
By 989 Oleg's great-grandson Vladimir I became the ruler of a kingdom that extended to as far south as the Black Sea, the Caucasus Mountains, and the lower reaches of the Volga River. Having decided to establish a state religion, Vladimir carefully considered a number of available faiths and decided upon Greek Orthodoxy, thus allying himself with Constantinople and the West. Vladimir was succeeded by Yaroslav the Wise, whose reign marked the apogee of Kievan Russia. Yaroslav codified laws, made shrewd alliances with other states, encouraged the arts, and all the other sorts of things that wise kings do. Unhappily, he decided, in the end, to divide his kingdom among his children and bidding them to cooperate and flourish. Of course, they did nothing of the sort.

Kievan Russia struggled on into the 13th century but was decisively destroyed by the arrival of a new invader, the Mongols. In 1237 Batu Khan, a grandson of the famous Genghis Khan carried out an invasion into Kievan Russia. Over the next three years the Mongols, or Tatars, nearly destroyed all of the major Russian cities with the exceptions of Novgorod and Pskov. The regional princes were not deposed, but they were forced to send regular tribute to the Tatar-Mongol State, which became known as the Empire of the Golden Horde. Invasions of Russia at that time were conducted from the west as well, by the Swedes (1240) and then by the Livonian knights, a regional branch of Teutonic Union. However, they both were defeated by the great warrior Alexander Nevsky, a prince of Novgorod who earned his surname from the victory over the Swedes on the Neva River.
When the Tatars controlled the southwest of Russia, the northeastern cities gradually gained more influence. These cities were Tver at first, and then, around the turn of the 14th century, Moscow. As a sign of the city's importance, the Patriarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church was transferred to the city, making it the spiritual capital of Russia. By the latter part of the century, Moscow felt strong enough to challenge the Tatars directly, and in 1380 Muscovite prince Dmitri Donskoy attacked them. His decisive victory at Kulikovo Field immediately made him a popular hero, though the Tatar retaliation two years later maintained their rule over the city. It wasn't until 1480, after another century had passed, that Moscow was strong enough to throw off the Tatar rule. It was Grand Duke Ivan III, better known as Ivan the Great, who ruled Moscow at that time. Ivan tore up the charter binding it to the Tatar tribute. After doing so, he was effectively in control of the whole country. However, it wasn't until the reign of his grandson, Ivan IV, or Ivan the Terrible, that Russia became a unified state again.
Famous Ivan the Terrible succeeded his father Vasily III as Grand Duke of Moscow in 1533 at the age of three. His mother served as a regent until she died when Ivan was eight. For the next eight years, the young Grand Duke endured a series of regents chosen from among the boyars, or the nobility. Finally, in 1547, he adopted the title of the tsar and set about crushing the power of the boyars, reorganizing the military, and preparing to smite the Tatars. He conquered and sacked Kazan in 1552 and Astrakhan in 1556, having thus concluded the lingering power of the Golden Horde. Ivan's Tatar campaigns opened vast new areas for Russian expansion, and it was during his reign that the conquest and colonization of Siberia started.
By the 1560s he carried out a pretty horrific campaign against the boyars, confiscating their land and executing or exiling those who displeased him. In 1581, in a rage, he struck his son and heir Ivan with an iron rod, killing him.
When Ivan the Terrible died in 1584, he was succeeded by his son Fyodor, who was not exactly up to filling the shoes of an absolute legend. Fyodor left most of the administration of the kingdom to his brother-in-law, Boris Godunov. And it was not long before Godunov began to work to secure the succession for himself. In 1591 he murdered Fyodor's younger brother Dmitri in the ancient town of Uglich, a spot now marked by the magnificent Church of St. Demetrius on the Blood. When Fyodor died in 1598, Godunov was made tsar, but his rule was never accepted as completely authentic. Within a few years, a pretender occurred in Poland, claiming to be Dmitri, and in 1604 he invaded Russia. Godunov died suddenly the next year, and the "Time of Troubles" began. For the next eight years, both the first and the second false Dmitri laid claims to the throne, both supported by invading Polish armies. Finally, in 1613, the Poles were ousted from Moscow, and the boyars elected Mikhail Romanov as a tsar. The Romanov dynasty was to rule Russia for the next 304 years.
For the first few pages, the Romanovs were happy to support the status quo in Russia. They proceeded to centralize power, but they did very little to bring Russia up to speed with the rapid changes in economic and political life that were taking place elsewhere in Europe. Peter the Great decided to change all of that. Peter was his father's youngest son and the child of his second wife, neither of which supported great things. He spent about two years on a Grand Tour of Europe, not only meeting monarchs and conducting diplomacy but also traveling incognito and even working as a ship's carpenter in Holland. He amassed a significant body of awareness on western European industrial techniques and state administration and became determined to modernize the Russian state and to westernize Russian society.The following day after his arrival Peter began his program to recreate Russia in the image of Western Europe by personally clipping off the beards of his nobles.
For the first few pages, the Romanovs were happy to support the status quo in Russia. They proceeded to centralize power, but they did very little to bring Russia up to speed with the rapid changes in economic and political life that were taking place elsewhere in Europe. Peter the Great decided to change all of that. Peter was his father's youngest son and the child of his second wife, neither of which supported great things. He spent about two years on a Grand Tour of Europe, not only meeting monarchs and conducting diplomacy but also traveling incognito and even working as a ship's carpenter in Holland. He amassed a significant body of awareness on western European industrial techniques and state administration and became determined to modernize the Russian state and to westernize Russian society.The following day after his arrival Peter began his program to recreate Russia in the image of Western Europe by personally clipping off the beards of his nobles.
Peter's return to Russia and assumption of personal rule hit the country like a hurricane. He banned traditional Muscovite dress for all men, introduced military draft, established technical schools, replaced the church patriarchy with a holy synod answerable to himself, simplified the alphabet, tried to improve the ways of the court, changed the calendar, changed his title from Tsar to Emperor, and introduced a hundred other reforms, restrictions, and novelties, all of which demonstrated the conservative clergy that he was the antichrist. In 1703 he embarked on the most dramatic of his reforms, which was the decision to transfer the capital from Moscow to a new city to be built from scratch on the Gulf of Finland. Over the next nine years, at tremendous human and material cost, St. Petersburg was created.
Peter himself died in 1725, and he remains one of the most controversial figures in Russian history. He was deeply committed to making Russia a powerful new member of modern Europe. Certainly, he modernized Russia's military and its administrative structure, but both of these reforms were financed at the expense of the impropriety, who were frequently forced into serfdom. After Peter's death, Russia went within a great number of rulers in a distressingly short time, none of whom had much of an opening to leave a lasting impression. Many of Peter's improvements failed to take root in Russia, and it was not until the reign of Catherine the Great that his desire to make Russia into a great European power was in fact achieved.
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Although the Bolsheviks enjoyed substantial support in St. Petersburg and Moscow, they were by no means in control of the country as a whole. They succeeded in taking Russia out of the war (though on very unfavorable terms), but within months civil war broke out throughout Russia. For the next three years, the country was devastated by civil strife, until by 1920 the Bolsheviks had finally emerged victorious.
The first few years of the Soviet rule were considered by an extraordinary outburst of social and cultural change.
Lenin's death in 1924 was followed by an extended and extremely divisive struggle for power in the Communist Party. By the latter part of the decade, Joseph Stalin had emerged as the victor, and he immediately set the country on a much different course. Agricultural lands were collectivized, creating large, state-run farms. Industrial development was pushed along at breakneck speed, and production was almost entirely diverted from consumer products to capital equipment. Religion was violently repressed, as churches were closed, destroyed, or converted to other uses. Stalin purged all opposition to himself within the party as well as all opposition to party policy in the country. By the end of the 1930s, the Soviet Union had become a country in which life was more strictly regulated than ever before.
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The Soviet Union emerged from World War II considerably stronger than it had been before the war. Although the country suffered enormous devastation and lost more than twenty million lives, it had gained considerable territory and now ranked as one of the two great world powers along with the United States. Industrial production was once again concentrated on heavy industry, agricultural failures produced widespread famine, political freedoms were restricted even further, and another huge wave of purges was carried out. As the Cold War got underway, an increasing proportion of the Soviet Union's resources were funneled into military projects, further exacerbating the quality of life. Stalin remained in power until 1953, when he died.
Almost immediately after the death of Stalin, many of the repressive policies that he had instituted were dismantled. Under the leadership of Nikita Khrushchev, political controls were to some degree relaxed, and cultural life experienced a brief period of revival. However, opposition to Khrushchev gradually gained strength within the party, and in 1964 he was ousted. By the 1970s, Leonid Brezhnev, as general secretary of the Communist party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), had become the next prominent Soviet leader. The country entered a decade-long period of stagnation, its rigid economy slowly deteriorating and its political climate becoming increasingly pessimistic. When Brezhnev died in 1982 he was succeeded as a general secretary first by Yuri Andropov, the head of the KGB, and then by Konstantin Chernenko, neither of whom managed to survive long enough to effect meaningful changes. In March of 1985, when Mikhail Gorbachev became general secretary, the need for improvements was pressing.
Gorbachev's platform for the new Soviet Union was based on two now-famous terms - glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring). Like Khrushchev, Gorbachev aimed to resuscitate the Soviet economics by loosening up a bit on social control, opening some room for new ideas, relaxing control of the economy, and generally allowing for a little fresh air. Restructuring began in earnest with a vigorous housecleaning of the bureaucracy and a significant investigation into corruption.
In 1990 the Soviet Union began to explain. Its own component republics began to issue descriptions of independence. In the Russian Republic, Yeltsin was elected a chairman of the Parliament, taking a lead in the independence movement. Gorbachev, caught between popular demands for more radical reform and party demands for the re-imposition of strict limitation, failed to satisfy either side.
The following summer, the radical reform movements became strong enough to openly defy the government. By the end of the year, the Soviet Union had been voted out of survival, to be replaced by a Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). On December 25, Gorbachev resigned, and at midnight of December 31, the Soviet flag atop the Kremlin was replaced by the Russian tricolor.
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