Simeon Bekbulatovich Explained

Simeon Bekbulatovich
Succession:Grand Prince of all Russia
Reign:October 1575 – September 1576
Predecessor:Ivan IV
Successor:Ivan IV
Succession1:Khan of the Tatar Qasim Khanate
Reign1:1567–1573
Predecessor1:Shahghali
Successor1:Mustafa Ali
Succession2:Grand Prince of Tver
Reign2:1576–1585
Reg-Type2:Monarch
Regent2:Ivan IV
Spouse:Anastasia Mstislavskaya
Death Place:Moscow, Russia
Burial Place:Simonov Monastery
Religion:Russian Orthodox
prev. Islam

Simeon Bekbulatovich (Russian: Симеон Бекбулатович; born Sain-Bulat; Russian: Саин-Булат; died) was a Russian statesman of Tatar origin who briefly served as the figurehead ruler of Russia from 1575 to 1576.[1] He was a descendant of Genghis Khan.[2]

He was born into a Muslim family and served as the khan of the Khanate of Qasim before converting to Christianity and becoming an aide to Ivan IV of Russia. He participated in the Livonian War as a commander of the main regiment (bol'shoi polk) of the Russian army.[3] In 1575, Ivan made Simeon the grand prince of all Russia,[4] though Ivan remained the de facto ruler and returned to his throne a year later. Subsequently, Simeon became the grand prince of Tver and Torzhok (1576–1585). He went blind (or was blinded) in 1595 and was allegedly tonsured as a Christian monk under the monastic name Stefan in 1606.

Biography

Simeon was the son of Bek-Bulat, and a great-grandson of Ahmed Khan bin Küchük.[5] The first mention of Simeon is in the Supplement to the Nikon Chronicle in 1561 when he came to Moscow in the entourage of his aunt, Kochenei (baptized as Maria), when she married Ivan IV that year.[6] [7] The earliest evidence he was the khan of Qasim comes from a statement from the Russian ambassador to Constantinople, Ivan Novosiltsev, to the Ottoman sultan Selim II in 1570.[8] [6]

In 1575 (either September or October),[9] Ivan IV appointed Simeon as the grand prince of all Russia,[10] and styled himself merely as "Ivan of Moscow". Historians have a number of opinions concerning why Ivan did this. According to the most popular theory by contemporary diplomat Giles Fletcher, the Elder, Ivan aimed to confiscate the land that belonged to monasteries without attracting the ire of the Church. Simeon issued the decrees of confiscation instead of Ivan, while Ivan pretended to disagree. During his one-year "rule" in the Moscow Kremlin, Simeon married Anastasia Mstislavskaya, the great-great-granddaughter of Ivan III.[1] [11]

In September 1576,[9] Simeon stepped down as the grand prince of all Russia as Ivan returned to the throne, and was given the title of grand prince of Tver and Torzhok.[12] In 1585, Tsar Feodor Ivanovich removed his title as grand prince of Tver and Torzhok, and confined him to his estate at Kushalov. In 1595, Simeon went blind. According to Jacques Margeret, Simeon blamed Spanish wine that Boris Godunov sent him for his birthday. When Boris was elected tsar in 1598, he required those at the court to sign a loyalty oath, which prohibited them from recognizing Simeon as tsar or corresponding with him. False Dmitry I required Simeon to be tonsured at the Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery, where he took the monastic name Stefan on April 3, 1606. When Vasilii Shuiskii was elected tsar, he ordered the elder Stefan taken to the Solovki Monastery on May 29, 1606.[1]

In 1612, as the result of a decree issued by Prince Dmitry Pozharsky and "on the advice of all the land" (Zemsky Sobor), Stefan was returned to the Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery. Under Tsar Mikhail Fedorovich, he returned to Moscow and resided in the Simonov Monastery until he died in 1616. He was buried in the Simonov Monastery next to his wife, who had died June 7, 1607, after having been veiled as the nun Alexandra.

Further reading

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: ru . How a Tatar Khan ruled Russia . Russia Beyond The Headlines . 2019-09-27 . 2020-01-29.
  2. Book: Perrie . Maureen . Pavlov . Andrei . Ivan the Terrible . 2014 . Routledge . 9781317894681 . 173 . 6 November 2020.
  3. Sinbirskii sbornik, vol. 1: Chast' istoricheskaia (Moscow: A. Semen, 1844), 31-35, 39.
  4. Book: Payne . Robert . Romanoff . Nikita . Ivan the Terrible . 2002 . Cooper Square Press . New York, NY . 0815412290 . 361 . 1. Cooper Square Press.
  5. Book: Pavlov . A. P. . Perrie . Maureen . Pavlov . Andrej Pavlovič . Ivan the Terrible . 2003 . Pearson/Longman . London . 9780582099487 . 173 . 1..
  6. Book: Russia's people of empire: life stories from Eurasia, 1500 to the present . 2012 . Indiana Univ. Press . Bloomington, Ind. . 9780253001764 . 28.
  7. Polnoe sobranie russkikh letopisei, 13:333.
  8. Puteshestviia russkikh poslov XVI-XVII vv., edited by D. S. Likhachev (Moscow: Akademiia nauk SSSR, 1954), 77. Novosil'tsev left Moscow on January 24, 1570, so Sain Bulat had to be khan by then.
  9. Book: Rude & barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers . 1968 . Univ. of Wisconsin Press . Madison, Wis. . 0299047644 . 166.
  10. Book: De Madariaga . Isabel . Ivan the Terrible: first Tsar of Russia . 2006 . Yale University Press . New Haven London . 0300119739 . 301 . First printed in paperback.
  11. Book: Norris . Stephen M. . Sunderland . Willard . Russia's people of empire: life stories from Eurasia, 1500 to the present . 2012 . Indiana University Press . Bloomington . 0253001846 . 31.
  12. Book: De Madariaga . Isabel . Ivan the Terrible: first Tsar of Russia . 2006 . Yale University Press . New Haven London . 9780300119732 . 311 . First printed in paperback.