俄罗斯 List of Authors
PushkinYi MingQiuteqiefuMikhail Yuryevich Lermontov
AnnenskiBalmontSuoluoguboDimitrij Sergeevic Mereskovskij
An BelyLuoheweici KajaHe Liebo MelnikovKuzmin
伊戈尔谢维里亚 NingVladimir MayakovskyAlexander BlokCult Bo
GippiusIvan Bunin弗索洛维约夫马沃洛 application
KhodasevichPoplavskiGumilyovAnna Akhmatova
Marina TsvetaevaOsip MandelstamBoris PasternakSergei Yesenin
Vladimir NabokovWeiyayiwan Ivanov安德列沃兹涅 Xing SkiPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
尤里加夫里科夫Yuri Emelianov罗伊麦德维 JeffValery Kim Do Leshkov
Mikhail KhorobritBoris MihajlovicDanielYuri
Ivan I (the Money bag)Simeon (the Proud)Ivan II (the Fair)Dimitri I (of the Don)
Vasily IVasily II (the Blind)Ivan III of Russia (the Great)Vasily III
Ivan IV (the Terrible)Fyodor I IvanovichBoris GodunovFeodor II
False Dmitriy IVasili IVMikhail I Fyodorovich RomanovAlexis I
Feodor IIIIvan V Alekseyevich RomanovPeter ICatherine I
Vasili IV
俄罗斯 空位时期  (September 22, 1552 ADSeptember 12, 1612 AD)
StartEnd
Reign1606 AD1610 AD

  Vasili IV of Russia (Russian: Василий IV Иванович Шуйский, other transliterations: Vasily, Vasiliy, Vasilii) (22 September 1552 – 12 September 1612) was Tsar of Russia between 1606 and 1610 after the murder of False Dmitriy I. His reign fell during the Time of Troubles.
  
  Born Prince Vasily Ivanovich Shuisky and descended from sovereign princes of Nizhny Novgorod, he was one of the leading boyars of Tsardom of Russia during the reigns of Feodor I and Boris Godunov. In all the court intrigues of the Time of Troubles, Vasily and his younger brother Dmitry Shuisky usually acted together and fought as one.
  
  It was he who, in obedience to the secret orders of Tsar Boris, went to Uglich to inquire into the cause of the death of the Tsarevich Dmitry Ivanovich, the youngest son of Ivan the Terrible, who had perished there in mysterious circumstances. Shuisky reported that it was a case of suicide, though rumors abounded that the Tsarevich had been assassinated on the orders of the regent Boris Godunov. Some suspected that Dmitry escaped the assassination and that another boy was killed in his place, providing impetus for the repeated appearance of impostors (See False Dmitry I, False Dmitry II, and False Dmitry III). On the death of Boris, who had become tsar, and the accession of his son Feodor II, Shuisky went back upon his own words in order to gain favour with the pretender False Dmitriy I, who was attempting to gain the throne by impersonating the dead Tsarevich. Shuisky recognized the pretender as the "real" Dmitry despite having earlier determined the boy had committed suicide, thus bringing about the assassination of the young Feodor.
  
  Shuisky then plotted against the false Dmitriy and procured his death (May 1606), in addition to confessing publicly that the real Dmitriy had been indeed slain and that the reigning tsar was an impostor. Shuisky's adherents thereupon proclaimed him tsar on 19 May 1606. He reigned till 19 July 1610, but he was never generally recognized. Even in Moscow itself he had little or no authority, and he only avoided deposition by the dominant boyars because they had no-one to put in his place.
  
  Only the popularity of his heroic cousin, Prince Mikhail Skopin-Shuisky, who led his armies, and soldiers from Sweden, whose assistance he purchased by the cession of Russian territory, kept him for a time on his unstable throne. In 1610 he was deposed by his former adherents Princes Vorotynsky and Mstislavsky, made a monk, and finally transported to Warsaw by the Polish hetman Stanislaus Zolkiewski . He died as a prisoner in the castle of Gostynin, near Warsaw, in 1612.
    

Comments (0)