pilfered_words: Escher bird tessellation, colored with watercolor pencil (Default)
 (responding to this prokopetz post about the False Dmitries)

This is called the Time of Troubles, and it was a catastrophe
 
The thing is, after Ivan the Terrible and his elder son Feodor both died, there was no one left with a reasonable claim to the throne. Literally no one. Feodor’s brother-in-law, Boris Godunov was crowned Tsar, largely because he was already the power behind the throne under Feodor, and it was relatively easy for him to seize power.
 
Dmitry died in 1591, when Feodor was still alive. The investigation into his death found that it was an accident, that he was playing with a knife and had an epileptic seizure; the accepted narrative for centuries was that Godunov had him murdered and covered it up; these days, we have no idea, both narratives sound plausible. 
 
Unfortunately for Godunov, False Dmitry I was super convincing. He managed to convince a whole army, and when Boris Godunov suddenly died mid-war, he took Moscow, killed Godunov’s wife and son, raped his daughter, and crowned himself Tsar.
 
After which he was promptly deposed by Vasily Shuisky, a prominent nobleman descended from Grand Princes of Moscow before they were Tsars; Shuisky was in turn deposed by a coalition known as the Seven Boyars, who looked at False Dmitry II and at the Polish army that was, by now, outside their doorstep and agreed to crown the Polish Prince Władysław; the Polish army tried to forcibly convert the whole country to Catholicism, the country rose in revolt in response, Sweden invaded, False Dmitry III declared himself, was captured and killed, and eventually the resistance kicked the Poles out of Moscow.
 
Once the Poles retreated, the nobles decided to crown one of their own - Mikhail Romanov. He was the great-nephew of Ivan the Terrible’s first wife, but more importantly, he came from a reasonably prominent noble family, he was Russian, and he was young and easy to influence. Which is how the Romanov dynasty first came to power.
 
By the time things settled down, a third of the population was dead, Moscow was in ruins, and a bunch of land had been annexed by various neighbors.
 
Like I said. Catastrophe.
pilfered_words: Escher bird tessellation, colored with watercolor pencil (Default)
www.rferl.org/a/russia-amerian-protest/28002785.html

"American Arrested Near Kremlin For Solo Protest
Moscow police detained an American protester near the Kremlin for her one-woman demonstration in support of jailed Russian activist Ildar Dadin."

I don’t know Ariella well, or at all, really, though we have friends in common. We both grew up in the Greater Boston Russian community, but she is a few years younger than me - and apparently, roughly a hundred times braver. To go out on the streets of Moscow, alone, to protest an unjust sentence knowing that you will be arrested, perhaps kicked out of the country, perhaps prosecuted, perhaps hurt - I couldn’t do it. I know I couldn’t, and I’m ashamed, because Ariella Katz makes it look like the only possible course of action, the only path open to a decent human being.
 
She’s protected, to some extent, by her US citizenship. She was detained twice on Monday, the second time for almost 4 hours, but there were no charges, no years-long prison sentence. And yet - something tells me that if she didn’t have that protection, she would be out there anyway.
 
She said in an interview that when the police asked her if anyone instigated or encouraged her actions, she answered, “Yes! Plato.” Some will think her naive: what is the point, they will say, of telling the Moscow police about Plato and Virgil, as she did? But I admire her for it. People will recognize true integrity and sincerity when they see it, even if they do not understand its sources. Even Russian police have minds that might, possibly, be changed.

(crosspost)

Sep. 3rd, 2016 02:43 pm
pilfered_words: Escher bird tessellation, colored with watercolor pencil (Default)
(Responding to this post about the Gregorian calendar) 

OK, but Russia only adopted the Gregorian calendar in 1918. Less than a hundred years ago! And, of course, many people disapproved, which is why Russians still celebrate the Old New Year on January 14 (which is, of course, January 1 Old Style). These days, of course, it’s more of an excuse to drink and party than any actual attachment to the Julian calendar.
 
The change also had the delightful result of placing the anniversary of the October Revolution on November 7 (and the anniversary of the February Revolution in March, but that anniversary wasn’t a national holiday). 
 
The Russian Orthodox church, I should add, still uses the Julian calendar, so Orthodox Christmas is on January 7. 
 
There is a delightful myth that states that the reason Napoleon won the battle of Austerlitz was because the Austrians and the Russians were using different calendars, and were so inept as to not realize it. Alas, this seems to be untrue. 

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