Transcript Slide 1

Created by Ms. Susan M. Pojer
edited by Ms. D. Tempelton, 2009
Russia Today
Former Soviet Region
Compared in Latitude & Area
with the United States
Topography of Russia
Themes
in Russian History
 Expansion by conquest.
Need for warm-water
ports.
 The necessity of a strong,
central government.
Early Russia
Cyril and
Methodius
Orthodox
Christian
missionaries to
the Slavs, 9th
century
Early Byzantine Influences:
Orthodox Christianity
Early Byzantine Influences:
Orthodox Christianity
Early Byzantine Influences:
Cyrillic Alphabet
Novgorod
Russian Boyars
• Highest rank of feudal nobility in
Medieval Rus, Bulgaria, Moldavia and
Ukraine
• In Kievan Rus they formed a council
(Duma) that advised the prince
• In Muscovy they chose the prince
they served
• During the Middle Ages, they were a
major power in Kievan Rus and
Muscovy
Russian
Boyars
Russian Boyars
Ivan IV restricted their power, curtailing their right to hold land
without serving the Tsar
Russian Expansion
Alexander Nevsky: 1220-1263
Battle on the Ice
(Neva River)
Against the
Swedes
Teutonic
Knight
The Mongols Invade Russia
Ivan IV, “Grozny”
(r. 1462-1505)
Ivan III Tearing the Great Khan’s Letter Requesting
More Tribute in 1480.
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Crowned as first “Tsar of All Russia” in 1547 at age of 16
Revised the law code, established a standing army (the
Streltsy), established a Council of Nobles and confirmed
the position of the Russian Orthodox Church
Introduced the first printing press to Russia
Defeated the Kazan Khanate in 1552 and the Astrakhan
Khanate in 1556
Built St. Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow to commemorate the
defeat of the Khans
Passed the first laws to restrict the mobility of the
peasants – leading to their eventual serfdom
Livonian Wars – attempts to expand Russian territory
westward. Lasted 24 years and devastated western Russia.
Eventually defeated by alliance of Sweden, Poland and the
Hanseatic League.
Towards the end of his life, Ivan became mentally unstable
The Death of Tsarevich Ivan
Ivanovich
Ivan accidentally killed his son, causing a crisis over
the succession
Russia in the Late 1500s
The Time of Troubles
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Ivan Grozny was succeeded by his mentally incompetent
son, Feodor – the last Tsar of the Rurik Dynasty
The period between his death in 1598 and the accession of
Michael Romanov in 1613 is Russia’s “Time of Troubles”
Famine from 1601 – 1603, dislocating large numbers of
people
Bands of armed brigands preyed on the population
The Government was unable to effectively rule
Russia was invaded by Poland (with the goal of forcing the
Russian rulers to become Catholic), and Lutheran Sweden in
the west and the Tatars in the east
Uprisings in the cities led to brutal repression and
massacres
• Governmental crisis led Kuzma Minin Novgorod
merchant, and Prince Pozharsky to lead an uprising
of the Russian people that effectively defeated the
Poles and established a new Russian government in
Moscow
• National Assembly elected Michael Romanov as Tsar
• He was related, through his mother, to the first wife
of Ivan IV
Michael Romanov
(r. 1613-1645)
Romanov Dynasty
(1613-1917)
Romanov Family Crest
The Pendulum
of Russian History
Pro-West
For Progress & Change
Encourage New Ideas,
Technologies, etc.
Anti-West
Isolationist
Xenophobic
Ultra-Conservative
 A few Tsars
 Most Tsars
 Intellectual elites
 Russian Orthodox
Church
 Merchants/businessmen
 Young members of the
middle class.
 Military
 Boyars
 peasants
REFORM-MINDED
LEADER
DEMAGOGUE
Peter the Great (r. 1682-1725)
Early Reign
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Inherited after the death of his older half-brother, Alexis I
in 1682
Regent was his half sister, Sophia, who ruled for him until
1689 when she led a rebellion against him and was
overthrown
Reorganized the Russian army – making it more modern
Put down a rebellion of the streltsy
Required nobility, army officers and government officials to
adopt Western dress and customs
War against the Ottoman Empire – not very successful
“The Grand Embassy”
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Peter traveled to Europe in an attempt to gain support for a
war against the Ottomans
European rulers not interested – most were involved with
The War of the Spanish Succession at the time
Peter visited Holland and spent time learning how to build
ships by working in a Dutch shipyard
In England he met with King William III and reviewed the
English Royal Navy
Visited Manchester and where he learned techniques of
planning a new city which he later used in the planning and
building St. Petersburg
Visited Leipzig, Dresden and Vienna, where he met the HRE
In 1698, Peter was forced to return to Russia to put down a
rebellion of the streltsy
Peter in the Netherlands
learning shipbuilding
Contemplating the Building of
St. Petersburg
Founded in 1703 to be the capital of Russia
The Great Northern War
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Seeking to control the Baltic Sea, Peter declared war on
Sweden
Battle of Narva – 1701 – Russians defeated during a
snowstorm
Swedes turn their attention to Poland, giving Peter time to
reorganize the Russian army
Swedish king Charles XII invaded Russia in 1706 and
attempted to conquer the Ukraine
Battle of Poltava – major defeat for the Swedes resulting
in the abdication and exile of Charles XII
Peter continued to build his navy, enabling him to conquer
much of Finland by 1714
1721 Treaty of Nystad ends Great Northern War – Russia
acquires Ingria, Estonia, Livonia and Karelia but returns
most of Finland to Sweden
As a result of this war, Russian has acquired a warm-water
port for the Navy
The Taking of Narva, 1704
Peter pacifies his troops and stops the looting and murder
Russia & Sweden After the
Great Northern War
Later Years of Peter’s Reign
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Proclaimed “Emperor of All Russia” in 1721
Reformed Russian Orthodox Church by establishing the
Holy Synod to rule the church in place of the Patriarch of
Moscow – makes Church subservient to State
Law – no man could enter a monastery before the age of
50 – to encourage enlisting in the military
Had his wife, Catherine, crowned as Empress in 1724
Executed his son and heir, Alexei, for opposing Peter’s
policies (the son of his first wife, Eudoxia)
1725 construction completed on the Peterhof Palace
(Peter’s Court”) near St. Petersburg
Summer of 1724 Peter had surgery to alleviate uremia –
blockage of the bladder. The problems were alleviated
but returned the next year.
Died on Feb. 8, 1725 of gangrene in the bladder at the age
of 52
Peterhof Palace
East Chapel at Peterhof
Throne room
Accomplishments of
Peter the Great
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Modernized Russia, transforming it into an empire
Discontinues use of the Old Russian Calendar, which had
dated events from the “beginning of the world” and
implements the Julian Calendar
Established the “Table of Ranks” in 1722 which
determined precedence among the nobility was
determined by service to the State, not by birth
Decree on Compulsory Education (1714) – children of
nobility required to have a basic education in math and
science
Abolished taxes on land and introduced a “head tax” on
everyone
Professional army – into which both nobles and serfs can
be conscripted
Expanded the Navy
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Established School of Navigation and Maths, School of
Medicine, School of Engineering and School of Science
Made education a top priority for members of the upper and
middle classes
Created a state-run newspaper
Fixed prices on many items
Mercantilism
Encouraged the adoption of Western customs and the
French language among the upper classes