiness to betray him.[5]

Historians Vasily Klyuchevsky (1841–1911) and Stepan Veselovsky [ru] (1876–1952) explained the oprichnina in terms of Ivan's paranoia and denied larger social aims for the oprichnina.[6] However, historian Sergey Platonov (1860–1933) argued that Ivan IV intended the oprichnina as a suppression of the rising boyar aristocracy.[7] Professor Isabel de Madariaga (1919–2014) expanded this idea to explain the oprichnina as Ivan's attempt to subordinate all independent social classes to the autocracy.[8]

Establishment edit

On December 3, 1564, Ivan IV departed Moscow on pilgrimage. While such journeys were routine for the throne, Ivan neglected to set in place the usual arrangements for rule in his absence. Moreover, an unusually large personal guard, a significant number of boyars, and the treasury accompanied him.[9]

After a month of silence, Ivan finally issued two letters from his fortifications at Aleksandrova Sloboda on January 3, 1565. The first addressed the elite of Moscow and accused them of embezzlement and treason. Further accusations concerned the clergy and their protection of denounced boyars. In conclusion, Ivan announced his abdication. The second letter addressed the population of Moscow and claimed "he had no anger against" its citizenry. Divided between Aleksandrova Sloboda and Moscow, the boyar court was unable to rule in absence of Ivan and feared the wrath of the Muscovite citizenry. Envoys departed for Aleksandrova Sloboda[10] to beg Ivan to return to the throne.[11]

Ivan IV agreed to return on condition that he might prosecute people for treason outside legal limitations. He demanded the right to execute and confiscate the land of traitors without interference from the boyar council or from the church. To pursue his investigations, Ivan decreed the establishment of the oprichnina (originally a term for land left to a noble widow, separate from her children's land). He also raised a levy of 100,000 rubles to pay for the oprichnina.[12]

Organization edit

The oprichnina consisted of a separate territory within the borders of Russia, mostly in the territory of the former Novgorod Republic in the north. This region included many of the financial centers of the state, including the salt region of Staraia Russa and prominent merchant towns. Ivan held exclusive power over the oprichnina territory. The Boyar Council ruled the zemshchina ('land'), the second division of the state. Until 1568, the oprichnina relied upon many administrative institutions under zemshchina jurisdiction. Only when conflict between the zemshchina and oprichnina reached its peak did Ivan create independent institutions within the oprichnina.[13]

Ivan also stipulated the creation of a personal guard known as the oprichniki. Originally it was a thousand strong. The noble oprichniki Aleksei Basmanov and Afanasy Viazemsky oversaw recruitment. Nobles and townsmen free of relations to the zemshchina or its administration were eligible for Ivan’s new guard.[14] Henri Troyat has emphasized the lowly origin of the oprichnina recruits.[15] However, historian Vladimir Kobrin has contested that a shift to the lower classes constituted a late development in the oprichnina era. Many early oprichniki had close ties to the princely and boyar clans of Russia.[16]

Territorial divisions under the oprichnina led to mass resettlement. When the property of zemshchina nobles fell within oprichnina territory, oprichniki seized their lands and forced the owners onto zemshchina land. The oprichnina territory included primarily service estates. Alexander Zimin and Stepan Veselovsky have argued that this division left heredity landownership largely unaffected. However, Platonov and other scholars have posited that resettlement aimed to undermine the power of the landed nobility. Pavlov has cited the relocation of zemshchina servicemen from oprichnina territories onto heredity estates as a critical blow to the power of the princely class. The division of hereditary estates diminished the influence of the princely elites in their native provinces.[17] The worst affected was the province of Suzdal which lost 80% of its gentry.[18]

The oprichniki enjoyed social and economic privileges under the oprichnina. While zemshchina boyars lost both heredity and service land, the oprichniki retained hereditary holdings that fell in zemshchina land. Moreover, Ivan granted the oprichnina the spoils of a heavy tax levied upon the zemshchina nobles. The rising oprichniki owed their allegiance to Ivan, not heredity or local bonds.[19]

Operations edit

 
The Oprichniki and the Boyars,
by Vasily Khudyakov

The first wave of persecutions targeted primarily the princely clans of Russia, notably the influential families of Suzdal. Ivan executed, exiled, or tortured prominent members of the boyar clans on questionable accusations of conspiracy. 1566 saw the oprichnina extended to eight central districts. Of the 12,000 nobles there, 570 became oprichniks, and the rest were expelled. They had to make their way to the zemshchina in mid-winter; peasants who helped them were executed.[20] In a show of clemency, Ivan recalled a number of nobles to Moscow. The Tsar even called upon zemshchina nobles for a zemskii sobor concerning the Livonian War. Ivan posed the question whether Russia should surrender the Livonian territories to recently victorious Lithuania or maintain the effort to conquer the region. The body approved war measures and advanced emergency taxes to support the draining treasury.

However, the zemskii sobor also forwarded a petition to end the oprichnina. The Tsar reacted with a renewal of the oprichnina terror. He ordered the immediate arrest of the petitioners and executed the alleged leaders of the protest. Further investigations tied Ivan Federov, leader of the zemshchina duma, to a plot to overthrow Tsar Ivan; Federov was removed from court and executed shortly thereafter.[21]

The overthrow of King Erik XIV of Sweden in 1568 and the death of Ivan's second wife in 1569 exacerbated Ivan's suspicions. His attention turned to the northwestern city of Novgorod. The second-largest city in Russia, Novgorod housed a large service nobility with ties to some of the condemned boyar families of Moscow. Despite the sack of the city under Ivan III, Novgorod maintained a political organization removed from Russia’s central administration. Moreover, the influence of the city in the northeast had increased as the city fronted the military advance against the Lithuanian border. The treasonous surrender of the border town Izborsk to Lithuania also caused Ivan to question the faith of border towns.

Ivan IV and an oprichniki detachment instituted a month-long terror in Novgorod (the Massacre of Novgorod). The oprichniki raided the town and conducted executions among all classes. As the Livonian campaign constituted a significant drain on state resources, Ivan targeted ecclesiastical and merchant holdings with particular fervor. After Novgorod, the oprichniki company turned to the adjacent merchant city Pskov. The city received relatively merciful treatment. The oprichniki limited executions and focused primarily upon the seizure of ecclesiastical wealth. According to a popular apocryphal account, Nicholas Salos of Pskov the fool-for-Christ prophesied the fall of Ivan and thus motivated the deeply religious Tsar to spare the city. Alternatively, Ivan may have felt no need to institute a terror in Pskov due to his prior sack of the city in wake of the Izborsk treason. The dire financial condition of the state and the need to bolster the war treasury likely inspired the second raid.[22]

Ivan IV maintained the heightened terror as he returned to Moscow. A series of particularly brutal open-air executions took place in Moscow's Pagan Square.[citation needed] The persecutions began to target the oprichnina leadership itself. The tsar had already refused Basmanov and Viazemsky participation in the Novgorod campaign. Upon his return, Ivan condemned the two to prison, where they died shortly thereafter. Pavlov links Ivan's turn against the higher echelons of oprichniki to the increasing number of the lower-born among their ranks. Ivan may have reacted to the apparent discontent among the princely oprichniki over the brutal treatment of Novgorod. Furthermore, class disparity may have set the lower recruits against the princely oprichniki. As Ivan already suspected the older oprichniki on the issue of Novgorod, the lower-born recruits may have advanced the new persecutions to increase their influence in the oprichnina hierarchy.[23]

Disbandment edit

1572 saw the fall of the oprichnina state structure. The zemshchina and oprichnina territories were reunited and placed under rule of a reformed Boyar Council, which included members from both sides of the divided apparatus.[24]

Scholars have cited diverse factors to explain the dissolution of the oprichnina. When the Crimean Tatars burnt Moscow in 1571 during the Russo-Crimean War, the oprichniki failed to offer serious resistance. The success of the Tatars may have shaken the Tsar’s faith in the effectiveness of the oprichnina. Ivan may have found state division ineffective in a period of war and its significant social and economic pressures. Alternatively, Ivan may have deemed the oprichnina a success; the weakening of the princely elite achieved, the Tsar may have felt that the terror had simply outlived its usefulness.[25]

Legacy edit

 
"The street in the town": people fleeing at the arrival of the Oprichniki, inspired by the opera
The Oprichnik by Tchaikovsky,
painted by Apollinary Vasnetsov in 1911

Scholar Robert O. Crummey and Platonov have emphasized the social impact of the mass resettlements under the oprichnina. The division of large estates into smaller oprichnik plots subjected the peasants to a stricter landowning dominion. Furthermore, a new itinerant population emerged as state terror and the seizure of lands forced many peasants from their lands. The increase in itinerants may have motivated the ultimate institutionalization of serfdom by the Russian throne.[26] The oprichnina coincided with the major social and economic crisis in Russia and, according to some contemporary and historical accounts, contributed to it.[27]

Historian Isabel de Madariaga has emphasized the role of the oprichnina in the consolidation of aristocratic power. Resettlement drastically reduced the power of the hereditary nobility. Oprichniki landowners who owed their loyalty to the throne replaced an aristocracy that might have evolved independent political ambitions.[28] Alternatively, Crummey has summarized the social effects of the oprichnina as a failure. From this perspective, the oprichnina failed to pursue coherent social motives and instead pursued a largely unfocused terror.[29] Such interpretations are derived from the 1960s works by Ruslan Skrynnikov who described the Oprichnina as the reign of terror designed to root out every possible challenge to the autocracy:

Under conditions of mass terror, universal fear and denunciations, the apparatus of violence acquired an entire overwhelming influence on the political structure of the leadership. The infernal machine of terror escaped from the control of its creators. The final victims of the Oprichnina proved to be all of those who had stood at its cradle.[30]

Cultural depictions edit

Ivan Lazhechnikov wrote the tragedy The Oprichniki (Russian: Опричники), on which Tchaikovsky based his opera The Oprichnik. In turn, Tchaikovsky's opera inspired a 1911 painting by Apollinary Vasnetsov, depicting a city street and people fleeing in panic at the arrival of the oprichniki.

A fantasy variation on the Oprichnina appears in the Japanese light novel franchise Gate. It retains the name, purpose, activities, dog head motif, and even the use of brooms from the historic original.

Vladimir Sorokin's 2006 novel Day of the Oprichnik envisions a dystopian near future in which the Russian monarchy and oprichnina have been reestablished. The novel's oprichnina drive red cars with severed dog heads as hood ornaments, rape and kill dissenting nobles, and consume massive amounts of alcohol and narcotics, all while praising the monarchy and the Russian Orthodox Church.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Oprichnina". The Great Soviet Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ Walter Leitsch. "Russo-Polish Confrontation" in Taras Hunczak, ed. "Russian Imperialism". Rutgers University Press. 1974, p. 140
  3. ^ Oleg Gordievsky and Christopher Andrew (1999). KGB: The Inside Story of its intelligence operations from Lenin to Gorbachev (Russian language edition, Moscow, Centerpoligraph, ISBN 5-227-00437-4, p. 21)
  4. ^ Manaev, G. (2019-01-07). "The madness of 3 Russian tsars, and the truth behind it". Russia Beyond the Headlines. Retrieved 2020-01-29.
  5. ^ R. Skrynnikov, Ivan Grosny, M., Science, 1975, pp. 93–96
  6. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 123.
  7. ^ S.F. Platonov, Ivan the Terrible, trans. Joseph L. Wieczynski (Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International Press, 1986), 101–02.
  8. ^ Isabel de Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 364–65, 368–70.
  9. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 107.
  10. ^ Compare: de Madariaga, Isabel (25 September 2006) [2005]. "The Setting up of the Oprichnina". Ivan the Terrible. New Haven: Yale University Press (published 2006). p. 178. ISBN 9780300119732. Retrieved 2 August 2022. The Metropolitan [...] sent Archbishop Pimen and Achimandrite Levkii as his envoys to Aleksandrovskaia Sloboda [...]. [...] The envoys from Moscow reached Aleksandrovskaia Sloboda on 5 January 1565, followed by a long trail of nobles, armed men, merchants, townspeople and the common people of the city. [...] The Tsar received first the ecclesiastics, then the boyars [...].
  11. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 176–78; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 112–13.
  12. ^ Isabel de Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible, 179–80.
  13. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 109–11, 140.
  14. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 182–83; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 112–13.
  15. ^ Henri Troyat, Ivan the Terrible, trans. E.P. Dutton (London: Phoenix Press, 2001), 129–30.
  16. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 113.
  17. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 143–45; S.F. Platonov, Ivan the Terrible, trans. Joseph L. Wieczynski (Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International Press, 1986), 130.
  18. ^ Isabel de Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible, p. 182
  19. ^ Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 113.
  20. ^ Isabel de Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible, p. 183
  21. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 202–08, 231–32; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 130–34.
  22. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 242–50; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 147–52.
  23. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 255–60; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 155–56, 161–62.
  24. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 282; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 166–67.
  25. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 278–79; Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie, Ivan the Terrible (London: Pearson Education Limited, 2003), 162–67.
  26. ^ Robert O. Crummey, "Ivan IV: Reformer or Tyrant?" in Reinterpreting Russian History, ed. Daniel H. Kaiser and Gary Marker (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 162–63; S.F. Platonov, Ivan the Terrible, trans. Joseph L. Wieczynski (Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International Press, 1986), 114–19.
  27. ^ Колычева, Евгения Ивановна (1987). Аграрный строй России XVI в. (in Russian). Наука. p. 181.
  28. ^ Isabel De Madariaga, Ivan the Terrible: First Tsar of Russia (London: Yale University Press, 2005), 368–70.
  29. ^ Robert O. Crummey, "Ivan IV: Reformer or Tyrant?" in Reinterpreting Russian History, ed. Daniel H. Kaiser and Gary Marker (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 162.
  30. ^ Quoted from: Alexander Yanov. The Origins of Autocracy: Ivan the Terrible in Russian History. University of California Press, 1981. ISBN 9780520042827. p. 315.

Further reading edit

  • Walter Leitsch. "Russo-Polish Confrontation" in Taras Hunczak, ed. "Russian Imperialism". Rutgers University Press. 1974, p. 140
  • Oleg Gordievsky and Christopher Andrew (1999). KGB: The Inside Story of its intelligence operations from Lenin to Gorbachev (Russian language edition, Moscow, Centerpoligraph, ISBN 5-227-00437-4, page 21)

External links edit

  • The New York Times Book Review - A Dystopian Tale of Russia’s Future (2011/03/13)

oprichnina, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, russian, july, 2018, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations, . You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian July 2018 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 216 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Oprichnina see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ru Oprichnina to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The oprichnina Russian opri chnina IPA ɐˈprʲitɕnʲɪne was a state policy implemented by Tsar Ivan the Terrible in Russia between 1565 and 1572 The policy included mass repression of the boyars Russian aristocrats including public executions and confiscation of their land and property In this context the term can also refer to 1 2 The notorious organization of six thousand Oprichniki the first political police in the history of Russia 3 4 The portion of Russia ruled directly by Ivan the Terrible where his Oprichniki operated The corresponding period of Russian history Oprichnik Forces Russian Oprichnye vojska romanized Oprichnie voyskaActive1565 1572 de jure to 1584CountryTsardom of RussiaAllegianceTsarSize6 000Nickname s Oprichnina The Oprichniks by Nikolai Nevrev shows mock coronation of Ivan Fyodorov Chelyadnin ru enthroned accused of conspiracy before his execution by oprichniks The term oprichnina which Ivan coined for this policy derives from the Russian word oprich Russian oprich apart from except Contents 1 Causes 2 Establishment 3 Organization 4 Operations 5 Disbandment 6 Legacy 7 Cultural depictions 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksCauses editIn 1558 Tsar Ivan IV started the Livonian War A broad coalition which included Poland Lithuania and Sweden became drawn into the war against Russia The war became drawn out it continued until 1583 and expensive raids by Crimean Tatars Polish and Lithuanian invasions famines a trading blockade and escalating costs of war ravaged Russia In 1564 Prince Andrey Kurbsky defected to the Lithuanians and commanded the Lithuanian army against Russia devastating the Russian region of Velikiye Luki Tsar Ivan began to suspect other aristocrats of readiness to betray him 5 Historians Vasily Klyuchevsky 1841 1911 and Stepan Veselovsky ru 1876 1952 explained the oprichnina in terms of Ivan s paranoia and denied larger social aims for the oprichnina 6 However historian Sergey Platonov 1860 1933 argued that Ivan IV intended the oprichnina as a suppression of the rising boyar aristocracy 7 Professor Isabel de Madariaga 1919 2014 expanded this idea to explain the oprichnina as Ivan s attempt to subordinate all independent social classes to the autocracy 8 Establishment editOn December 3 1564 Ivan IV departed Moscow on pilgrimage While such journeys were routine for the throne Ivan neglected to set in place the usual arrangements for rule in his absence Moreover an unusually large personal guard a significant number of boyars and the treasury accompanied him 9 After a month of silence Ivan finally issued two letters from his fortifications at Aleksandrova Sloboda on January 3 1565 The first addressed the elite of Moscow and accused them of embezzlement and treason Further accusations concerned the clergy and their protection of denounced boyars In conclusion Ivan announced his abdication The second letter addressed the population of Moscow and claimed he had no anger against its citizenry Divided between Aleksandrova Sloboda and Moscow the boyar court was unable to rule in absence of Ivan and feared the wrath of the Muscovite citizenry Envoys departed for Aleksandrova Sloboda 10 to beg Ivan to return to the throne 11 Ivan IV agreed to return on condition that he might prosecute people for treason outside legal limitations He demanded the right to execute and confiscate the land of traitors without interference from the boyar council or from the church To pursue his investigations Ivan decreed the establishment of the oprichnina originally a term for land left to a noble widow separate from her children s land He also raised a levy of 100 000 rubles to pay for the oprichnina 12 Organization editThe oprichnina consisted of a separate territory within the borders of Russia mostly in the territory of the former Novgorod Republic in the north This region included many of the financial centers of the state including the salt region of Staraia Russa and prominent merchant towns Ivan held exclusive power over the oprichnina territory The Boyar Council ruled the zemshchina land the second division of the state Until 1568 the oprichnina relied upon many administrative institutions under zemshchina jurisdiction Only when conflict between the zemshchina and oprichnina reached its peak did Ivan create independent institutions within the oprichnina 13 Ivan also stipulated the creation of a personal guard known as the oprichniki Originally it was a thousand strong The noble oprichniki Aleksei Basmanov and Afanasy Viazemsky oversaw recruitment Nobles and townsmen free of relations to the zemshchina or its administration were eligible for Ivan s new guard 14 Henri Troyat has emphasized the lowly origin of the oprichnina recruits 15 However historian Vladimir Kobrin has contested that a shift to the lower classes constituted a late development in the oprichnina era Many early oprichniki had close ties to the princely and boyar clans of Russia 16 Territorial divisions under the oprichnina led to mass resettlement When the property of zemshchina nobles fell within oprichnina territory oprichniki seized their lands and forced the owners onto zemshchina land The oprichnina territory included primarily service estates Alexander Zimin and Stepan Veselovsky have argued that this division left heredity landownership largely unaffected However Platonov and other scholars have posited that resettlement aimed to undermine the power of the landed nobility Pavlov has cited the relocation of zemshchina servicemen from oprichnina territories onto heredity estates as a critical blow to the power of the princely class The division of hereditary estates diminished the influence of the princely elites in their native provinces 17 The worst affected was the province of Suzdal which lost 80 of its gentry 18 The oprichniki enjoyed social and economic privileges under the oprichnina While zemshchina boyars lost both heredity and service land the oprichniki retained hereditary holdings that fell in zemshchina land Moreover Ivan granted the oprichnina the spoils of a heavy tax levied upon the zemshchina nobles The rising oprichniki owed their allegiance to Ivan not heredity or local bonds 19 Operations edit nbsp The Oprichniki and the Boyars by Vasily Khudyakov The first wave of persecutions targeted primarily the princely clans of Russia notably the influential families of Suzdal Ivan executed exiled or tortured prominent members of the boyar clans on questionable accusations of conspiracy 1566 saw the oprichnina extended to eight central districts Of the 12 000 nobles there 570 became oprichniks and the rest were expelled They had to make their way to the zemshchina in mid winter peasants who helped them were executed 20 In a show of clemency Ivan recalled a number of nobles to Moscow The Tsar even called upon zemshchina nobles for a zemskii sobor concerning the Livonian War Ivan posed the question whether Russia should surrender the Livonian territories to recently victorious Lithuania or maintain the effort to conquer the region The body approved war measures and advanced emergency taxes to support the draining treasury However the zemskii sobor also forwarded a petition to end the oprichnina The Tsar reacted with a renewal of the oprichnina terror He ordered the immediate arrest of the petitioners and executed the alleged leaders of the protest Further investigations tied Ivan Federov leader of the zemshchina duma to a plot to overthrow Tsar Ivan Federov was removed from court and executed shortly thereafter 21 The overthrow of King Erik XIV of Sweden in 1568 and the death of Ivan s second wife in 1569 exacerbated Ivan s suspicions His attention turned to the northwestern city of Novgorod The second largest city in Russia Novgorod housed a large service nobility with ties to some of the condemned boyar families of Moscow Despite the sack of the city under Ivan III Novgorod maintained a political organization removed from Russia s central administration Moreover the influence of the city in the northeast had increased as the city fronted the military advance against the Lithuanian border The treasonous surrender of the border town Izborsk to Lithuania also caused Ivan to question the faith of border towns Ivan IV and an oprichniki detachment instituted a month long terror in Novgorod the Massacre of Novgorod The oprichniki raided the town and conducted executions among all classes As the Livonian campaign constituted a significant drain on state resources Ivan targeted ecclesiastical and merchant holdings with particular fervor After Novgorod the oprichniki company turned to the adjacent merchant city Pskov The city received relatively merciful treatment The oprichniki limited executions and focused primarily upon the seizure of ecclesiastical wealth According to a popular apocryphal account Nicholas Salos of Pskov the fool for Christ prophesied the fall of Ivan and thus motivated the deeply religious Tsar to spare the city Alternatively Ivan may have felt no need to institute a terror in Pskov due to his prior sack of the city in wake of the Izborsk treason The dire financial condition of the state and the need to bolster the war treasury likely inspired the second raid 22 Ivan IV maintained the heightened terror as he returned to Moscow A series of particularly brutal open air executions took place in Moscow s Pagan Square citation needed The persecutions began to target the oprichnina leadership itself The tsar had already refused Basmanov and Viazemsky participation in the Novgorod campaign Upon his return Ivan condemned the two to prison where they died shortly thereafter Pavlov links Ivan s turn against the higher echelons of oprichniki to the increasing number of the lower born among their ranks Ivan may have reacted to the apparent discontent among the princely oprichniki over the brutal treatment of Novgorod Furthermore class disparity may have set the lower recruits against the princely oprichniki As Ivan already suspected the older oprichniki on the issue of Novgorod the lower born recruits may have advanced the new persecutions to increase their influence in the oprichnina hierarchy 23 Disbandment edit1572 saw the fall of the oprichnina state structure The zemshchina and oprichnina territories were reunited and placed under rule of a reformed Boyar Council which included members from both sides of the divided apparatus 24 Scholars have cited diverse factors to explain the dissolution of the oprichnina When the Crimean Tatars burnt Moscow in 1571 during the Russo Crimean War the oprichniki failed to offer serious resistance The success of the Tatars may have shaken the Tsar s faith in the effectiveness of the oprichnina Ivan may have found state division ineffective in a period of war and its significant social and economic pressures Alternatively Ivan may have deemed the oprichnina a success the weakening of the princely elite achieved the Tsar may have felt that the terror had simply outlived its usefulness 25 Legacy edit nbsp The street in the town people fleeing at the arrival of the Oprichniki inspired by the opera The Oprichnik by Tchaikovsky painted by Apollinary Vasnetsov in 1911 Scholar Robert O Crummey and Platonov have emphasized the social impact of the mass resettlements under the oprichnina The division of large estates into smaller oprichnik plots subjected the peasants to a stricter landowning dominion Furthermore a new itinerant population emerged as state terror and the seizure of lands forced many peasants from their lands The increase in itinerants may have motivated the ultimate institutionalization of serfdom by the Russian throne 26 The oprichnina coincided with the major social and economic crisis in Russia and according to some contemporary and historical accounts contributed to it 27 Historian Isabel de Madariaga has emphasized the role of the oprichnina in the consolidation of aristocratic power Resettlement drastically reduced the power of the hereditary nobility Oprichniki landowners who owed their loyalty to the throne replaced an aristocracy that might have evolved independent political ambitions 28 Alternatively Crummey has summarized the social effects of the oprichnina as a failure From this perspective the oprichnina failed to pursue coherent social motives and instead pursued a largely unfocused terror 29 Such interpretations are derived from the 1960s works by Ruslan Skrynnikov who described the Oprichnina as the reign of terror designed to root out every possible challenge to the autocracy Under conditions of mass terror universal fear and denunciations the apparatus of violence acquired an entire overwhelming influence on the political structure of the leadership The infernal machine of terror escaped from the control of its creators The final victims of the Oprichnina proved to be all of those who had stood at its cradle 30 Cultural depictions editIvan Lazhechnikov wrote the tragedy The Oprichniki Russian Oprichniki on which Tchaikovsky based his opera The Oprichnik In turn Tchaikovsky s opera inspired a 1911 painting by Apollinary Vasnetsov depicting a city street and people fleeing in panic at the arrival of the oprichniki A fantasy variation on the Oprichnina appears in the Japanese light novel franchise Gate It retains the name purpose activities dog head motif and even the use of brooms from the historic original Vladimir Sorokin s 2006 novel Day of the Oprichnik envisions a dystopian near future in which the Russian monarchy and oprichnina have been reestablished The novel s oprichnina drive red cars with severed dog heads as hood ornaments rape and kill dissenting nobles and consume massive amounts of alcohol and narcotics all while praising the monarchy and the Russian Orthodox Church See also edit nbsp Russia portal Crisis of the late 16th century in Russia Cheka Reign of Terror Al Ahbash Anti clericalism in France NKVD KGB Okhrana Burning of books and burying of scholars literary inquisition Great PurgeReferences edit Oprichnina The Great Soviet Encyclopedia Walter Leitsch Russo Polish Confrontation in Taras Hunczak ed Russian Imperialism Rutgers University Press 1974 p 140 Oleg Gordievsky and Christopher Andrew 1999 KGB The Inside Story of its intelligence operations from Lenin to Gorbachev Russian language edition Moscow Centerpoligraph ISBN 5 227 00437 4 p 21 Manaev G 2019 01 07 The madness of 3 Russian tsars and the truth behind it Russia Beyond the Headlines Retrieved 2020 01 29 R Skrynnikov Ivan Grosny M Science 1975 pp 93 96 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 123 S F Platonov Ivan the Terrible trans Joseph L Wieczynski Gulf Breeze FL Academic International Press 1986 101 02 Isabel de Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 364 65 368 70 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 107 Compare de Madariaga Isabel 25 September 2006 2005 The Setting up of the Oprichnina Ivan the Terrible New Haven Yale University Press published 2006 p 178 ISBN 9780300119732 Retrieved 2 August 2022 The Metropolitan sent Archbishop Pimen and Achimandrite Levkii as his envoys to Aleksandrovskaia Sloboda The envoys from Moscow reached Aleksandrovskaia Sloboda on 5 January 1565 followed by a long trail of nobles armed men merchants townspeople and the common people of the city The Tsar received first the ecclesiastics then the boyars Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 176 78 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 112 13 Isabel de Madariaga Ivan the Terrible 179 80 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 109 11 140 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 182 83 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 112 13 Henri Troyat Ivan the Terrible trans E P Dutton London Phoenix Press 2001 129 30 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 113 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 143 45 S F Platonov Ivan the Terrible trans Joseph L Wieczynski Gulf Breeze FL Academic International Press 1986 130 Isabel de Madariaga Ivan the Terrible p 182 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 113 Isabel de Madariaga Ivan the Terrible p 183 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 202 08 231 32 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 130 34 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 242 50 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 147 52 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 255 60 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 155 56 161 62 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 282 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 166 67 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 278 79 Andrei Pavlov and Maureen Perrie Ivan the Terrible London Pearson Education Limited 2003 162 67 Robert O Crummey Ivan IV Reformer or Tyrant in Reinterpreting Russian History ed Daniel H Kaiser and Gary Marker New York Oxford University Press 1994 162 63 S F Platonov Ivan the Terrible trans Joseph L Wieczynski Gulf Breeze FL Academic International Press 1986 114 19 Kolycheva Evgeniya Ivanovna 1987 Agrarnyj stroj Rossii XVI v in Russian Nauka p 181 Isabel De Madariaga Ivan the Terrible First Tsar of Russia London Yale University Press 2005 368 70 Robert O Crummey Ivan IV Reformer or Tyrant in Reinterpreting Russian History ed Daniel H Kaiser and Gary Marker New York Oxford University Press 1994 162 Quoted from Alexander Yanov The Origins of Autocracy Ivan the Terrible in Russian History University of California Press 1981 ISBN 9780520042827 p 315 Further reading editWalter Leitsch Russo Polish Confrontation in Taras Hunczak ed Russian Imperialism Rutgers University Press 1974 p 140 Oleg Gordievsky and Christopher Andrew 1999 KGB The Inside Story of its intelligence operations from Lenin to Gorbachev Russian language edition Moscow Centerpoligraph ISBN 5 227 00437 4 page 21 External links editThe New York Times Book Review A Dystopian Tale of Russia s Future 2011 03 13 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oprichnina amp oldid 1219347686, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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