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Gippius níng Ivan Bunin
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dān 'ěr · shān luó wéi Danielyóu · luò wéi Yuri
fán shì Ivan I (the Money bag)xiè miáo shì Simeon (the Proud)
fán 'èr shì Ivan II (the Fair) · dùn Dimitri I (of the Don)
shì Vasily I 'èr shì Vasily II (the Blind)
fán sān shì Ivan III of Russia (the Great) sān shì Vasily III
fán shì Ivan IV (the Terrible)fèi 'ào duō 'ěr · wàn nuò wéi Fyodor I Ivanovich
bào · dōng nuò Boris Godunovfèi duō 'ěr 'èr shì Feodor II
wěi shì False Dmitriy I shì Vasili IV
'ěr · fèi 'ào duō luó wéi · luó màn nuò Mikhail I Fyodorovich Romanovā liè xiè shì Alexis I
fèi 'ào duō 'ěr sān shì Feodor III fán shì Ivan V Alekseyevich Romanov
Peter I jié lín shì Catherine I
fán shì Ivan V Alekseyevich Romanov
é luó luó màn nuò wáng cháo  (1666niánjiǔyuè6rì1696niánèryuè8rì)
fán shì · ā liè xiè wéi · luó màn nuò
kāiduānzhōngjié
zàiwèi1682nián1696nián

   fán shìquán míng wéi fán shì · ā liè xiè wéi · luó màn nuò (ИванVАлексеевичРоманов)(1666 nián -1696 nián ), shì wèi 'é luó shā huáng, 1682 nián -1696 nián zài wèi
  
   shì 'ā liè xiè · luò wéi · luó zhī yīn bìng ruò néng néng cānyù guó zhèngzài xiōng fèi duō 'ěr sān shì hòu léi shí jīn jiā tuī tóng wéi shā huáng luó jiā duì mǎnsuō shǐ jìn wèi jūn dòng zhèng biàntuī fán bìng wéi shā huáng hòu zhào kāi de quán 'é jìn shēn huì què rèn fán wéi shā huáng wéi 'èr shā huángdàn shì fán wèi hòu guò shì míng shàng de shā huáng 'ér shí quán bèi tóng jiě jiě suǒ fēi gōng zhù gōng zhù zhǎng zhí dào 1689 nián zài shēng zhèng biànjiāng suǒ fēi qiú xiū dào yuàn wéi zhǐ hòu quán luò shǒu zhōng 'é luó shǐ shàng zuì zhù míng de


  Ivan V Alekseyevich Romanov (Russian: Иван V Алексеевич, 6 September [O.S. 27 August] 1666 — 8 February [O.S. 29 January] 1696) was a joint tsar of Russia (with his younger half-brother Peter I) who co-reigned between 1682 and 1696. He was the youngest son of Alexis I of Russia and Maria Miloslavskaya. His reign was only formal, since he had serious physical and mental disabilities. He sat still for hours at a time and needed assistance in order to walk.
  
  Ivan V was the 11th child of Tsar Alexis. As he was eye-sore and infirm, his capacity for supreme power was challenged by the party of the Naryshkins, who aspired to bring Natalia Naryshkina's son, Peter I, to the throne. Upon the death of Feodor III of Russia in April 1682, their enemies insinuated that the Naryshkins had Ivan strangled, thus fomenting the Moscow Uprising of 1682, which was put to an end only after Ivan was demonstrated by his relatives to the furious crowd.
  
  Ivan had a very close relationship with his stepmother and half-brother/co-Tsar Peter. He did not really want to become Tsar but was persuaded to.
  
  On 25 June the same year, Ivan and Peter were crowned in the Cathedral of the Dormition as "dvoetsarstvenniki" (double tsars). A special throne with two seats was executed for the occasion (now on display in the Kremlin Armoury). Although Ivan was considered the "senior tsar", actual power was wielded by his elder sister, Sophia Alekseyevna. In 1689, when she realized that power was slipping from her hands, she attempted to raise another riot, speculating that the Naryshkins had destroyed Ivan's crown and were poised to set his room on fire. However, Ivan's tutor, Prince Prozorovsky, persuaded him to change sides, whereupon Ivan declared his allegiance to his brother's cause.
  
  During the last decade of his life, Ivan was completely overshadowed by the more energetic Peter I. He spent his days with his wife, Praskovia Saltykova, caring about little but "praying and fasting day and night". Ivan's purported debility did not prevent him from producing robust offspring in the shape of five daughters, one of whom — Anna Ivanovna — would assume the throne in 1730. At the age of 27 he was described by foreign ambassadors as senile, paralytic and almost blind. He died two years later and was interred in the Archangel Cathedral.
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