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Ivan The Terrible (Sunday History Read)
BBC Education - History 2000 ^ | undated | BBC

Posted on 07/28/2002 11:37:32 AM PDT by Hacksaw

Ivan the Terrible

Stalin admired him. The rest of Europe believed he was mad. What is certain is that he was one of the most ruthless tyrants in history.

The name 'Ivan the Terrible' conjours up images of senseless cruelty and paranoia. Yet, for many in Russia, he is a national hero. Ivan appears to be a man of huge contradictions - a man of God who personally tortured his victims and beat his own son to death; a hardened despot who often behaved like a coward, asking his ally, Elizabeth I of England, for political asylum; a man who believed himself chosen to save the souls of his people, but who brutally put thousands to death in carefully orchestrated purges.

Born in 1530, Ivan was only three when he inherited the Russian throne following his father's death. At the age of seven, tragedy struck again when his mother was poisoned by nobles at court. By his early teens, he was already displaying some of his uglier traits. He would throw live animals from towers and appeared to derive pleasure from doing so.

Ivan was crowned Russia's first Tsar at the age of 17. Three weeks later he married, having chosen his bride in a national virgin competition. Virgins over the age of twelve were brought to the Kremlin to be paraded before him. He chose Anastasia, the daughter of a minor noble, and their marriage proved to be a very close one.

Ivan had huge ambitions for his new Imperial dynasty. He launched a holy war against Russia's traditional enemy - the Tartars - showing no mercy to these Muslim peoples and decimating their cultural heritage. Ivan's conquest of Kazan and later Astrakhan and Siberia gave birth to a sixteenth century personality cult glorifying him as the Orthodox crusader.

His wife Anastasia helped to hold his cruelty in check, but in 1560 she died. He accused his nobles of poisoning her, and became even more mentally unstable. Until recently, most scholars have dismissed Ivan's accusation of murder as evidence of his paranoia. But recent forensic tests on Anastasia's remains have revealed more than ten times the normal levels of mercury in her hair. It is likely, that Anastasia was indeed murdered, sending Ivan into a downward spiral of murder and cruelty.

He set up a bodyguard that has been described as Russia's first 'secret police' - the Oprichniki - as a religious brotherhood sworn to protecting God's Tsar. In reality, they became marauding thugs, ready to commit any crime in the Tsar's name. Ivan sentenced thousands to internal exile in far flung parts of the empire. Others were condemned to death; their families and servants often killed as well. Ivan would give detailed orders about the executions, using biblically inspired tortures to reconstruct the sufferings of hell. More than 3,000 people lost their lives in Ivan's attack on Novgorod alone. In a fit of rage, Ivan struck his son and heir dead with his staff. Mad with sorrow and guilt, he had a dramatic volte face, posthumously forgiving all those he'd executed and paying for prayers to be said for their souls. Before his death, Ivan was re-christened as the monk Jonah and buried in his monk's habit - in the hope of finding ultimate forgiveness.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs; history; historylist; ivantheterrible; russia
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To: Hacksaw
"National Virgin Competition"?

Sounds a bit like judging varieties of olive oil.
61 posted on 07/29/2002 10:45:19 AM PDT by Doctor Stochastic
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To: one_particular_harbour
They hung onto feudalism for many, many years longer than the Europeans.

Literally until the Bolsheviks took over. Serfdom was only recently abolished prior to that.

62 posted on 07/29/2002 4:58:11 PM PDT by Hacksaw
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Comment #63 Removed by Moderator

Comment #64 Removed by Moderator

To: one_particular_harbour; Savage Beast
Vladimir is a name of Slavic origin, and means, roughly, "to rule the land" or, alternately, "to rule with peace" (since mir means both world and peace).

Walter, which apparently is Germanic in origin, has as its root "Walt(en)" which means, "to rule" in German. ("Valteris", a Lithuanian variation of Walter, means "rule people".)

So, it is quite possible that Walter is the German equivalent for Vladimir in that it conveys the concept of rule or power.

65 posted on 07/30/2002 9:05:25 PM PDT by Washington-Husky
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To: Washington-Husky
Thanks, Husky.
66 posted on 07/31/2002 5:28:47 AM PDT by Savage Beast
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To: Kevin Curry
Anastasia introduced Byzantine customs to the court and Ivan adopted the two-headed Byzantine eagle as the Russian seal--which has been reprised in post-Soviet Russia.

That explains all those vodka bottle symbols :)

67 posted on 07/31/2002 4:55:04 PM PDT by Hacksaw
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This topic was posted 7/28/2002, thanks Hacksaw.

68 posted on 09/05/2021 8:48:06 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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