The Rise of Russia
CENTRAL EUROPE
• The middle of the continent was defined by the HRE
• Politically, central Europe was comprised of numerous principalities, Church lands, and free towns
• By the end of the 15th century, the HRE was an empire in name only
• Central Europe was rich in minerals and timber
THE FORMATION OF STATES
• Factors involved in the formation of states in Europe in the late 15th and early 16th century included geography, population, natural resources, social characteristics, language, and religion
• Furthermore, advances in warfare made consolidation easier -- what could not be inherited or married could be conquered
• In combination these factors slowly moved Europe toward formation of states
Caution! Europe under construction!
• 1. How have geography, climate & distance directed and limited Russian expansion?
• 2. How might geography, climate & distance affect the governance of Russia?
• 3. What states probably opposed Russian expansion?
EASTERN CONFIGURATION
• At the beginning of the 16th century, the principality of Muscovy was the largest political unit in Europe
• Under Ivan III, “the Great” (1462-1505), Muscovy expanded greatly largely due to deterioration of the Mongol Empire
• Ivan III extended the privileges of the nobility and organized a military class
Russia’s greatest historian, Sergei Platonov wrote:
“The Grand Duke Ivan, endowed with quick wit and a will of iron completed the
unification of the Russian lands under Moscow’s hand… “
Ivan III
Ivan lll (the Great) from Moscow – liberate from Mongols- used nationalism & Orthodox loyalties- by 1480, large, independent state
- reduced culture & economy- left local administration alone
Mongol Legacy
literacy declineseconomy agricultural
Ivan restores centralized rule- supervises church
Russia is 3rd Rome
Expansionism under the Tsars
Ivan lV (the Terrible)- kills nobility (boyars) on charge of conspiracy
The Cossacks Expand Across Siberia: Late 1500s to mid 1600s
Impact of shift
• Russians sent Cossacks to hold the newly acquired land – Cossacks were peasants who migrated to
these new areas
• Trade from China was refocused through Russia
As a result of such achievements, the years from 1547 to 1563 are known as Ivan’s “good period.”
• In the 1500s Russia far behind western Europe in technical advancement and centralized government
• Russia run by church officials and boyars, or landowners• Had conservative viewpoints
• 1546, young prince claimed title of czar, put Russia on different course• Title was version of Latin word
caesar, or emperor• New czar, Ivan, intended to rule
without limits on power• His own madness created chaos
Rule Without Limits
The Monarchy of Ivan IV
• During early years, Ivan IV made many reforms—created general
council that included merchants, lower-level nobles
• Promoted military officers on merit; drew up legal code
• Expanded Russia’s borders, trade
Reforms of Ivan IV
Private Police Force
• Created private police force to investigate, punish opposition
• Men dressed in black, rode black horses
• Controlled almost half of Russia’s territory in Ivan’s name
• Brutally punished anyone who spoke out against czar’s policies
Ivan the Terrible
• During 1560s, Ivan changed
• Strict policies, violent actions sealed reputation as Ivan the Terrible
• Suspicious of closest advisors; sent them away, killed supporters
• Was convinced wife was murdered, people conspiring against him
• Death of Ivan’s son may have been accident, but left Russia
without heir to throne
• Uncertainty about succession, economic problems, foreign
invasions made chaotic period known as Time of Troubles
• 1613, Michael, relative of Ivan’s first wife, crowned czar; first of
Romanov dynasty
• Dynasty lasted until 1917
Time of Troubles
• 1565, harshness continued; seized land from 12,000 boyars
• Ordered killing of thousands of people in Novgorod; suspected they wanted to separate from
Russia
• 1581, killed his own son, next in line to be czar
• Descent into mental illness seemed complete
Descent into Mental Illness
Last Years of Ivan
Autocrats• Michael was the first Romanov
• He was able to establish some stability but did not re-establish the autocracy of the emperor or czar
• He expands into the Ukraine and re-united Kiev with the rest of Russia
• He waged a successful war against Poland
While others were reforming…
• Alexis was able to re-establish the power of the czar by outlawing assemblies of the boyars
• He also re-organized the Orthodox Church
• Those who would not reform were called the Old believers and many were exiled to Siberia for their conservative views
Serfs before Mongols – peasants relatively free
1500s – encouraged serfdom to control large peasant population
1649 – serfdom hereditary
other laws tie serfs to land, give landlords more authority
bought, sold, punished
Trade & Economics 95% population rural
few artisans (most manufacturing rural based)
most trade handled by Westerners- few merchants
Peter’s reforms increase trade- yet nobility prevent a strong commercial class
strengths – revenue good enough for expanding empire
commerce with Central Asia
ag & manufacturing methods remain traditional
What was the nature of Russian serfdom?
• power of nobility increases 1600 – 1700s• gives government a way to satisfy nobility & regulate
peasants when govt. didn’t have the means to rule peasants directly
• had been basically free farmers before Mongols• serfs tied to land, hereditary status, born to it• close to slavery, serfs could be bought & sold, punished,
essentially enslave their own people• whole villages could be sold as manufacturing labor• did use village governments to regulate lives, rely on
community ties• illiterate & poor• paid high taxes, owed labor to landlords or government
(obrok)• economic & legal situation of the peasantry deteriorated
What is the basis for the culture of the Russian masses?
• Orthodox Christianity
• village life
• serfdom
• agriculture
• taxes
1450-1750
• Russia has contact with the West
• Only a few big cities; 95% rural
• No strong merchant or commercial class
• Long-lasting multinational empire
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