Interesting facts about Vasily III. The reign of Vasily III (briefly) Interesting facts about Vasily 3
Vasily III Ivanovich in baptism Gabriel, in monasticism Varlaam (born March 25, 1479 - death December 3, 1533) - Grand Duke of Vladimir and Moscow (1505-1533), Sovereign of All Rus'. Parents: father John III Vasilyevich the Great, mother Byzantine princess Sophia Paleologus. Children: from first marriage: George (presumably); from his second marriage: and Yuri.
Vasily 3 short biography (article review)
The son of John III from his marriage to Sophia Palaeologus, Vasily the Third was distinguished by his pride and inaccessibility, punishing the descendants of appanage princes and boyars under his control who dared to contradict him. He is “the last collector of the Russian land.” After annexing the last appanages (Pskov, the northern principality), he completely destroyed the appanage system. He fought with Lithuania twice, following the teachings of the Lithuanian nobleman Mikhail Glinsky, who entered his service, and finally, in 1514, he was able to take Smolensk from the Lithuanians. The war with Kazan and Crimea was difficult for Vasily, but ended in the punishment of Kazan: Trade was diverted from there to the Makaryev fair, which was later moved to Nizhny. Vasily divorced his wife Solomonia Saburova and married the princess, which further aroused the boyars who were dissatisfied with him against him. From this marriage Vasily had a son, Ivan IV the Terrible.
Biography of Vasily III
The beginning of the reign. Bride's choice
The new Grand Duke of Moscow Vasily III Ivanovich began his reign by resolving the “throne issue” with his nephew Dmitry. Immediately after his father’s death, he ordered that he be shackled “in iron” and put in a “close ward,” where he died 3 years later. Now the tsar had no “legitimate” opponents in the competition for the grand-ducal throne.
Vasily ascended the Moscow throne at the age of 26. Having later shown himself to be a skilled politician, even under his father he was preparing for the role of autocrat in the Russian state. It was not in vain that he refused a bride from among the foreign princesses and for the first time a bridesmaid ceremony for Russian brides was organized at the Grand Duke's palace. 1505, summer - 1,500 noble maidens were brought to the bride.
A special boyar commission, after a careful selection, presented the heir to the throne with ten worthy candidates in all respects. Vasily chose Salomonia, the daughter of boyar Yuri Saburov. This marriage would be unsuccessful - the royal couple had no children, and, first of all, no son-heir. In the first half of the 20s, the problem of an heir for the grand ducal couple worsened to the limit. In the absence of an heir to the throne, Prince Yuri automatically became the main contender for the kingdom. Vasily developed a hostile relationship with him. It is a well-known fact that the appanage prince himself and his entourage were under the watchful eye of informants. The transfer of supreme power in the state to Yuri generally promised a large-scale shake-up in the ruling elite of Russia.
According to the strictness of the observed tradition, the second marriage of an Orthodox Christian in Russia was possible only in two cases: the death or voluntary departure of the first wife to a monastery. The sovereign's wife was healthy and, contrary to the official report, had no intention of voluntarily entering a monastery. Salomonia's disgrace and forced tonsure at the end of November 1525 completed this act of family drama, which split Russian educated society for a long time.
Grand Duke Vasily III Ivanovich on the hunt
Foreign policy
Vasily the Third continued his father’s policy of creating a unified Russian state, “followed the same rules in foreign and domestic policy; showed modesty in the actions of monarchical power, but knew how to command; loved the benefits of peace, not fearing war and not missing the opportunity to gain important for the sovereign power; less famous for his military happiness, more for his dangerous cunning for his enemies; did not humiliate Russia, he even exalted it...” (N. M. Karamzin).
At the very beginning of his reign, in 1506, he launched an unsuccessful campaign against the Kazan Khan, which ended in the flight of the Russian army. This beginning greatly inspired King Alexander of Lithuania, who, relying on the youth and inexperience of Vasily III, offered him peace with the condition of returning the lands conquered by John III. A rather stern and brief answer was given to such a proposal - the Russian Tsar owns only his own lands. But, in the letter of accession to the throne sent to Alexander, Vasily rejected the complaints of the Lithuanian boyars against the Russians as unfair, and reminded of the inadmissibility of converting Elena (Alexander’s wife and sister of Vasily III) and other Christians living in Lithuania to Catholicism.
Alexander realized that a young but strong king had ascended the throne. When Alexander died in August 1506, Vasily tried to offer himself as king of Lithuania and Poland in order to end the confrontation with Russia. However, Alexander’s brother Sigismund, who did not want peace with Russia, ascended the throne. Out of frustration, the sovereign tried to recapture Smolensk, but after several battles there were no winners, and a peace was concluded, according to which all the lands conquered under John III remained with Russia and Russia promised not to encroach on Smolensk and Kyiv. As a result of this peace treaty, the Glinsky brothers appeared in Russia for the first time - noble Lithuanian nobles who had a conflict with Sigismund and who came under the protection of the Russian Tsar.
By 1509, external relations had been regulated: letters were received from Russia’s longtime friend and ally, the Crimean Khan Mengli-Girey, which confirmed the invariability of his attitude towards Russia; A 14-year peace treaty was concluded with Livonia, with the exchange of prisoners and the resumption of: security of movement in both powers and trade on the same mutually beneficial terms. It was also important that, according to this agreement, the Germans broke off allied relations with Poland.
Domestic policy
Tsar Vasily believed that nothing should limit the power of the Grand Duke. He enjoyed the active support of the Church in the fight against the feudal boyar opposition, harshly dealing with those who expressed dissatisfaction.
Now Vasily the Third could engage in domestic politics. He turned his attention to Pskov, which proudly bore the name of “brother of Novgorod.” Using the example of Novgorod, the sovereign knew where the boyars' freedom could lead, and therefore wanted to subjugate the city to his power without leading to a rebellion. The reason for this was the refusal of the landowners to pay tribute, everyone quarreled and the governor had no choice but to turn to the court of the Grand Duke.
The young tsar went to Novgorod in January 1510, where he received a large embassy of Pskovites, which consisted of 70 noble boyars. The trial ended with all the Pskov boyars being put into custody, because the tsar was dissatisfied with their insolence against the governor and injustice against the people. In connection with this, the sovereign demanded that the Pskov residents abandon the veche and accept the sovereign's governors in all their cities.
Noble boyars, feeling guilty and not having the strength to resist the Grand Duke, wrote a letter to the people of Pskov, asking them to agree to the demands of the Grand Duke. It was sad for the free people of Pskov to gather in the square for the last time to the ringing of the veche bell. At this meeting, the sovereign’s ambassadors announced their consent to submit to the royal will. Vasily III arrived in Pskov, restored order there and installed new officials; took the oath of allegiance to all residents and founded the new church of St. Xenia; the commemoration of this saint occurred precisely on the day of the end of the freedom of the city of Pskov. Vasily sent 300 noble Pskovites to the capital and went home a month later. Following him, the veche bell of the Pskovites was soon taken.
By 1512, relations with the Crimean Khanate worsened. The intelligent and loyal Khan Mengli-Girey, who was a reliable ally of John III, grew very old, became decrepit, and his sons, the young princes Akhmat and Burnash-Girey, began to lead politics. Sigismund, who hated Russia even more than Alexander, was able to bribe the brave princes and incite them to campaign against Rus'. Sigismund was especially furious when he lost Smolensk in 1514, which had been under Lithuania for 110 years.
Sigismund regretted that he released Mikhail Glinsky, who diligently served the new land, to Russia, and began to demand the return of the Glinskys. M. Glinsky made special efforts during the capture of Smolensk; he hired skilled foreign soldiers. Mikhail had the hope that, out of gratitude to his services, the sovereign would make him the sovereign prince of Smolensk. However, the Grand Duke did not love and did not trust Glinsky - he who cheated once will cheat a second time. In general, Vasily struggled with inheritances. And so it happened: offended, Mikhail Glinsky went over to Sigismund, but fortunately, the governors were quickly able to catch him and, by order of the tsar, he was sent in chains to Moscow.
1515 - the Crimean Khan Mengli-Girey died, and his throne was inherited by his son Muhamed-Girey, who, unfortunately, did not inherit many of his father’s good qualities. During his reign (until 1523), the Crimean army acted either on the side of Lithuania or Russia - everything depended on who would pay the most.
The power of Russia of that era aroused the respect of various countries. Ambassadors from Constantinople brought a letter and an affectionate letter from the famous and terrible Turkish Sultan Soliman for all of Europe. Good diplomatic relations with him frightened the eternal enemies of Russia - Mukhamet-Girey and Sigismund. The latter, without even arguing about Smolensk, made peace for 5 years.
Solomonia Saburova. Painting by P. Mineeva
Unification of Russian lands
Such a respite gave the Grand Duke time and strength to fulfill his and his great father’s long-standing intention - to completely destroy the appanages. And he succeeded. The Ryazan inheritance, ruled by the young Prince John, almost seceded from Russia, with the active participation of Khan Mukhamet. Put in prison, Prince John fled to Lithuania, where he died, and the Ryazan principality, which had been separate and independent for 400 years, merged in 1521 into the Russian state. There remained the Seversk Principality, where Vasily Shemyakin, the grandson of the famous Dmitry Shemyaka, who troubled power during the times, reigned. This Shemyakin, so similar to his grandfather, had long been suspected of friendship with Lithuania. 1523 - his correspondence with Sigismund was revealed, and this is already open treason to the fatherland. Prince Vasily Shemyakin was thrown into prison, where he died.
Thus, the dream of uniting Rus', fragmented into appanage principalities, into a single whole under the rule of one king was realized.
1523 - the Russian city of Vasilsursk was founded on Kazan soil, and this event marked the beginning of the decisive conquest of the Kazan kingdom. And although throughout his reign Vasily the Third had to fight the Tatars and repel their raids, in 1531 the Kazan Khan Enalei became a novice of the Russian Tsar, recognizing his power.
Divorce and marriage
Everything was going well in the Russian state, but Vasily III did not have an heir for 20 years of marriage. And various boyar parties began to be formed for and against a divorce from the barren Saburova. The king needs an heir. 1525 - a divorce took place, and Solomonida Saburova was tonsured a nun, and in 1526 Tsar Vasily Ivanovich married Elena Vasilievna Glinskaya, the niece of the traitor Mikhail Glinsky, who in 1530 gave birth to her first son and heir to the throne, John IV (the Terrible ).
Elena Glinskaya - second wife of Grand Duke Vasily III
Board results
The first signs of the prosperity of the Russian state were successfully developing trade. The largest centers besides Moscow were Nizhny Novgorod, Smolensk and Pskov. The Grand Duke cared about the development of trade, which he constantly pointed out to his governors. Handicrafts also developed. Craft suburbs - settlements - emerged in many cities. The country provided itself, at that time, with everything necessary and was ready to export more goods than import what it needed. The wealth of Rus', the abundance of arable land, forest lands with precious furs, are unanimously noted by foreigners who visited Muscovy in
those years.
Under Vasily III, urban planning and the construction of Orthodox churches continued to develop. The Italian Fioravanti builds in Moscow, following the model of the Assumption Cathedral in Vladimir, the Kremlin Assumption Cathedral, which becomes the main shrine of Muscovite Rus'. The cathedral will be an image for Russian temple craftsmen for many decades.
Under Vasily III, the construction of the Kremlin was completed - in 1515 a wall was erected along the Neglinnaya River. The Moscow Kremlin is turning into one of the best fortresses in Europe. Being the residence of the monarch, the Kremlin becomes a symbol of the Russian state right up to the present day.
Death
Vasily III always had enviable health and he was not seriously ill with anything, probably because it was so unexpected that an abscess on his leg led him to death 2 months later. He died on the night of December 3-4, 1533, having managed to give all orders for the state, transferring power to his 3-year-old son John, and the guardianship of his mother, the boyars and his brothers - Andrei and Yuri; and before his last breath he managed to accept the schema.
Vasily was called a kind and affectionate sovereign, and therefore it is not surprising that his death was so sad for the people. Throughout the 27 years of his reign, the Grand Duke worked hard for the good and greatness of his state and was able to achieve a lot.
That night, for the history of the Russian state, “the last collector of the Russian land” passed away.
According to one of the legends, during her tonsure, Solomonia was pregnant, gave birth to a son, George, and handed him over “to safe hands,” and everyone was told that the newborn had died. Subsequently, this child will become the famous robber Kudeyar, who with his gang will rob rich carts. This legend interested Ivan the Terrible very much. The hypothetical Kudeyar was his older half-brother, which means that he could lay claim to the royal throne. This story is most likely a folk fiction.
For the second time, Vasily III married a Lithuanian woman, young Elena Glinskaya. Only 4 years later Elena gave birth to her first child, Ivan Vasilyevich. As the legend goes, at the hour of the baby's birth, a terrible thunderstorm allegedly broke out. Thunder struck from the clear sky and shook the earth to its foundations. The Kazan Khansha, having learned about the birth of an heir, said to the Moscow messengers: “A king was born to you, and he has two teeth: with one he can eat us (Tatars), and with the other you.”
There was a rumor that Ivan was an illegitimate son, but this is unlikely: an examination of the remains of Elena Glinskaya showed that she had red hair. As you know, Ivan was also red-haired.
Vasily III was the first Russian tsar to shave his chin hair. As legend has it, he trimmed his beard to make himself look younger to his young wife. He did not last long in a beardless state.
Vasily 3 (reigned 1505-1533) was marked by the final gathering of Russian lands around Moscow. It was under Vasily III that the process of unifying the lands around Moscow was completed and the process of creating the Russian state continued to take shape.
Most historians agree that Vasily 3, as a ruler and personality, was greatly inferior to his father, Ivan 3. It is difficult to say for sure whether this is true or not. The fact is that Vasily continued the business (and successfully) started by his father, but did not have time to start his own important business.
The end of the appanage system
Ivan 3 transferred all power to Vasily 3, and ordered his younger sons to obey their elder brother in everything. Vasily 3 inherited 66 cities (30 to his other sons), as well as the right to determine and conduct the country's foreign policy and mint coins. The appanage system was preserved, but the power of the Grand Duke over others became increasingly stronger. The system of Rus' of that period was very accurately described by Joseph Volotsky (church leader), who called the reign of Vasily 3 the reign of the “Sovereign Sovereign of All Russian Lands.” Sovereign, Sovereign- that’s how it really was. There were sovereigns who owned appanages, but over them there was a single sovereign.
In the fight against the estates, Vasily 3 showed cunning - he forbade his brothers, the owners of the estates, to marry. Accordingly, they had no children and their power died away, and the lands became subordinate to Moscow. By 1533, only 2 estates were settled: Yuri Dmitrovsky and Andrei Staritsky.
Domestic policy
Land unification
The domestic policy of Vasily 3 continued the path of his father, Ivan 3: the unification of Russian lands around Moscow. The main initiatives in this regard were as follows:
- Subjugation of independent principalities.
- Strengthening the borders of the state.
In 1510, Vasily 3 subjugated Pskov. The Pskov prince Ivan Repnya-Obolensky, who was a cruel and unprincipled man, contributed greatly to this. The people of Pskov did not like him and staged riots. As a result, the prince was forced to turn to the main Sovereign, asking him to pacify the citizens. After this there are no exact sources. It is only known that Vasily 3 arrested the ambassadors who were sent to him from the townspeople, and offered them the only solution to the problem - submission to Moscow. That's what they decided on. To gain a foothold in this region, the Grand Duke sends 300 of the most influential families of Pskov to the central regions of the country.
In 1521, the Ryazan principality submitted to the authorities of Moscow, and in 1523, the last southern principalities. Thus, the Sami main task of the internal policy of the reign of Vasily 3 was solved - the country was united.
Map of the Russian state under Vasily 3
A map showing the last stages of the unification of Russian lands around Moscow. Most of these changes took place during the reign of Prince Vasily Ivanovich.
Foreign policy
The expansion of the Russian state under Vasily 3 also turned out to be quite extensive. The country managed to strengthen its influence, despite its fairly strong neighbors.
Western direction
War of 1507-1508
In 1507-1508 there was a war with Lithuania. The reason was that the border Lithuanian principalities began to swear allegiance to Rus'. The last to do this was Prince Mikhail Glinsky (before that the Odoevskys, Belskys, Vyazemskys and Vorotynskys). The reason for the reluctance of the princes to be part of Lithuania lies in religion. Lithuania banned Orthodoxy and forcibly introduced Catholicism to the local population.
In 1508, Russian troops besieged Minsk. The siege was successful and Sigismund 1 asked for peace. As a result, all the lands that Ivan III annexed were assigned to Russia. This was a big breakthrough and an important step in foreign policy and in strengthening the Russian state.
War of 1513-1522
In 1513, Vasily 3 learned that Lithuania had reached an agreement with the Crimean Khanate and was preparing for a military campaign. The prince decided to take the lead and besieged Smolensk. The assault on the city was difficult and the city repelled two attacks, but ultimately, in 1514, Russian troops took the city. But in the same year, the Grand Duke lost the battle of Orsha, which allowed the Lithuanian-Polish troops to approach Smolensk. It was not possible to take the city.
Minor battles continued until 1525, when peace was signed for 5 years. As a result of the peace, Russia retained Smolensk, and the border with Lithuania now ran along the Dnieper River.
Southern and eastern directions
The eastern and southern directions of the foreign policy of Prince Vasily Ivanovich should be considered together, since the Crimean Khan and the Kazan Khan acted together. Back in 1505, the Kazan Khan invaded Russian lands with plunder. In response, Vasily 3 sends an army to Kazan, forcing the enemy to again swear allegiance to Moscow, as was the case under Ivan 3.
1515-1516 - the Crimean army reaches Tula, devastating the lands along the way.
1521 - the Crimean and Kazan khans simultaneously began a military campaign against Moscow. Having reached Moscow, the Crimean Khan demanded that Moscow pay tribute, as it was before, and Vasily 3 agreed, since the enemy was numerous and strong. After this, the Khan's army went to Ryazan, but the city did not surrender, and they returned to their lands.
1524 - the Crimean Khanate captures Astrakhan. All Russian merchants and the governor were killed in the city. Vasily 3 concludes a truce and sends an army to Kazan. Kazan ambassadors arrive in Moscow for negotiations. They dragged on for several years.
1527 - on the Oka River, the Russian army defeated the army of the Crimean Khan, thereby stopping constant raids from the south.
1530 - the Russian army is sent to Kazan and takes the city by storm. A ruler is installed in the city - a Moscow protege.
Key dates
- 1505-1533 – reign of Vasily 3
- 1510 – annexation of Pskov
- 1514 – annexation of Smolensk
The king's wives
In 1505, Vasily 3 decided to get married. A real show was organized for the prince - 500 noble girls from all over the country came to Moscow. The prince's choice settled on Solomnia Saburova. They lived together for 20 years, but the princess could not give birth to an heir. As a result, by the decision of the prince, Solomnia was tonsured as a nun and sent to the Suzdal convent of the Intercession.
In fact, Vasily 3 divorced Solomonia, violating all the laws of that time. Moreover, for this it was even necessary to remove Metropolitan Varlaam, who refused to arrange a divorce. Ultimately, after the change of metropolitan, Solomonia was accused of witchcraft, after which she was tonsured a nun.
In January 1526, Vasily 3 married Elena Glinskaya. The Glinsky family was not the most noble, but Elena was beautiful and young. In 1530, she gave birth to her first son, who was named Ivan (the future Tsar Ivan the Terrible). Soon another son was born - Yuri.
Maintain power at any cost
The reign of Vasily 3 seemed impossible for a long time, since his father wanted to pass the throne to his grandson from his first marriage, Dmitry. Moreover, in 1498, Ivan 3 crowned Dmitry as king, declaring him heir to the throne. The second wife of Ivan 3, Sophia (Zoya) Paleologus, together with Vasily, organize a conspiracy against Dmitry in order to get rid of a competitor for the inheritance of the throne. The plot was discovered and Vasily was arrested.
- In 1499, Ivan 3 pardoned his son Vasily and released him from prison.
- In 1502, Dmitry himself was accused and imprisoned, and Vasily was blessed to reign.
In light of the events of the struggle for the rule of Russia, Vasily 3 clearly understood that power at any cost is important, and anyone who interferes with this is an enemy. Here, for example, are the words in the chronicle:
I am king and lord by right of blood. I didn’t ask anyone for titles or buy them. There are no laws that require me to obey anyone. Believing in Christ, I reject any rights begged from others.
Prince Vasily 3 Ivanovich
Predecessor: |
|
Successor: |
Ivan IV the Terrible |
Religion: |
Orthodoxy |
Birth: |
|
Buried: |
Archangel Cathedral in Moscow |
Dynasty: |
Rurikovich |
Sofia Paleolog |
|
1) Solomonia Yuryevna Saburova 2) Elena Vasilievna Glinskaya |
|
Sons: Ivan IV and Yuri |
Biography
Internal affairs
Unification of Russian lands
Foreign policy
Annexations
Marriages and children
Vasily III Ivanovich (March 25, 1479 - December 3, 1533) - Grand Duke of Moscow in 1505-1533, son of Ivan III the Great and Sophia Paleologus, father of Ivan IV the Terrible.
Biography
Vasily was the second son of Ivan III and the eldest son of Ivan's second wife Sophia Paleologus. In addition to the eldest, he had four younger brothers:
- Yuri Ivanovich, Prince of Dmitrov (1505-1536)
- Dmitry Ivanovich Zhilka, Prince of Uglitsky (1505-1521)
- Semyon Ivanovich, Prince of Kaluga (1505-1518)
- Andrei Ivanovich, Prince of Staritsky and Volokolamsk (1519-1537)
Ivan III, pursuing a policy of centralization, took care of transferring all power through the line of his eldest son, while limiting the power of his younger sons. Therefore, already in 1470, he declared his eldest son from the first wife of Ivan the Young as his co-ruler. However, in 1490 he died of illness. Two parties were created at court: one grouped around the son of Ivan the Young, the grandson of Ivan III Dmitry Ivanovich and his mother, the widow of Ivan the Young, Elena Stefanovna, and the second around Vasily and his mother. At first, the first party had the upper hand; Ivan III intended to crown his grandson as king. Under these conditions, a conspiracy matured in the circle of Vasily III, which was discovered, and its participants, including Vladimir Gusev, were executed. Vasily and his mother Sophia Paleologue fell into disgrace. However, the grandson's supporters came into conflict with Ivan III, which ended in the grandson's disgrace in 1502. On March 21, 1499, Vasily was declared Grand Duke of Novgorod and Pskov, and in April 1502, Grand Duke of Moscow and Vladimir and All Rus', autocrat, that is, he became co-ruler of Ivan III.
The first marriage was arranged by his father Ivan, who first tried to find him a bride in Europe, but ended up choosing from 1,500 girls presented to the court for this purpose from all over the country. The father of Vasily Solomonia's first wife, Yuri Saburov, was not even a boyar. The Saburov family descended from the Tatar Murza Chet.
Since the first marriage was fruitless, Vasily obtained a divorce in 1525, and at the beginning of the next year (1526) he married Elena Glinskaya, the daughter of the Lithuanian prince Vasily Lvovich Glinsky. Initially, the new wife also could not get pregnant, but in the end, on August 15, 1530, they had a son, Ivan, the future Ivan the Terrible, and then a second son, Yuri.
Internal affairs
Vasily III believed that nothing should limit the power of the Grand Duke, which is why he enjoyed the active support of the Church in the fight against the feudal boyar opposition, harshly dealing with all those who were dissatisfied. In 1521, Metropolitan Varlaam was exiled due to his refusal to participate in Vasily’s fight against Prince Vasily Ivanovich Shemyachich, the Rurik princes Vasily Shuisky and Ivan Vorotynsky were expelled. The diplomat and statesman Ivan Bersen-Beklemishev was executed in 1525 because of criticism of Vasily’s policies, namely because of open rejection of Greek novelty, which came to Rus' with Sophia Paleologus. During the reign of Vasily III, the landed nobility increased, the authorities actively limited the immunity and privileges of the boyars - the state followed the path of centralization. However, the despotic features of government, which were fully manifested already under his father Ivan III and grandfather Vasily the Dark, only intensified even more in the era of Vasily.
In church politics, Vasily unconditionally supported the Josephites. Maxim the Greek, Vassian Patrikeev and other non-covetous people were sentenced at Church councils, some to death, some to imprisonment in monasteries.
During the reign of Vasily III, a new Code of Law was created, which, however, has not reached us.
As Herberstein reported, at the Moscow court it was believed that Vasily was superior in power to all the monarchs of the world and even the emperor. On the front side of his seal there was an inscription: “Great Sovereign Basil, by the grace of God, Tsar and Lord of All Rus'.” On the reverse side it read: “Vladimir, Moscow, Novgorod, Pskov and Tver, and Yugorsk, and Perm, and many lands of the Sovereign.”
The reign of Vasily is the era of the construction boom in Rus', which began during the reign of his father. The Archangel Cathedral was erected in the Moscow Kremlin, and the Ascension Church was built in Kolomenskoye. Stone fortifications are being built in Tula, Nizhny Novgorod, Kolomna, and other cities. New settlements, forts, and fortresses are founded.
Unification of Russian lands
Vasily, in his policy towards other principalities, continued the policy of his father.
In 1509, while in Veliky Novgorod, Vasily ordered the Pskov mayor and other representatives of the city, including all the petitioners who were dissatisfied with them, to gather with him. Arriving to him at the beginning of 1510 on the feast of Epiphany, the Pskovites were accused of distrust of the Grand Duke and their governors were executed. The Pskovites were forced to ask Vasily to accept themselves into his patrimony. Vasily ordered to cancel the meeting. At the last meeting in the history of Pskov, it was decided not to resist and to fulfill Vasily’s demands. On January 13, the veche bell was removed and sent to Novgorod with tears. On January 24, Vasily arrived in Pskov and dealt with it in the same way as his father did with Novgorod in 1478. 300 of the most noble families of the city were resettled to Moscow lands, and their villages were given to Moscow service people.
It was the turn of Ryazan, which had long been in Moscow’s sphere of influence. In 1517, Vasily called to Moscow the Ryazan prince Ivan Ivanovich, who was trying to enter into an alliance with the Crimean Khan, and ordered him to be put into custody (after Ivan was tonsured a monk and imprisoned in a monastery), and took his inheritance for himself. After Ryazan, the Starodub principality was annexed, in 1523 - Novgorod-Severskoye, whose prince Vasily Ivanovich Shemyachich was treated like the Ryazan principality - he was imprisoned in Moscow.
Foreign policy
At the beginning of his reign, Vasily had to start a war with Kazan. The campaign was unsuccessful, the Russian regiments commanded by Vasily’s brother, Prince of Uglitsky Dmitry Ivanovich Zhilka, were defeated, but the Kazan people asked for peace, which was concluded in 1508. At the same time, Vasily, taking advantage of the turmoil in Lithuania after the death of Prince Alexander, put forward his candidacy for the throne of Gediminas. In 1508, the rebellious Lithuanian boyar Mikhail Glinsky was received very cordially in Moscow. The war with Lithuania led to a rather favorable peace for the Moscow prince in 1509, according to which the Lithuanians recognized the capture of his father.
In 1512 a new war with Lithuania began. On December 19, Vasily Yuri Ivanovich and Dmitry Zhilka set out on a campaign. Smolensk was besieged, but it was not possible to take it, and the Russian army returned to Moscow in March 1513. On June 14, Vasily set out on a campaign again, but having sent the governor to Smolensk, he himself remained in Borovsk, waiting for what would happen next. Smolensk was again besieged, and its governor, Yuri Sologub, was defeated in the open field. Only after that Vasily personally came to the troops. But this siege was also unsuccessful: the besieged managed to restore what was being destroyed. Having devastated the outskirts of the city, Vasily ordered a retreat and returned to Moscow in November.
On July 8, 1514, the army led by the Grand Duke again set out for Smolensk, this time his brothers Yuri and Semyon walked with Vasily. A new siege began on July 29. The artillery, led by gunner Stefan, inflicted heavy losses on the besieged. On the same day, Sologub and the clergy of the city came to Vasily and agreed to surrender the city. On July 31, the residents of Smolensk swore allegiance to the Grand Duke, and Vasily entered the city on August 1. Soon the surrounding cities were taken - Mstislavl, Krichev, Dubrovny. But Glinsky, to whom the Polish chronicles attributed the success of the third campaign, entered into relations with King Sigismund. He hoped to get Smolensk for himself, but Vasily kept it for himself. Very soon the conspiracy was exposed, and Glinsky himself was imprisoned in Moscow. Some time later, the Russian army, commanded by Ivan Chelyadinov, suffered a heavy defeat near Orsha, but the Lithuanians were never able to return Smolensk. Smolensk remained a disputed territory until the end of the reign of Vasily III. At the same time, residents of the Smolensk region were taken to the Moscow regions, and residents of the regions closest to Moscow were resettled to Smolensk.
In 1518, Shah Ali Khan, who was friendly towards Moscow, became the Khan of Kazan, but he did not rule for long: in 1521 he was overthrown by his Crimean protege Sahib Giray. In the same year, fulfilling allied obligations with Sigismund, the Crimean Khan Mehmed I Giray announced a raid on Moscow. Together with him, the Kazan Khan emerged from his lands, and near Kolomna, the Crimeans and Kazan people united their armies together. The Russian army under the leadership of Prince Dmitry Belsky was defeated on the Oka River and was forced to retreat. The Tatars approached the walls of the capital. Vasily himself at that time left the capital for Volokolamsk to gather an army. Magmet-Girey did not intend to take the city: having devastated the area, he turned back to the south, fearing the Astrakhan people and the army gathered by Vasily, but taking a letter from the Grand Duke stating that he recognized himself as a loyal tributary and vassal of the Crimea. On the way back, having met the army of governor Khabar Simsky near Pereyaslavl of Ryazan, the khan began, on the basis of this letter, to demand the surrender of his army. But, having asked the Tatar ambassadors with this written commitment to come to his headquarters, Ivan Vasilyevich Obrazets-Dobrynsky (this was Khabar’s family name) retained the letter, and dispersed the Tatar army with cannons.
In 1522, the Crimeans were again expected in Moscow; Vasily and his army even stood on the Oka River. Khan never came, but the danger from the steppe did not pass. Therefore, in the same 1522, Vasily concluded a truce, according to which Smolensk remained with Moscow. The Kazan people still did not calm down. In 1523, in connection with another massacre of Russian merchants in Kazan, Vasily announced a new campaign. Having ruined the Khanate, on the way back he founded the city of Vasilsursk on Sura, which was supposed to become a new reliable place of trade with the Kazan Tatars. In 1524, after the third campaign against Kazan, Sahib Giray, an ally of the Crimea, was overthrown, and Safa Giray was proclaimed khan in his place.
In 1527, the attack of Islam I Giray on Moscow was repelled. Having gathered in Kolomenskoye, Russian troops took up defensive positions 20 km from the Oka. The siege of Moscow and Kolomna lasted five days, after which the Moscow army crossed the Oka and defeated the Crimean army on the Sturgeon River. The next steppe invasion was repulsed.
In 1531, at the request of the Kazan people, the Kasimov prince Jan-Ali Khan was proclaimed khan, but he did not last long - after the death of Vasily, he was overthrown by the local nobility.
Annexations
During his reign, Vasily annexed Pskov (1510), Smolensk (1514), Ryazan (1521), Novgorod-Seversky (1522) to Moscow.
Marriages and children
Wives:
- Solomonia Yuryevna Saburova (from September 4, 1505 to November 1525).
- Elena Vasilievna Glinskaya (from January 21, 1526).
Children (both from his second marriage): Ivan IV the Terrible (1530-1584) and Yuri (1532-1564). According to legend, from the first, after the tonsure of Solomonia, a son, George, was born.
Reign of Vasily III (briefly)
Reign of Vasily III (briefly)
On March 25, 1479, Vasily the Third, the future ruler, was born. Vasily was born into the family of Ivan the Third and was his second son. For this reason, in 1470, the prince announced Ivan the Young (eldest son) as his co-ruler, intending to transfer complete rule to him in the future. However, unfortunately, Ivan died in 1490, and already in 1502, Vasily the Third Ivanovich, who at that time was already the Pskov and Great Novgorod prince, was declared co-ruler and future full heir of Ivan the Third.
In his policy, Vasily the Third fully adhered to the course that was chosen by his father. Its main goals were:
· centralization and strengthening of power;
· defending the interests of the Orthodox Church.
During the reign of Vasily the Third, the Starodub and Novgorod-Seversky principalities, as well as the lands of Ryazan, Smolensk and Pskov, were annexed to the Moscow principality.
Trying to protect Russian borders from active regular Tatar raids from the Crimean and Kazan kingdoms, Vasily the Third introduced the practice of introducing Tatar princes into the service, giving them considerable territories for this. The policy of this ruler in relation to distant states was quite friendly. Vasily even discussed with the Pope about the possibility of a union against Turkey, which was disadvantageous for both, and also tried to develop trade contacts with Austria, Italy and France.
In domestic politics, Vasily the Third concentrated his efforts on strengthening the autocracy, which soon led to the “curtailment” of the privileges of the boyar and prince families. For example, they were removed from solving important state issues, which from now on were taken exclusively by Vasily the Third and his circle of close advisers. At the same time, representatives of the boyar class were able to retain important places in the prince’s army.
Historians indicate that the prince was married twice. The first time was with Solomonia Saburova, who herself was from a noble boyar family, but turned out to be childless. And the second time he married Elena Glinskaya, who bore him two sons, the youngest of whom, Yuri, suffered from dementia.
On December 3, 1533, Moscow Prince Vasily the Third died from a blood poisoning disease, after which he was buried in the Moscow Kremlin (Arkhangelsk Cathedral). In subsequent years, the boyars Belsky and Glinsky acted as regents for the young Ivan.
Grand Duke of Vladimir and Moscow, sovereign of all Rus', who ruled from 1505 to 1533. In an agreement with the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, for the first time in the history of Rus', he was named Emperor of the Rus. He continued his father’s policy of strengthening and centralizing the Russian state and fought the feudal opposition. Father .
Under Vasily III, the last semi-independent fiefs and principalities were annexed to Moscow. The Grand Duke limited the privileges of the princely-boyar aristocracy. He became famous for his victorious war against Lithuania.
Childhood and youth
The future emperor of the Rus was born in the spring of 1479. They named the grand-ducal son in honor of Vasily the Confessor, and at baptism they gave him the Christian name Gabriel. Vasily III is the first son born to her husband Sophia Paleologus, and the second eldest. At the time of his birth, his half-brother was 21 years old. Later, Sophia gave birth to her wife four more sons.
Vasily III's path to the throne was thorny: Ivan the Young was considered the main heir and legal successor of the sovereign. The second competitor for the throne turned out to be the son of Ivan the Young, Dmitry, who was favored by his august grandfather.
In 1490, the eldest son of Ivan III died, but the boyars did not want to see Vasily on the throne and sided with Dmitry and his mother Elena Voloshanka. The second wife of Ivan III, Sophia Paleologue, and her son were supported by the clerks and boyar children who led the orders. Vasily's supporters pushed him into a conspiracy, advising the prince to kill Dmitry Vnuk and, having seized the treasury, flee from Moscow.
The sovereign's people uncovered the conspiracy, those involved were executed, and Ivan III put his rebellious son in custody. Suspecting his wife Sophia Paleologue of bad intentions, the Grand Duke of Moscow began to beware of her. Having learned that sorcerers were coming to see his wife, the sovereign ordered the “dashing women” to be seized and drowned in the Moscow River under cover of darkness.
In February 1498, Dmitry was crowned prince, but a year later the pendulum swung in the opposite direction: the sovereign’s favor abandoned his grandson. Vasily, at the behest of his father, accepted Novgorod and Pskov into the reign. In the spring of 1502, Ivan III took his daughter-in-law Elena Voloshanka and grandson Dmitry into custody, and blessed Vasily for the great reign and declared autocrat of all Rus'.
Board
In domestic politics, Vasily III was a supporter of strict rule and believed that power should not be limited by anything. He dealt with dissatisfied boyars without delay and relied on the church in his confrontation with the opposition. But in 1521, Metropolitan Varlaam fell under the hot hand of the Grand Duke of Moscow: the priest was exiled for his unwillingness to side with the autocrat in the fight against the appanage prince Vasily Shemyakin.
Vasily III considered criticism unacceptable. In 1525, he executed diplomat Ivan Bersen-Beklemishev: the statesman did not accept the Greek innovations introduced into the life of Rus' by the sovereign’s mother Sophia.
Over the years, the despotism of Vasily III intensified: the sovereign, increasing the number of landed nobility, limited the privileges of the boyars. The son and grandson continued the centralization of Rus' begun by his father Ivan III and grandfather Vasily the Dark.
In church politics, the new sovereign sided with the Josephites, who defended the right of monasteries to own land and property. Their non-covetous opponents were executed or imprisoned in monastery cells. During the reign of Ivan the Terrible's father, a new Code of Law appeared, which has not survived to this day.
The era of Vasily III Ivanovich saw a construction boom, which was started by his father. The Archangel Cathedral appeared in the Moscow Kremlin, and the Church of the Ascension of the Lord appeared in Kolomenskoye.
The tsar’s two-story travel palace has also survived to this day - one of the oldest monuments of civil architecture in the Russian capital. There were many such small palaces (“putinkas”) in which Vasily III and the retinue accompanying the tsar rested before entering the Kremlin, but only the palace on Staraya Basmannaya has survived.
Opposite the “putinka” there is another architectural monument - the Church of St. Nikita the Martyr. It appeared in 1518 by order of Vasily III and was originally made of wood. In 1685, a stone church was built in its place. They prayed under the arches of the ancient temple, Fyodor Rokotov,.
In foreign policy, Vasily III was noted as a collector of Russian lands. At the beginning of his reign, the Pskovites asked to annex them to the Moscow Principality. The Tsar did with them as Ivan III had done with the Novgorodians earlier: he resettled 3 hundred noble families from Pskov to Moscow, giving their estates to service people.
After the third siege in 1514, Smolensk was taken, and Vasily III used artillery to conquer it. The annexation of Smolensk became the sovereign's greatest military success.
In 1517, the tsar put into custody the last prince of Ryazan, Ivan Ivanovich, who had conspired with the Crimean Khan. Soon he was tonsured a monk, and his inheritance was extended to the Principality of Moscow. Then the Starodub and Novgorod-Seversky principalities surrendered.
At the beginning of his reign, Vasily III made peace with Kazan, and after breaking the agreement, he went on a campaign against the Khanate. The war with Lithuania was a success. The results of the reign of the Sovereign of All Rus' Vasily Ivanovich was the strengthening of the country, and people learned about it beyond distant borders. Relations began with France and India.
Personal life
Ivan III married his son a year before his death. It was not possible to find a noble wife: Solomonia Saburova, a girl of a non-boyar family, was chosen as Vasily’s wife.
At the age of 46, Vasily III was seriously concerned that his wife had not given him an heir. The boyars advised the king to divorce the barren Solomonia. Metropolitan Daniel approved the divorce. In November 1525, the Grand Duke separated from his wife, who was tonsured a nun at the Nativity Convent.
After the tonsure, rumors arose that the ex-wife imprisoned in the monastery gave birth to a son, Georgy Vasilyevich, but there is no convincing evidence of this. According to popular rumor, the grown son of Saburova and Vasily Ivanovich became the robber Kudeyar, sung in Nekrasov’s “Song of the Twelve Thieves.”
A year after the divorce, the nobleman chose the daughter of the late Prince Glinsky. The girl conquered the king with her education and beauty. For the sake of it, the prince even shaved off his beard, which went against Orthodox traditions.
4 years passed, and the second wife still did not give the king the long-awaited heir. The Emperor and his wife went to Russian monasteries. It is generally accepted that the prayers of Vasily Ivanovich and his wife were heard by the Monk Paphnutius of Borovsky. In August 1530, Elena gave birth to her first child, Ivan, the future Ivan the Terrible. A year later, a second boy appeared - Yuri Vasilyevich.
Death
The Tsar did not enjoy fatherhood for long: when the first-born was 3 years old, the Tsar fell ill. On the way from the Trinity Monastery to Volokolamsk, Vasily III discovered an abscess on his thigh.
After treatment, there was a short-term relief, but after a couple of months the doctor pronounced a verdict that only a miracle could save Vasily: the patient had developed blood poisoning.
Tomb of Vasily III (right)
In December, the king died, blessing his first-born son to the throne. The remains were buried in the Moscow Archangel Cathedral.
Researchers suggest that Vasily III died of terminal cancer, but in the 16th century doctors did not know about such a disease.
Memory
- During the reign of Vasily III, a new Code of Law was created, the Archangel Cathedral and the Church of the Ascension of the Lord were built.
- In 2007, Alexey Shishov published the study “Vasily III: The Last Gatherer of the Russian Land.”
- In 2009, the premiere of the series “Ivan the Terrible,” directed by the director, took place, in which the actor played the role of Vasily III.
- In 2013, Alexander Melnik’s book “Moscow Grand Duke Vasily III and the Cults of Russian Saints” was published.