Russian XVIth century Silver Wire Kopeck Coin
was produced during the reign of Ivan IV (1533-1584).
Year: 1533-47
Novgorod Mint.
0.63 gr
Reference: Kleshchinov/Grishin # 76.
Estimated Value: $160-200
XF Condition.
Ivan IV Vasilyevich (Russian: Иван IV
Васильевич) (August 25, 1530, Moscow – March 18, 1584, Moscow) was the Grand
Duke of Muscovy from 1533 to 1547 and was the first ruler of Russia to assume
the title of tsar. His long reign saw the conquest of Tartary and Siberia and
subsequent transformation of Russia into a multiethnic and multiconfessional
state. This tsar retains his place in the Russian tradition simply as Ivan
Grozny (Russian: Ива́н Гро́зный which translates into English as Ivan the
Fearsome or 'Thunderous'. He is commonly referred to in English as Ivan the
Terrible. Early reign Ivan (or Ioann, as his name is rendered in Church
Slavonic) was a long-awaited son of Vasili III. Upon his father's death, he
formally came to the throne at the age of three, but his minority was dominated
by regents. Initially his mother Elena Glinskaya acted as regent, but she died
when Ivan was only eight. She was replaced as regent by boyars from the Shuisky
family until Ivan assumed power in 1544. According to his own letters, Ivan
customarily felt neglected and offended by the mighty boyars from the Shuisky
and Belsky families. These traumatic experiences may have contributed to his
hatred of the boyars and to his mental instability. He was known to throw cats
and dogs out of the Kremlin windows, among other cruel acts. Ivan was crowned
tsar with Monomakh's Cap at the Cathedral of the Dormition at age sixteen on
January 16 1547. Despite calamities triggered by the Great Fire of 1547, the
early part of his reign was one of peaceful reforms and modernization. Ivan
revised the law code (known as the sudebnik), created a standing army (the
streltsy), established the Zemsky Sobor, the council of the nobles (known as
the Chosen Council), and confirmed the position of the Church with the Council
of the Hundred Chapters, which unified the rituals and ecclesiastical
regulations of the entire country. He introduced the local self-management in
rural regions, mainly in the Northeast of Russia, populated by the state
peasantry. During his reign the first printing press was introduced to Russia
(although the first Russian printers Ivan Fedorov and Pyotr Mstislavets had to
flee from Moscow to the Grand Duchy of Lithuania). In 1547 Hans Schlitte, the
agent of tsar Ivan, employed handicraftsmen in Germany for work in Russia.
However all these handicraftsmen were arrested in Lübeck at the request of
Poland and Livonia. The German merchant companies ignored the new port built by
tsar Ivan on the river Narva in 1550 and delivered the goods still in the
Baltic ports owned by Livonia. Russia remained isolated from sea trade. Ivan
formed new trading connections, opening up the White Sea and the port of
Arkhangelsk to the Muscovy Company of English merchants. In 1552 he defeated
the Kazan Khanate, whose armies had repeatedly devastated the Northeast of
Russia, and annexed its territory. In 1556, he annexed the Astrakhan Khanate
and destroyed the largest slave market on the river Volga. These gains of tsar
complicated the migration of aggressive nomadic hordes from Asia to Europe
through Volga and transformed Russia into a multinational and multiconfessional
state. He had St. Basil's Cathedral constructed in Moscow to commemorate the
seizure of Kazan. Legend has it that he was so impressed with the structure
that he had the architects blinded, so that they could never design anything as
beautiful again. Ivan married 7 times, sometimes divorcing his wife a week
after the marriage. Other less positive aspects of this period include the
introduction of the first laws restricting the mobility of the peasants, which
would eventually lead to serfdom. The dramatic change in Ivan's personality is
traditionally linked to his near-fatal illness in 1553 and the death of his
first wife, Anastasia Romanovna. Ivan suspected boyars of poisoning his wife
and of plotting to replace him on the throne with his cousin, Vladimir of
Staritsa. In addition, during that illness Ivan had asked the boyars to swear
an oath of allegiance to his eldest son, an infant at the time. Many boyars
refused, deeming the tsar's health too hopeless to survive. This angered Ivan
and added to his distrust of the boyars. There followed brutal reprisals and
murders of innocent people, including Metropolitan Philip and Prince Alexander
Gorbatyi-Shuisky. Also problematic was the 1565 formation of the Oprichnina.
The Oprichnina was the section of Russia (mainly the Northeast) directly ruled
by Ivan and policed by his personal servicemen, the Oprichniki. This whole
system of Oprichnina has been viewed by some historians as a tool against the
omnipotent hereditary nobility of Russia (boyars) who opposed the absolutist
drive of the tsar, while others have interpreted it as a sign of the paranoia
and mental deterioration of the tsar. Later reign The latter half of Ivan's
reign was far less successful. Although Khan Devlet I Giray of Crimea
repeatedly devastated Moscow region and even set Moscow on fire in 1571, the
tsar supported Yermak's conquest of Tatar Siberia, adopting a policy of
empire-building, which led him to launch a victorious war of seaward expansion
to the west, only to find himself fighting the Swedes, Lithuanians, Poles, and
the Livonian Teutonic Knights. For twenty-four years the Livonian War dragged
on, damaging the Russian economy and military but winning Russia no territory.
In the 1560s the combination of drought and famine, Polish-Lithuanian raids,
Tatar attacks, and the sea-trading blockade carried out by the Swedes, Poles
and the Hanseatic League devastated Russia. The price of grain increased by a
factor of ten. Epidemics of the plague killed 10,000 in Novgorod. In 1570 the
plague killed 600-1000 in Moscow daily. Ivan's closest advisor, Prince Andrei
Kurbsky, defected to the Lithuanians, headed the Lithuanian troops and
devastated the Russian region of Velikie Luki. This treachery deeply hurt Ivan.
As the Oprichnina continued, Ivan became mentally unstable and physically
disabled. In one week, he could easily pass from the most depraved orgies to
prayers and fasting in a remote northern monastery. Because he gradually grew
unbalanced and violent, the Oprichniks under Malyuta Skuratov soon got out of
hand and became murderous thugs. They massacred nobles and peasants, and
conscripted men to fight the war in Livonia. Depopulation and famine ensued.
What had been by far the richest area of Russia became the poorest. In a
dispute with the wealthy city of Novgorod, Ivan ordered the Oprichniks to murder
inhabitants of this city, which was never to regain its former prosperity.
Between thirty and forty thousand might have been killed during the infamous
Massacre of Novgorod in 1570; many others were deported elsewhere. Yet the
official death toll named 1,500 of Novgorod big people (nobility) and only
mentioned about the same number of smaller people. Many modern researchers
estimate number of victims between two and three thousand. (After the famine
and epidemics of 1560s the population of Novgorod did not exceed
10,000-20,000.) In 1581, Ivan beat his pregnant daughter-in-law for wearing
immodest clothing, causing a miscarriage. His son, also named Ivan, upon
learning of this, engaged in a heated argument with his father, which resulted
in Ivan striking his son in the head with his pointed staff, causing his son's
(accidental) death. This event is depicted in the famous painting by Ilya
Repin, Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16, 1581 better
known as Ivan the Terrible killing his son. Death and legacy Ivan's murder of
his son brought about the extinction of the Rurik Dynasty and the Time of
Troubles. Although it is thought by many that Ivan died while setting up a
chess board, it is more likely that he died while playing with little boys
along with Bogdan Belsky on March 18 1584. When Ivan's tomb was opened during
renovations in the 1960s, his remains were examined and discovered to contain
very high amounts of mercury, indicating a high probability that he was
poisoned. Modern suspicion falls on his advisors Belsky and Boris Godunov (who
became tsar in 1598). Three days earlier, Ivan had allegedly attempted to rape
Irina, Godunov's sister and Fyodor's wife. Her cries attracted Godunov and
Belsky to the noise, whereupon Ivan let Irina go, but Belski and Godunov
considered themselves marked for death. The tradition says that they either
poisoned or strangled Ivan in fear for their own lives. The mercury found in
Ivan's remains may also be related to treatment for syphilis, which it is speculated
that Ivan had. Upon Ivan's death, the ravaged kingdom was left to his unfit and
childless son Feodor. Epistles D.S. Mirsky called Ivan "a pamphleteer of
genius". His epistles are the masterpieces of old Russian (perhaps all
Russian) political journalism. They may be too full of texts from the
Scriptures and the Fathers, and their Church Slavonic is not always correct.
But they are full of cruel irony, expressed in pointedly forcible terms. Ivan's
repentance: he asks a father superior of the Pskovo-Pechorsky Monastery to let
him take the tonsure at his monastery. The shameless bully and the great
polemicist are seen together in a flash when he taunts runaway Kurbsky with the
question: "If you are so sure of your righteousness, why did you run away and
not prefer martyrdom at my hands?" Such strokes were well calculated to
drive his correspondent into a rage. "The part of the cruel tyrant
elaborately upbraiding an escaped victim while he continues torturing those in
his reach may be detestable, but Ivan plays it with truly Shakespearian breadth
of imagination". Besides his letters to Kurbsky he wrote other satirical
invectives to men in his power. The best is his letter to the abbot of the
Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery, where he pours out all the poison of his grim
irony on the unascetic life of the boyars, shorn monks, and those exiled by his
order. His picture of their luxurious life in the citadel of ascetism is a
masterpiece of trenchant sarcasm. Sobriquet The English word terrible is
usually used to translate the Russian word grozny in Ivan's nickname, but the
modern English usage of terrible, with a pejorative connotation of bad or evil,
does not precisely represent the intended meaning. Grozny's meaning is closer
to the original usage of terrible—inspiring fear or terror, dangerous (as in
Old English in one's danger), formidable, threatening, or awesome. Perhaps a
translation closer to the intended sense would be Ivan the Fearsome. (Compare
the city name Grozny.) The Russian people gave Ivan this nickname after he
seized Kazan.
Preceded by: Vasili III Grand Prince of Muscovy
1533–1547
Succeeded by: became Tsar
Succeeded by: Feodor I
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