POPULATION
1600 - 15.5 million
1700 - 17.5 millionMONARCHS
Boris Godunov (1598-1605)
Feodor II (1605)
[False] Dmitri (1606)
Vasily IV (1606-10)
[Interregnum 1610-13]
Michael Romanov (1613-45)
Alexis (1645-76)
Feodor III (1676-82)
Peter the Great (1682-1725)
KEY EVENTS
1598-1613
Time of Troubles
1618 Treaty of Deulino
1648-50 Moscow riots
1649 Ulozheniye
1664 Pereyaslav
Agreement
1667 Truce of Andrusovo
1670 Razin rebellion
1682 Avvakum burnt
CULTURE
Literature
1662
First theatre established in Russia
Education
1687
Slavonic-Greek-Latin Academy founded
|
|
|
|
|
Boris Godonov
|
|
|
|
Michael Romanov
|
|
|
|
Alexis
|
|
|
|
Peter the Great
|
|
|
By the end of the 17th Century, Russia was
emerging as a great European power. During the Time of
Troubles (1598-1613)
the succession to the throne was violently disputed by various
claimants, each backed by a different faction of nobles. Poland
and Sweden took advantage of the chaos to invade. Only in 1613
did the election of Michael Romanov begin a new stable rule.
Russia remained vulnerable to attacks from the Turks and Tatars
in the south. The Romanov dynasty continued the enserfment of
the peasantry that had begun in the sixteenth century. Domestic
unrest erupted in the Copper rebellion (1662), Razin's uprising
(1670) and was also expressed in the religious schism of the
"Old Believers" provoked by Patriarch Nikon's reforms of the
1650's.
Domestic peace allowed the Romanov dynasty to
expand Russia's borders. Russia seized the rich agricultural
lands of the Ukraine from Poland, constructed the port of
Archangelsk to trade by sea with Europe, and began expansion
east of the Urals. Pioneers reached the Pacific coast in 1637.
Russia also wanted a port on the Baltic, but was it was not
until the reign of the ruthless, energetic Peter the Great, that
this aim was achieved. He took advantage of Charles XII of
Sweden's over-ambitious expansionist schemes to forge alliances
with Poland and Denmark. The construction of Saint Petersburg
was started in 1703 on land seized from the defeated Swedes. By
forcing westernization down the throats of his reluctant
subjects, Peter drove Russia into the modern era.
|