The Many Deaths of Ivan the Terrible and Their Interpretations
Palabras clave:
Christian death, Ivan the Terrible, Muscovite historiography, Russian Orthodox Church, Succession to the throneResumen
Born on August 25th 1530, Ivan the Terrible lived a relatively long life but was thought to be dead many times. During his childhood many rumors about his death circulated, contributing to the instability of court politics. In March 1553, shortly after his triumph, the conquest of Kazan (October 2 1552), he fell extremely ill, and a tragicomedy was played around his bed about the would-be succession. The many tales about this episode do not add up and were rewritten several times. Ivan’s real death, on March 18th 1584, is recorded in very different ways in English and Russian sources. This paper explores the mechanics of History writing in Muscovy and the birth of Kremlinology abroad. The positivist approach consists of eliminating “errors” in each tale and establishing a plausible reconstruction of the chain of events. We try to understand the purpose of each narration and the reason why some elements are kept or omitted.Descargas
Descargas
Publicado
Cómo citar
Número
Sección
Licencia
Los autores conservan los derechos de autor sobre sus trabajos y garantizan a la revista el derecho de ser la primera publicación del mismo. Los artículos se publican bajo la licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial 4.0 Internacional (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0), lo que permite a los lectores y otros investigadores copiar, redistribuir, remezclar, transformar y construir a partir del material, siempre que se respeten las condiciones establecidas.