With the Russia leaderless and the country
faced mortal danger from its foreign adversaries, explore how Russia passed the
last years of the Time of Troubles.
The Time
of Troubles reached its pinnacle at the time when Russia had no legitimate Tsar.
From 1610 to 1612, Russia had numerous governments but no absolute central
ruler. After deposing Vasily Shuisky, the Boyars formed a council of seven
nobles to rule Russia, or at least Moscow.
Polish Invasion Continued
Poland,
by that time, advanced into the heart of Russia. King Sigismund III continued
to besiege Smolensk. On the other, another Polish army continued to march to
the capital Moscow.
By
September, the Polish army stood in the outskirts and poised to take the
capital. The Council of the 7 Boyars felt troubled and anxious over their faiths.
Especially, as it seemed that the Polish wanted to ally with False Dmitry II to
take the Kremlin. Nevertheless, they stroke luck. The Polish commander in the
outskirts of Moscow wanted to negotiate with the council.
A Polish Tsar?
To save
themselves from the Poles, the council decided to offer the Tsardom to the son
of the Polish King, Prince Wladyslaw, under the condition that he must convert
to the Russian Orthodox Church. The commander of the Polish army agreed. A grand
embassy made of nobles including Filaret Romanov, Vasily Galitsyn, and Varlaam (the
name that the former Tsar Vasily Shuisky along with his vows), delivered the
offer to King Sigismund III in Smolensk. But when they offered the throne, the
Polish King acted otherwise to their expectation. Instead of welcoming and
accepting the offer, he declined with the intention of taking the Russian crown
for himself. He had the members of the embassy arrested and sent back to Poland
to remain incarcerated. With the failure of negotiations, Polish forces pressed
on in Moscow and eventually captured the capital city. In addition, the
offering of the throne to the Polish Prince Wladyslaw had serious implications to the reign of the next Tsar.
Death of False Dmitry II
False
Dmitry, meanwhile, continued to live in Kaluga as the Polish army marched to
Moscow. He ruled with an iron fist. His movement became unpopular, nevertheless
he still had the support of the Cossacks. But in December of 1610, False Dmitry
II passed away, leaving his wife Marina Mniszech and their son Ivan to continue
the fight.
Resistance to the Poles
Patriarch Hermogenes refusing to bless the Poles |
But
personal ambitions weakened the makeshift army. For instance, Liapunov
wanted to form his own government, which caused his murder in July 1611 by
Cossacks. But even without Liapunov, Ivan Zarutsky pressed on to recapture
Moscow. But Zarutsky then allied himself with the Baby Brigand Ivan and his
mother Marina Mniszech to assert their “claim” to the throne. They abandoned
the siege and then moved to Nizhny Novgorod.
Zarutsky, Marina, and the Baby Brigand
Ivan,
Marina, and Zarutsky continued to roam Russia until 1614 when Cossacks in
Astrakan captured and delivered them to the authorities. They met a gruesome
fate. Zarutsky executed, Marina impaled in a stake, and the young Ivan
executed.
Disasters and Relief
After
Moscow, other major Russian cities fell to foreign invaders. In June 1611, the
Poles under Sigismund III captured the city of Smolensk. In the North, King
Karl IX of Sweden captured Novgorod.
But even
with these disasters, the Russians found courage to face up to the challenges.
In Nizhny Novgorod, a merchant named Kuzma Minin rallied the Russian people with
the support of the local prince, Dmitry Pozharsky to march against Poland. In
1612, Kuzma Minin and Pozharsky triumphantly marched to Yaroslav and their army
continued to grow. Upon their capture of Yaroslav, they promised to convene a Zemsky Sobor or a national assembly once
they capture Moscow.
The
assembly was tasked to elect the new Tsar. With the declaration, many more joined
their army, many desiring to end a decade of carnage. This army differed from
the others. Here Cossacks, peasants, nobles, came together liberate their
capital city and preserving existence of their mother Russia. The Council of
the Seven Boyars and Cossacks under Prince Dmitry Trubetskoy joined Kuzma Minin
and Pozharsky in Yaroslav. In October, their huge army marched to the outskirts
of Moscow and a siege began.
On
October 1612 in the Old Russian Calendar, finally, the united Russian army
drove out the Poles out of Moscow and the capital was liberated. True to their
declaration in Yaroslav, a Zemsky Sobor
convened to elect Russia’s new Tsar. All sectors, peasantry, nobility, clergy,
Cossacks, free peasants, and other minorities formed a new national assembly
tasked to choose their new Tsar who would rule under the will of the Russian
people.
Election and Ascension of Tsar Michael Romanov
The Zemsky Sobor convened in early 1613.
Made up of 500 to 800 members from all provinces and from all sectors of
society, they debated who would be Russia’s new Tsar. Arguments ran for a month
until February. At the end, the assembly elected the son of the incarcerated
Filaret Romanov and long distant relative of the former Tsaritsa Anasatasia
Romanova, wife of Tsar Ivan IV – Mikhail Romanov or Michael Romanov – as the
new Tsar and Autocrat of All Russia.
Tsar
Michael faced a daunting task in his hands. He had to resolve the problems of foreign invasion. He needed to rescue his father from the Poles. And stop the
pretender Ivan and his mother Marina, and their Cossack ally Zarutsky, as well
as another pretender in form of Prince Wladyslaw. Nevertheless, the worst of
the internal struggles and chaos finally came to an end. The election of Michael
Romanov marked the end of the Time of Troubles.
Summing Up
The Time of Trouble showed a nation on the brink of becoming a failed state. Famine,
social tensions, foreign interventions, intrigue and ambitions had brought out
the worst out of the Russian people. Nevertheless, it showed also their best,
their resiliency and to recover and unite for a cause that threatened to devour
their freedom and identity. In Russian history, the Time of Troubles gave the
conditions for the rise of the family that would rule Russia for three hundred
years – the Romanovs. From the
chaos of the Time of Trouble, the Romanovs brought stability, order, and
legitimacy, which Russia would experience for many years to follow.
Explore also:
Bibliography:
Freeze,
Gregory. Russia: A History.
New York, New York: Oxford University Press, 2009.
Langer,
Lawrence. Historical
Dictionary of Medieval Russia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press, 2002.
Moss,
Walter. A History of Russia
Volume I: To 1917. London: Anthem Press, 2005.
Stone, David. A Military History of Russia: From Ivan the Terrible to the War in Chechnya. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press Publishing, Company, 2006.
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