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Peter the Great
Peter the Great
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Peter I (Russian: Пётр I Алексеевич, romanizedPyotr I Alekseyevich, IPA: [ˈpʲɵtr ɐlʲɪkˈsʲejɪvʲɪtɕ]; 9 June [O.S. 30 May] 1672 – 8 February [O.S. 28 January] 1725), better known as Peter the Great,[note 1] was the Tsar of all Russia from 1682 and the first Emperor of all Russia from 1721 until his death in 1725. He reigned jointly with his half-brother Ivan V until 1696. From this year, Peter was an absolute monarch, an autocrat who remained the ultimate authority and organized a well-ordered police state.[2][3]

Key Information

Much of Peter's reign was consumed by lengthy wars against the Ottoman and Swedish empires. His Azov campaigns were followed by the foundation of the Russian Navy; after his victory in the Great Northern War, Russia annexed a significant portion of the eastern Baltic coastline and was officially renamed from a tsardom to an empire. Peter led a cultural revolution that replaced some of the traditionalist and medieval social and political systems with ones that were modern, scientific, Westernized, and based on the radical Enlightenment.[4][5]

In December 1699, he introduced the Julian calendar,[6] and in 1703, he introduced the first Russian newspaper, Sankt-Peterburgskie Vedomosti, and ordered the civil script, a reform of Russian orthography largely designed by himself. On the shores of the Neva River, he founded Saint Petersburg, a city famously dubbed by Francesco Algarotti as the "window to the West".[7][8] In 1712, Peter relocated the capital from Moscow to St. Petersburg, a status it retained until 1918. Peter had a great interest in plants, animals and minerals, in malformed creatures or exceptions to the law of nature for his cabinet of curiosities. He encouraged research of deformities, all along trying to debunk the superstitious fear of monsters.[9] He promoted industrialization in the Russian Empire and higher education. The Russian Academy of Sciences and the Saint Petersburg State University were founded in 1724, and invited Christian Wolff and Willem 's Gravesande.

Peter is primarily credited with the modernization of the country, quickly transforming it into a major European power. His administrative reforms, creating a Governing Senate in 1711, the Collegium in 1717 and the Table of Ranks in 1722 had a lasting impact on Russia, and many institutions of the Russian government trace their origins to his reign.

Early life

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Peter as a child
Double throne in Kremlin Armoury. A large hole was cut in the back of the dual-seated throne used by Ivan and Peter. Sophia would sit behind the throne and listen as Peter conversed with nobles, while feeding him information and giving him responses to questions and problems.
Peter's ship, rigged with a sail and a mast with the help of Dutch carpenters

Peter grew up at Izmaylovo Estate and was educated at the Amusement Palace from an early age by several tutors commissioned by his father, most notably Nikita Zotov, Patrick Gordon, and Paul Menesius. When his father died in 1676, he left the sovereignty to Peter's elder half-brother, the crippled Feodor III.[10] Throughout this period, the government was largely run by Artamon Matveyev, an enlightened friend of Alexis, the political head of the Naryshkin family and one of Peter's greatest childhood benefactors.[citation needed]

This position changed when Feodor died in 1682. As Feodor did not leave any children, a dispute arose between the Miloslavsky family (Maria Miloslavskaya was the first wife of Alexis I) and Naryshkin family (Natalya Naryshkina was his second wife) over who should inherit the throne. He jointly ruled with his elder half-brother, Ivan V, until 1696. Ivan was next in line but was weakminded and blind. Consequently, the Boyar Duma (a council of Russian nobles) chose the 10-year-old Peter to become tsar, with his mother as regent. A hole was cut in the back of the throne, so that she, literally behind the scenes, could whisper to the two boys.[11]

The "Moscow Grand Discharge" started in 1677 and was completed in 1688; it affected noble families with high ranks in the administration; the ministries were also reduced in number. This provoked fierce reactions. Sophia, one of Alexis' daughters from his first marriage, led a rebellion of the streltsy (Russia's elite military corps) in April–May 1682. In the subsequent conflict, some of Peter's relatives and friends were murdered, including Artamon Matveyev, and Peter witnessed some of these acts of political violence.[12]

The streltsy made it possible for Sophia, the Miloslavskys (the clan of Ivan), and their allies to insist that Peter and Ivan be proclaimed joint tsars, with Ivan being acclaimed as the senior. Sophia then acted as regent during the minority of the sovereigns and exercised all power. For seven years, she ruled as an autocrat.

From 1682 to 1689, Peter and his mother were banned to Preobrazhenskoye. At the age of 16, he discovered an English boat on the estate, had it restored and learned to sail. He received a sextant, but did not know how to use it. Peter was fascinated by sundials. Therefore, he began a search for a foreign expert in the German Quarter. Peter befriended Andrew Vinius, a bibliophile, who taught him Dutch and two Dutch carpenters, Frans Timmerman and Karsten Brandt. Peter studied arithmetic, geometry, and military sciences (fortification). He was not interested in a musical education but liked fireworks and drumming.

Peter was not particularly concerned that others ruled in his name; Boris Golitsyn and Fyodor Apraksin played an important role. He engaged in such pastimes as shipbuilding in Pereslavl-Zalessky and sailing at Lake Pleshcheyevo, as well as mock battles with his toy army. Peter's mother sought to force him to adopt a more conventional approach and arranged his marriage to Eudoxia Lopukhina in 1689.[13] The marriage was a failure, and 10 years later, Peter forced his wife to become a nun and thus freed himself from the union.

By the summer of 1689, Peter, planned to take power from his half-sister Sophia, whose position had been weakened by two unsuccessful Crimean campaigns against the Crimean Khanate in an attempt to stop devastating Crimean Tatar raids into Russia's southern lands. When she learned of his designs, Sophia conspired with some leaders of the Streltsy, who continually aroused disorder and dissent. Peter, warned by others from the Streltsy, escaped in the middle of the night to the impenetrable monastery of Troitse-Sergiyeva Lavra; there he slowly gathered adherents who perceived he would win the power struggle. Sophia was eventually overthrown, with Peter I and Ivan V continuing to act as co-tsars. Peter forced Sophia to enter a convent, where she gave up her name and her position as a member of the royal family.[14]

Meanwhile, he was a frequent guest in the German quarter, where he met Anna and Willem Mons. In 1692 he sent Eberhard Isbrand Ides as envoy to the Kangxi Emperor of China. In 1693 he sailed to Solovetsky Monastery and accepted divine providence after surviving a storm.[15] Still, Peter could not acquire actual control over Russian affairs. Power was instead exercised by his mother. It was only when Natalya died in 1694 that Peter, then aged 22, became an independent sovereign.[16] Formally, Ivan V was a co-ruler with Peter, though being ineffective. Peter became the sole ruler when Ivan died in 1696 without male offspring.

Peter grew to be extremely tall, especially for the time period, reportedly standing 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m).[16] He was seen as a "second Goliath" or Samson.[17][18] Saint-Simon described him in 1717 as "tall, well-formed and slim... with a look both bewildered and fierce". Peter had noticeable facial tics, and he may have suffered from neck spasm.[19]

Ideology of Peter's reign

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Monument to Peter the Great in Kronstadt

As a young man, Peter I adopted the Protestant model of existence in a pragmatic world of competition and personal success, which largely shaped the philosophy of his reformism. He perceived the Russian people as rude, unintelligent, stubborn in their sluggishness, a child, a lazy student. He highly appreciated the state's role in the life of society, saw it as an ideal instrument for achieving high goals, saw it as a universal institution for transforming people, with the help of violence and fear, into educated, conscious, law-abiding and useful to the whole society subjects.[1] Peter had a keen interest in The Education of a Christian Prince which offers advice to rulers on how to govern justly and wisely.[citation needed]

He introduced into the concept of the autocrat's power the notion of the monarch's duties. He considered it necessary to take care of his subjects, to protect them from enemies, to work for their benefit. Above all, he put the interests of Russia. He saw his mission in turning it into a power similar to Western countries, and subordinated his own life and the lives of his subjects to the realization of this idea. Gradually penetrated the idea that the task should be solved with the help of reforms, which will be carried out at the autocrat's will, who creates good and punishes evil. He considered the morality of a statesman separately from the morality of a private person and believed that the sovereign in the name of state interests can go to murder, violence, forgery and deceit.[1]

He went through the naval service, starting from the lowest ranks: bombardier (1695), captain (1696), colonel (1706), schout-bij-nacht (1709), vice-admiral (1714), admiral (1721). By hard daily work (according to the figurative expression of Peter the Great himself, he was simultaneously "forced to hold a sword and a quill in one right hand") and courageous behavior he demonstrated to his subjects his personal positive example, showed how to act, fully devoting himself to the fulfillment of duty and service to the fatherland.[1]

Reign

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Europe in 1721 (in German)
Capture of Azov, 1696, by Robert Ker Porter

Peter reigned for around 43 years. He implemented sweeping reforms aimed at modernizing Russia.[20] Heavily influenced by his advisors, like Jacob Bruce, Peter reorganized the Russian army along modern lines and dreamed of making Russia a maritime power. He faced much opposition to these policies at home but brutally suppressed rebellions against his authority, including by the Streltsy, Bashkirs, Astrakhan, and the greatest civil uprising of his reign, the Bulavin Rebellion.

In his process to westernize Russia, he wanted members of his family to marry other European royalty. In the past, his ancestors had been snubbed at the idea; however, it was proving fruitful. He negotiated with Frederick William, Duke of Courland to marry his niece, Anna Ivanovna. He used the wedding in order to launch his new capital, St Petersburg, where he had already ordered building projects of westernized palaces and buildings. Peter hired Italian and German architects to design it.[21] He attracted Domenico Trezzini, Carlo Bartolomeo Rastrelli, Jean-Baptiste Alexandre Le Blond and Andreas Schlüter.

To improve his nation's position on the seas, Peter sought more maritime outlets. His only outlet at the time was the White Sea at Arkhangelsk. The Baltic Sea was at the time controlled by Sweden in the north, while the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea were controlled by the Ottoman Empire and Safavid Empire respectively in the south. The country's need for metal was exacerbated by the outbreak of wars for access to the Black and Baltic Seas.

Peter attempted to acquire control of the Black Sea, which would require expelling the Tatars from the surrounding areas. As part of an agreement with Poland that ceded Kiev to Russia, Peter was forced to wage war against the Crimean Khan and against the Khan's overlord, the Ottoman Sultan. Peter's primary objective became the capture of the Ottoman fortress of Azov, near the Don River. In the summer of 1695 Peter organized the Azov campaigns to take the fortress, but his attempts ended in failure.

Peter returned to Moscow in November 1695 and began building a large navy in Voronezh. He launched about thirty ships against the Ottomans in 1696, capturing Azov in July of that year. He appointed Alexander Gordon, who later would publish a biography on Peter.[22] Peter used to hold all his important meetings and numerous celebrations in Le Fort's palace.

Grand Embassy

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Abraham Storck: Spectacle on the Amstel river, August 1697
Fleet Manoeuvres Performed on the IJ on 1 September 1797 during Peter's Visit to Amsterdam, painting by Adam Silo (Hermitage)
The frigate Pieter and Paul on the IJ while Peter stands on the small ship on the right. Painting by A. Storck. This ship sank on his second voyage.

Peter knew that Russia could not face the Ottoman Empire alone. In March 1697, he traveled "incognito" to Western Europe on an 18-month journey with a large Russian delegation—the so-called "Grand Embassy". Peter was the first tsar to leave Russia for more than 100 years.[23] He used a fake name, allowing him to escape social and diplomatic events, but since he was far taller than most others, he could not fool anyone. One goal was to seek the aid of European monarchs, but Peter's hopes were dashed. France was a traditional ally of the Ottoman Sultan, and Austria was eager to maintain peace in the east while conducting its own wars in the west. Peter, furthermore, had chosen an inopportune moment: the Europeans at the time were more concerned about the War of the Spanish Succession over who would succeed the childless King Charles II of Spain than about fighting the Ottoman Sultan.[13] Peter failed to expand the anti-Ottoman alliance.

In Riga, the local Swedish commander Erik Dahlbergh decided to pretend that he did not recognize Peter and did not allow him to inspect the fortifications.[24] (Three years later, Peter would cite the inhospitable reception as one of the reasons for starting the Great Northern War). He met Frederick Casimir Kettler, the Duke of Courland.[25] In Königsberg, the tsar was apprenticed for two months to an artillery engineer. (Decrees were issued on the construction of the first Ural blast furnace plants.) In July he met Sophia of Hanover at Coppenbrügge castle. She described him: "The tsar is a tall, handsome man, with an attractive face. He has a lively mind is very witty. Only, someone so well endowed by nature could be a little better mannered."[26] Peter rented a ship in Emmerich am Rhein and sailed to Zaandam, where he arrived on 18 August 1697.

Amsterdam

[edit]

Peter studied saw-mills, manufacturing and shipbuilding in Zaandam but left after a week.[27] He sailed to Amsterdam after he was recognized and attacked.[28] The log-cabin he rented became the Czar Peter House. He sailed to Texel to see a fleet. Through the mediation of Nicolaas Witsen, an expert on Russia, the tsar was given the opportunity to gain practical experience in shipyard, belonging to the Dutch East India Company, for a period of four months, under the supervision of Gerrit Claesz Pool. The diligent and capable tsar assisted in the construction of an East Indiaman Peter and Paul specially laid down for him. Peter felt that the ship's carpenters in Holland worked too much by eye and lacked accurate construction drawings. During his stay the tsar engaged many skilled workers such as builders of locks, fortresses, shipwrights, and seamen—including Cornelis Cruys, a vice-admiral who became, under Franz Lefort, the tsar's advisor in maritime affairs; engineer Menno van Coehoorn refused. Peter put his knowledge of shipbuilding to use in helping build Russia's navy.[29]

Peter and Witsen visited Frederik Ruysch who had all the specimens exposed in five rooms. He taught Peter how to catch butterflies and how to preserve them. They also had a common interest in lizards.[30] Together they went to see patients. He arrived in Utrecht on a barge and met stadtholder William III in a tavern.[31] When he visited the States-General of the Netherlands he left the hall and the astonished attendees with his wig pulled over his head, according to Massie.[citation needed][32] He visited Jan van der Heyden, the inventor of a fire hose. He collected paintings by Adam Silo with ships and seascapes. In October 1697, the Tsar visited Delft and received an "eal viewer" from the microscopist Antoni van Leeuwenhoek.[33] After the Peace of Ryswick he was invited by King of England to visit him. The Dutch regents considered the Tsar too inquisitive, and this affected their willingness to help the Russians.[34]

Deptford

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Portrait of Peter I by Godfrey Kneller, 1698. This portrait was Peter's gift to the King of England.
Woolwich Dockyard in 1698: the recently erected Great Storehouse (centre-right) dominates the built environment of the dockyard.

On 11 January 1698 (O.S.), Peter arrived at Victoria Embankment with four chamberlains, three interpreters (Peter Shafirov, LeFort), two clock makers, a cook, a priest, six trumpeters, 70 soldiers from the Preobrazhensky regiment, four dwarfs and a monkey which he purchased in Amsterdam; Jacob Bruce accompanied him. Peter stayed at 21 Norfolk Street, Strand, and met with Bishop of Salisbury Gilbert Burnet and Thomas Osborne and posed for Sir Godfrey Kneller. He watched the proceedings within the Parliament from a rooftop window.[35] At some time, he had an affair with actress Letitia Cross.[35] He visited the Royal Mint four times; it is not clear whether he ever met Isaac Newton, the mint's warden,[36][37] who introduced milling on the coinage.[38] Peter was impressed by the Great Recoinage of 1696, according to Massie.[citation needed]

At some time he visited Spithead, Plymouth, with captain John Perry to watch a mock battle.[39][40] In February he attended a Fleet Review in Deptford, and inspected the Woolwich Dockyard and Royal Arsenal with Anthony Deane. For three months he stayed at Sayes Court as the guest of John Evelyn, a member of the Royal Society.[41] He was trained on a telescope at the Greenwich Observatory by John Flamsteed. Peter communicated with Thomas Story and William Penn about their position that believers should not join the military.[42][35] King William III presented a schooner with a whole crew to Peter I in exchange for the monopoly right of English merchants to trade tobacco in Russia (see Charles Whitworth).[43] At the end of April 1698 he left after being shown how to make watches, and carpeting coffins. Back in Holland he visited Harderwijk and Cleves.

The Embassy next went to Leipzig, Dresden, where he met with Queen Christiane Eberhardine of Poland-Lithuania. Three times he visited the Kunstsammlung, then Königstein Fortress, Prague, and Vienna, where he paid a visit to Leopold I.[44] At Rava-Ruska, he crossed the border and Peter spoke with Augustus II the Strong. Peter's visit was cut short, when he was informed of the second Streltsy uprising in June. The rebellion was easily crushed by General Gordon before Peter returned home early September.[45] Peter nevertheless acted ruthlessly towards the mutineers; 4,600 rebels were sent to prison. Around 1,182 were tortured and executed, and Peter ordered that their bodies be publicly exhibited as a warning to future conspirators.[46] The Streltsy were disbanded, and Peter's half-sister Sophia, who they sought to put on the throne, was kept in strictest seclusion at Novodevichy Convent.

Peter's visits to the West impressed upon him the notion that European customs were in several respects superior to Russian traditions. He commanded all of his courtiers and officials to wear European clothing (no caftans) and cut off their long beards, causing Boyars and Old Believers, who were very fond of their beards, great upset.[47] Boyars who sought to retain their beards were required to pay an annual beard tax of one hundred rubles.[48][49] In the same year, Peter also sought to end arranged marriages, which were the norm among the Russian nobility, because he thought such a practice was barbaric and led to domestic violence, since the partners usually resented each other.[50]

Reforms

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Vista through the Summer Garden towards the Summer Palace, 1716
Embankment of the Fontanka River, Laundry Bridge, Summer Palace of Peter I
View of the Kunstkamera across the Neva

In 1698, Peter sent a delegation to Malta, under boyar Boris Sheremetev, to observe the training and abilities of the Knights of Malta and their fleet. Sheremetev investigated the possibility of future joint ventures with the Knights, including action against the Turks and the possibility of a future Russian naval base.[51] On 12 September 1698, Peter officially founded the first Russian Navy base, Taganrog on the Sea of Azov.

In 1699, Peter changed the date of the celebration of the new year from 1 September to 1 January. Traditionally, the years were reckoned from the purported creation of the World, but after Peter's reforms, they were to be counted from the birth of Christ. Thus, in the year 7207 of the old Russian calendar, Peter proclaimed that the Julian Calendar was in effect and the year was 1700.[52] On the death of Lefort in 1699, Menshikov succeeded him as Peter's prime favourite and confidant.

In 1700, Peter I prevented the election of a new patriarch and deprived the Russian Church of the opportunity to regain a single spiritual leader. Reducing the number of monasteries, he converted all monasteries with less than 30 monks into schools or churches.[53] He encouraged the development of private entrepreneurship, but under strict state control. He initiated the construction of canals by John Perry and implemented a monetary reform, using the decimal principle as the basis of the monetary system (1698-–1704).

Peter attracted many foreign specialists and opened an educational institution for surgery, led by Nicolaas Bidloo. In 1701, the Moscow School of Mathematics and Navigation was founded, led by Jacob Bruce; for fifteen years, naval officers, surveyors, engineers, and gunners were educated there.[54]

Preobrazhensky Regiment with the Sukharev tower

In 1700, Jan Thesingh (-1701) received a monopoly on printing and importing books, maps and prints into Russia for fifteen years.[55] In 1701 he appointed Fedor Polikarpov-Orlov as head of the Moscow Print Yard. In 1707, Tsar Peter I bought a fully equipped printing house in Holland, including staff.[56] Peter replaced the Cyrillic numerals with Arabic numerals (1705–1710) and the Cyrillic font with a civil script (1708–1710).[57]

In 1708, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz became an advisor and offered to write new laws for the country.[58] In December Russia was divided into eight governorates (guberniya).[53] Matwei Petrowitsch Gagarin was the first governor of Siberia.[3] Peter was visited by Cornelis de Bruijn, who spent six years in Russia and made drawings of the Kremlin.[59] In 1711, Peter visited elector August II of Poland in Dresden, Carlsbad and Torgau where his son Aleksei married. In 1713 he visited Hamburg, sieged Tönningen with his allies. He then traveled to Hanover and was a guest of Duke Anton Ulrich of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel in Salzdahlum. From Danzig he sailed to Riga, Helsingfors and Turku.

In 1711, Peter established by decree a new state body known as the Governing Senate.[60] Normally, the Boyar duma would have exercised power during his absence. Peter, however, mistrusted the boyars; he instead abolished the Duma and created a Senate of ten members. The Senate was founded as the highest state institution to supervise all judicial, financial and administrative affairs. Originally established only for the time of the monarch's absence, the Senate became a permanent body after his return. A special high official, the Ober-Procurator, served as the link between the ruler and the senate and acted, in Peter own words, as "the sovereign's eye". Without his signature no Senate decision could go into effect; the Senate became one of the most important institutions of Imperial Russia.[61]

In 1701, 1705 and 1712, Peter I issued decrees establishing an Engineering School in Sukharev Tower, which was supposed to recruit up to 100 students, but had only 23.[54] Therefore, he issued another decree in 1714 calling for compulsory education, which dictated that all Russian 10- to 15-year-old children of the nobility, government clerks, and lesser-ranked officials must learn basic arithmetic, trigonometry and geometry, and should be tested on the subjects at the end of their studies.[62]

Areskine, an iatrochemist, became head of the court apothecary; Johann Daniel Schumacher was appointed secretary and librarian of the Kunstkamera. The country's first scientific library was opened in his palace in the Summer Garden. Peter ordered the development of Aptekarsky Island, headquarters for the Medical Clerical Office and the Main Pharmacy.[63] Gottlieb Schober was commissioned to examine hot springs and discovered rich deposits of sulfur; Peter immediately set up a factory for the development in the Samara Oblast. In 1721 the shipyard Petrozavod and Petrodvorets Watch Factory was established. Some 3,500 new words—German, French, Dutch, English, Italian, Swedish in origin—entered Russian in Peter's period, roughly one-fourth of them shipping and naval terms.[64]

As part of his reforms, Peter started an industrialization effort that was slow but eventually successful. Russian manufacturing and main exports were based on the mining and lumber industries. In 1719, the privileges of miners were enshrined in law with the Berg Privilege, which allowed representatives of all classes to search for ores and build metallurgical plants. At the same time, manufacturers and artisans were exempted from state taxes and recruiting, and their houses were exempt from the post of troops. The law also guaranteed the inheritance of the ownership of factories, proclaimed industrial activity a matter of state importance and protected manufacturers from interference in their affairs by local authorities. The same law established the Collegium of Mining, and managed the entire mining and metallurgical industry, and local administrations. The Demidovs became the first Russian exporters of iron to Western Europe. In 1721, a decree was issued that allowed factory owners, regardless of whether they had a noble rank, to buy serfs.

Great Northern War

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Peter I of Russia pacifies his marauding troops after retaking Narva in 1704, by Nikolay Sauerweid, 1859
Interior of Peter's log cabin
Peter the Great Meditating the Idea of Building St Petersburg at the Shore of the Baltic Sea, by Alexandre Benois, 1916
Peter I in the Battle of Poltava, a mosaic by Mikhail Lomonosov
First Winter Palace by Alexey Zubov

Peter made a temporary peace with the Ottoman Empire that allowed him to keep the captured fort of Azov, and turned his attention to Russian maritime supremacy. He sought to acquire control of the Baltic Sea, which had been taken by the Swedish Empire a half-century earlier. Peter declared war on Sweden, which was at the time led by the young King Charles XII. Sweden was also opposed by Denmark–Norway, Saxony, and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Preobrazhensky regiment took part in all major battles of the Great Northern War.

Russia was ill-prepared to fight the Swedes, and their first attempt at seizing the Baltic coast ended in disaster at the Battle of Narva in 1700. In the conflict, the forces of Charles XII, rather than employ a slow methodical siege, attacked immediately using a blinding snowstorm to their advantage. After the battle, Charles XII decided to concentrate his forces against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, which gave Peter time to reorganize the Russian army and conquered Nyenschantz in the Ingrian campaign. Bidloo had to organize a military hospital. Robert Bruce was appointed commander-in-chief of St. Petersburg. After the defeat at Narva, Peter I gave the order to melt the church bells into cannons and mortars. In 1701, Peter ordered the construction of Novodvinsk Fortress north of Archangelsk. Everybody was convinced they knew: his Majesty will wage war.[65] In the siege of Nöteborg Russian forces captured the Swedish fortress, renamed Shlisselburg. In 1702 Peter the Great established the Olonets Shipyard at Lodeynoye Pole, where Russian frigate Shtandart was built.

While the Poles fought the Swedes, Peter founded the city of Saint Petersburg on 29 June 1703 on Hare Island. He forbade the building of stone edifices outside Saint Petersburg, which he intended to become Russia's capital, so that all stonemasons could participate in the construction of the new city. While the city was being built along the Neva he lived in a modest three-room log cabin (with a study but without a fire-place) which had to make room for the first version of the Winter Palace. The first buildings which appeared were a shipyard at the Admiralty, Kronstadt (1704-1706) and the Peter and Paul Fortress (1706). Peter took his whole family on a boat trip to Kronstadt.[66]

Following several defeats, Polish King Augustus II the Strong abdicated in 1706. Swedish king Charles XII turned his attention to Russia, invading it in 1708. After crossing into Russia, Charles defeated Peter at Golovchin in July. In the Battle of Lesnaya, Charles suffered his first loss after Peter crushed a group of Swedish reinforcements marching from Riga. Deprived of this aid, Charles was forced to abandon his proposed march on Moscow.[67]

Charles XII refused to retreat to Poland or back to Sweden and instead invaded Ukraine. Peter withdrew his army southward, employing scorched earth, destroying along the way anything that could assist the Swedes. Deprived of local supplies, the Swedish army was forced to halt its advance in the winter of 1708–1709. In the summer of 1709, they resumed their efforts to capture Russian-ruled Ukraine, culminating in the Battle of Poltava on 27 June. The battle was a decisive defeat for the Swedish forces, ending Charles' campaign in Ukraine and forcing him south to seek refuge in the Ottoman Empire. Russia had defeated what was considered to be one of the world's best militaries, and the victory overturned the view that Russia was militarily incompetent. In Poland, Augustus II was restored as King.

Peter, overestimating the support he would receive from his Balkan allies, attacked the Ottoman Empire, initiating the Russo-Turkish War of 1710.[68] Peter's campaign in the Ottoman Empire was disastrous, and in the ensuing Treaty of the Pruth, Peter was forced to return the Black Sea ports he had seized in 1697.[68] In return, the Sultan expelled Charles XII. The Ottomans called him Mad Peter (Turkish: deli Petro), for his willingness to sacrifice large numbers of his troops in wartime.[69]

Peter's northern armies took the Swedish province of Livonia (the northern half of modern Latvia, and the southern half of modern Estonia), driving the Swedes out of Finland. In 1714, the Russian fleet won the Battle of Gangut. During the Great Wrath most of Finland was occupied by Russian forces.

Second Embassy

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Tsar Peter the Great picks up the young King Louis XV (1717), painted around 1838

In January 1716, Tsar Peter traveled in the Baltic region to discuss peace negotiations and how to protect the sea trade route from the Swedes. He visited Riga, Königsberg and Danzig. There his niece married the quarrelsome Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin with which Peter wanted an alliance. He obtained the assistance of the Frederick William I of Prussia who sieged the strong Swedish fortress Wismar. In Altona he met with Danish diplomats, supporting Prussia. He sailed to Copenhagen heading an allied fleet. In Wittenberg he visited the monastery, where Luther lived.[70] In May he went on to Bad Pyrmont, and, because of his physical problems he stayed at this spa. There he met with the genius Leibniz.[71] Blumentrost and Areskine accompanied him.

In early December Peter arrived in Amsterdam and visited Nicolaas Witsen. He bought the anatomic and herbarium collection of Frederik Ruysch, Levinus Vincent and Albertus Seba. He obtained many paintings among other from Maria Sibylla Merian for his Kunstkamera and Rembrandt's "David and Jonathan" for Peterhof Palace.[72] He paid a visit to a friend's mansion near Nigtevecht, a silk manufacture and a paper-mill.[73][31] At five in the morning he was received by Herman Boerhaave who showed Peter the Botanical Garden. In April 1717 he continued his travel to Austrian Netherlands, Dunkirk and Calais. In Paris he obtained many books, requested to become a member of the Academie de Sciences and visited the parliament, the Sorbonne and Madame Maintenon. Via the Palace of Saint-Cloud, the Grand Trianon at Versailles, Fontainebleau, Spa he travelled on to Maastricht, at that time one of the most important fortresses in Europe. He went back Amsterdam to attend a Treaty with France and Prussia on 15 August.[74] He achieved a diplomatic success, and his international prestige, consolidated. Again he visited the Hortus Botanicus and left the city early September 1717, heading for Berlin.[75] In October he was back in St Petersburg.[56] In 1719 New Holland Island was created.

The tsar's navy was powerful enough that the Russians could penetrate Sweden. Still, Charles XII refused to yield, and not until his death in battle in 1718 did peace become feasible. After the battle of Grengam, Sweden made peace with all powers but Russia by 1720. In 1721, the Treaty of Nystad ended the Great Northern War. Russia acquired Ingria, Estonia, Livonia, and a substantial portion of Karelia. In turn, Russia paid two million Riksdaler and surrendered most of Finland.[76]

Later years

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Peter I’s small wooden palace in Strelna, designed by Le Blond around 1714, had a botanical garden

In 1717, Alexander Bekovich-Cherkassky led the first Russian military expedition into Central Asia against the Khanate of Khiva. The expedition ended in complete disaster when the entire expeditionary force was slaughtered.

To the end of 1717, the preparatory phase of administrative reform in Russia was completed. After 1718, Peter established collegiums in place of the old central agencies of government, including foreign affairs, war, navy, expense, income, justice, and inspection. Later others were added, to regulate mining and industry. Each college consisted of a president, a vice-president, a number of councilors and assessors, and a procurator. Some foreigners were included in various colleges but not as president. Pavel Yaguzhinsky was entrusted with the observation of the "soonest possible establishment of colleges by their presidents". Peter did not have enough loyal, talented or educated persons to put in full charge of the various departments. Peter preferred to rely on groups of individuals who would keep check on one another.[77] Decisions depended on the majority vote.

In 1718, Peter investigated why the formerly Swedish province of Livonia was so orderly. He discovered that the Swedes spent as much administering Livonia (300 times smaller than his empire) as he spent on the entire Russian bureaucracy. He was forced to dismantle the province's government.[78] In June 1721 he had Gagarin, the governor of Siberia, executed.

Peter the Great's Assembly in 1718 by Stanisław Chlebowski
Peter I being titulated as the emperor of Russia (1721) by Boris Chorikov

Peter's last years were marked by further reform in Russia. On 2 November 1721 (N.S.), soon after peace was made with Sweden, he was officially proclaimed Emperor of All Russia. The coronation of the Russian monarch took place in Uspensky Cathedral, Moscow. Some proposed that he take the title Emperor of the East, but he refused.[79] Gavrila Golovkin, the State Chancellor, was the first to add "the Great, Father of His Country, Emperor of All the Russias" to Peter's traditional title of tsar following a speech by Theophan Prokopovich in 1721. Peter's imperial title was recognized by Augustus II of Poland, Frederick William I of Prussia, and Frederick I of Sweden, but not by the other European monarchs. In the minds of many, the word emperor connoted superiority or pre-eminence over kings. Several rulers feared that Peter would claim authority over them, just as the Holy Roman Emperor had claimed suzerainty over all Christian nations.

By the grace of God, the most excellent and great sovereign emperor Pyotr Alekseevich the ruler of all the Russias: of Moscow, of Kiev, of Vladimir, of Novgorod, Tsar of Kazan, Tsar of Astrakhan and Tsar of Siberia, sovereign of Pskov, great prince of Smolensk, of Tver, of Yugorsk, of Perm, of Vyatka, of Bulgaria and others, sovereign and great prince of the Novgorod Lower lands, of Chernigov, of Ryazan, of Rostov, of Yaroslavl, of Belozersk, of Udora, of Kondia and the sovereign of all the northern lands, and the sovereign of the Iverian lands, of the Kartlian and Georgian Kings, of the Kabardin lands, of the Circassian and Mountain princes and many other states and lands western and eastern here and there and the successor and sovereign and ruler.

In 1722, Peter issued a Decree on the succession to the throne, in which he abolished the ancient custom of transferring the throne to direct descendants in the male line (as he had no son). The decree was so unusual for Russian society that it was necessary to explain it. Peter created a new order of precedence for landowners known as the Table of Ranks. Formerly, precedence had been determined by birth. To deprive the Boyars of their high positions, Peter directed that precedence should be determined by merit and service to the Emperor. The Table of Ranks continued to remain in effect until the Russian monarchy was overthrown in 1917.

In 1722, John Bell accompanied Peter the Great on a military expedition to the city of Derbent near the Caspian Sea. The once powerful Persian Safavid Empire to the south was in deep decline. Taking advantage of the profitable situation, Peter launched the Russo-Persian War of 1722–1723, otherwise known as "The Persian Expedition of Peter the Great", which drastically increased Russian influence for the first time in the Caucasus and Caspian Sea region, and prevented the Ottoman Empire from making territorial gains in the region. After considerable success and the capture of many provinces and cities in the Caucasus and northern mainland Persia, the Safavids were forced to hand over territory to Russia, comprising Derbent, Shirvan, Gilan, Mazandaran, Baku, and Astrabad. Within twelve years all the territories were ceded back to Persia, now led by the charismatic military genius Nader Shah, as part of the Treaty of Resht, the Treaty of Ganja, and as the result of a Russo-Persian alliance against the Ottoman Empire, which was the common enemy of both.[80]

Peter changed the system of direct taxation. He abolished the land tax and household tax and replaced them with a poll tax.[81] The taxes on land and on households were payable only by individuals who owned property or maintained families. The new head taxes were payable by serfs and paupers. Peter began construction of the Monplaisir Palace based on his own sketches. He ordered to purchase 2,000 lime trees which were shipped to St Petersburg.[56] In 1725, the construction of Peterhof, a palace near Saint Petersburg, was completed. Peterhof was a grand residence, becoming known as the "Russian Versailles".

Illness and death

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Peter the Great on his deathbed, by Nikitin

In the winter of 1723, Peter, whose overall health was never robust, began having problems with his urinary tract and bladder. In the summer of 1724, a team of doctors performed surgery releasing upwards of four pounds of blocked urine. Peter remained bedridden until late autumn. In the first week of October, restless and certain he was cured, Peter began a lengthy inspection tour of various projects. Rastrelli finished his monument to Peter I (St. Michael's Castle). According to legend, in November, at Lakhta along the Gulf of Finland to inspect some ironworks, Peter saw a group of soldiers drowning near shore and, wading out into near-waist deep water, came to their rescue.[82] This icy water rescue is said to have exacerbated Peter's bladder problems and caused his death. The story, however, has been viewed with skepticism by some historians, pointing out that the German chronicler Jacob von Staehlin [de] is the only source for the story.[83]

In early January 1725, Peter was struck once again with uremia or azotemia. Legend has it that before lapsing into unconsciousness Peter asked for a paper and pen and scrawled an unfinished note that read: "Leave all to ..." and then, exhausted by the effort, asked for his daughter Anna to be summoned.[note 2]

Peter died between four and five in the morning 8 February. An autopsy revealed his bladder to be infected with gangrene.[84] He was fifty-two years, seven months old when he died, having reigned forty-two years. He is interred in Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral.

After his death, students came to the Military College with a request to "leave science" under the pretext of "unconsciousness and incomprehensibility."[54]

Religion

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The 1782 statue of Peter I in Saint Petersburg, informally known as the Bronze Horseman. Saint Isaac's Cathedral is in the background.

Peter had a great interest in dissenters and visited gatherings of Quakers and Mennonites. He did not believe in miracles and founded The All-Joking, All-Drunken Synod of Fools and Jesters,[85] an organization that mocked the Orthodox and Catholic Church, when he was eighteen. In January 1695, Peter refused to partake in a traditional Russian Orthodox Epiphany Ceremony, and would often schedule events for The All-Joking, All-Drunken Synod of Fools and Jesters to directly conflict with the Church.[86] He often used the nickname Pakhom Mikhailov (Russian: Пахом Михайлов) among the ministers of religion who made up his relatively close circle of long-term drinking companions.

Peter was brought up in the Russian Orthodox faith, but he had low regard for the Church hierarchy, which he kept under tight governmental control. The traditional leader of the Church was the Patriarch of Moscow. In 1700, when the office fell vacant, Peter refused to name a replacement, allowing the patriarch's coadjutor (or deputy) to discharge the duties of the office. Peter could not tolerate the patriarch exercising power superior to the tsar, as indeed had happened in the case of Philaret (1619–1633) and Nikon (1652–66). The Alexander Nevsky Lavra was constructed between 1710–1712; Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral between 1712–1733. In 1716 he invited Theophan Prokopovich, a pietist and astronomer, to come to the capital.[87] The Ecclesiastical Regulations of 1721 are based on the ideas of August Hermann Francke.[88] The Church reform of Peter the Great therefore abolished the patriarchate, replacing it with a Holy Synod that was under the control of a Procurator.

In 1721, Peter followed the advice of Prokopovich in designing the Holy Synod as a council of ten clergymen. For leadership in the Church, Peter turned increasingly to Ukrainians, who were more open to reform, but were not well loved by the Russian clergy. Peter implemented a law that stipulated that no Russian man could join a monastery before the age of fifty. He felt that too many able Russian men were being wasted on clerical work when they could be joining his new and improved army.[89][90]

Marriages and family

[edit]
Peter the Great Interrogating the Tsarevich Alexei Petrovich at Peterhof, a painting by Nikolai Ge (1871)

Peter the Great had two wives, with whom he had fifteen children, three of whom survived to adulthood. Peter's mother selected his first wife, Eudoxia Lopukhina, when he was only 16.[91] This was consistent with previous Romanov tradition by choosing a daughter of a minor noble. This was done to prevent fighting between the stronger noble houses and to bring fresh blood into the family.[92] Upon his return from his European tour in 1698, Peter sought to end his unhappy marriage. He divorced the tsaritsa and forced her to join a convent.[91] She had borne him three children, although only one, Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia, survived past his childhood.

Menshikov introduced him to Marta Helena Skowrońska, the daughter of a Polish-Lithuanian peasant, and took her as a mistress some time between 1702 and 1704.[93] Marta converted to the Russian Orthodox Church and was given the name Catherine.[94] Though no record exists, Catherine and Peter married secretly between 23 October and 1 December 1707 in St. Petersburg.[95] Peter valued Catherine and married officially, at Saint Isaac's Cathedral on 19 February 1712.

In 1718, his son Alexei Petrovich was locked up in the Peter and Paul fortress, whom he regarded as the rebellious Absalom.[96] He was suspected of being involved in a plot to overthrow the Emperor. Alexei was tried and confessed under torture during questioning conducted by a secular court (count Tolstoy). He was convicted and sentenced to be executed. The sentence of high treason could only be carried out with Peter's signed authorization, and Alexei died in prison, as Peter hesitated before making the decision. Alexei's death most likely resulted from injuries suffered during his torture.[97] Alexei's mother Eudoxia was punished. She was dragged from her home, tried on false charges of adultery, publicly flogged, and confined in monasteries while being forbidden to be talked to. [dubiousdiscuss]

In 1724, Peter had his second wife, Catherine, crowned as Empress, although he remained Russia's actual ruler.

Issue

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By his two wives, he had fifteen children: three by Eudoxia and twelve by Catherine. These included four sons named Pavel and three sons named Peter, all of whom died in infancy. Only three of his children survived to adulthood. He had only three grandchildren: Tsar Peter II and Grand Duchess Natalia by Alexei and Tsar Peter III by Anna.

Name Birth Death Notes
By Eudoxia Lopukhina
Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia 18 February 1690 26 June 1718, age 28 Married 1711, Charlotte Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel;
issue Peter II of Russia
Alexander Petrovich 13 October 1691 14 May 1692, age 7 months  
Pavel Petrovich 1693 1693  
By Catherine I
Peter Petrovich Winter 1704[98] 1707[98] Born and died before the official marriage of his parents
Paul Petrovich October 1705[98] 1707[98] Born and died before the official marriage of his parents
Catherine Petrovna 7 February 1707[98] 7 August 1708[98] Born and died before the official marriage of her parents
Anna Petrovna 27 January 1708 15 May 1728 Married 1725, Karl Friedrich, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp;
issue Peter III of Russia.
Elizaveta Petrovna,
later Empress Elizaveta Petrovna
29 December 1709 5 January 1762 Reputedly married 1742, Alexei Razumovsky;
no issue
Maria Natalia Petrovna 20 March 1713 17 May 1715 born in Riga
Margarita Petrovna 19 September 1714 7 June 1715
Peter Petrovich 9 November 1715 (N.S.) 6 May 1719
Pavel Petrovich 13 January 1717 14 January 1717 in Wesel
Natalia Petrovna 31 August 1718 15 March 1725
Peter Petrovich 7 October 1723 7 October 1723
Pavel Petrovich 1724 1724

Mistresses and illegitimate children

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Peter the Great with a black page, by de:Gustav von Mardefeld, a Prussian diplomat, who attended the peace congress on Åland between 1717–1719[99]

Legacy

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Head (original) of the model after which the monument by Falconet was cast in gypsum by Marie-Anne Collot. Russian Museum, Saint-Petersburg

Peter's legacy has always been a major concern of Russian intellectuals. Peter is a more complex character than he is sometimes given credit for. Some believe Peter's reforms divided the country socially and weakened it spiritually. Riasanovsky points to a "paradoxical dichotomy" in the black and white images such as God/Antichrist, educator/ignoramus, architect of Russia's greatness/destroyer of national culture, father of his country/scourge of the common man.[103] For Old Believers he was the Antichrist, because of the calendar changes and poll tax. Peter compared himself with King David or Noah with a divine mission.[104] At his funeral Prokopovich compared him with Moses and Solomon.[18] Voltaire's 1759 biography gave 18th-century Russians a man of the Enlightenment, while Alexander Pushkin's "The Bronze Horseman" poem of 1833 gave a powerful romantic image of a creator-god.[105][106][107] Slavophiles in mid-19th century deplored Peter's westernization of Russia.

Western writers and political analysts recounted "The Testimony" or secret will of Peter the Great. It supposedly revealed his grand evil plot for Russia to control the world via conquest of Constantinople, Afghanistan and India. It was a forgery made in Paris at Napoleon's command when he started the invasion of Russia in 1812. Nevertheless, it is still quoted in foreign policy circles.[108]

The Communists executed the last Romanovs, and their historians such as Mikhail Pokrovsky presented strongly negative views of the entire dynasty. Stalin however admired how Peter strengthened the state, and wartime, diplomacy, industry, higher education, and government administration. Stalin wrote in 1928, "when Peter the Great, who had to deal with more developed countries in the West, feverishly built works in factories for supplying the army and strengthening the country's defenses, this was an original attempt to leap out of the framework of backwardness."[109] As a result, Soviet historiography emphasizes both the positive achievement and the negative factor of oppressing the common people.[110]

After the fall of Communism in 1991, scholars and the general public in Russia and the West gave fresh attention to Peter and his role in Russian history. His reign is now seen as the decisive formative event in the Russian imperial past. Many new ideas have merged, such as whether he strengthened the autocratic state or whether the tsarist regime was not statist enough given its small bureaucracy.[111] Modernization models have become contested ground.[112]

He initiated a wide range of economic, social, political, administrative, educational and military reforms which ended the dominance of traditionalism and religion in Russia and initiated its westernization. His efforts included secularization of education, organization of administration for effective governance, enhanced use of technology, establishing an industrial economy, modernization of the army and establishment of a strong navy.[113]

Historian Y. Vodarsky said in 1993 that Peter, "did not lead the country on the path of accelerated economic, political and social development, did not force it to 'achieve a leap' through several stages.... On the contrary, these actions to the greatest degree put a brake on Russia's progress and created conditions for holding it back for one and a half centuries!"[114] The autocratic powers that Stalin admired appeared as a liability to Evgeny Anisimov, who complained that Peter was, "the creator of the administrative command system and the true ancestor of Stalin."[115] In the period from 1678 to 1710, however, the population grew 2 times.[116]

According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, "He did not completely bridge the gulf between Russia and the Western countries, but he achieved considerable progress in development of the national economy and trade, education, science and culture, and foreign policy. Russia became a great power, without whose concurrence no important European problem could thenceforth be settled. His internal reforms achieved progress to an extent that no earlier innovator could have envisaged."[117]

While the cultural turn in historiography has downplayed diplomatic, economic and constitutional issues, new cultural roles have been found for Peter, for example in architecture (Petrine Baroque) and dress. James Cracraft argues:

The Petrine revolution in Russia—subsuming in this phrase the many military, naval, governmental, educational, architectural, linguistic, and other internal reforms enacted by Peter's regime to promote Russia's rise as a major European power—was essentially a cultural revolution, one that profoundly impacted both the basic constitution of the Russian Empire and, perforce, its subsequent development.[118]

The iconic representations of dead saints typical for centuries of Russian visual culture suddenly give way to naturalistic portraiture.[64]

[edit]
Tomb of Peter the Great in the Peter and Paul Fortress, St Petersburg
Peter I at Krasnaya Gorka Lighting a Fire on the Shore to Signal to his Sinking Ships; the Russian Baltic Fleet first went to sea in full force, – to help the Russian troops besieging Viborg, – the fleet got caught in a storm.[119] Painting by Ivan Aivazovsky (1846).

Peter has been featured in many histories, novels, plays, films, monuments and paintings.[120][121] They include the poems The Bronze Horseman, Poltava and the unfinished novel The Moor of Peter the Great, all by Alexander Pushkin. The former dealt with The Bronze Horseman, an equestrian statue raised in Peter's honour. Aleksey Nikolayevich Tolstoy wrote a biographical historical novel about him, named Peter I, in the 1930s.

There was a man named Peter the Great who was a Russian Tzar;
When remodeling his the castle put the throne behind the bar;
He lined the walls with vodka, rum, and 40 kinds of beers;
And advanced the Russian culture by 120 years!

Ancestors

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]

Sources

[edit]
Historiography and memory
  • Brown, Peter B. "Towards a Psychohistory of Peter the Great: Trauma, Modeling, and Coping in Peter's Personality". Russian History 35#1–2 (2008): 19–44.
  • Brown, Peter B. "Gazing Anew at Poltava: Perspectives from the Military Revolution Controversy, Comparative History, and Decision-Making Doctrines". Harvard Ukrainian Studies 31.1/4 (2009): 107–133. online Archived 15 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Cracraft, James. "Kliuchevskii on Peter the Great". Canadian-American Slavic Studies 20.4 (1986): 367–381.
  • Daqiu, Zhu. "Cultural Memory and the Image of Peter the Great in Russian Literature". Russian Literature & Arts 2 (2014): 19+.
  • Gasiorowska, Xenia. The image of Peter the Great in Russian fiction (1979) online
  • Platt, Kevin M. F. Terror and Greatness: Ivan and Peter as Russian Myths (2011) [ISBN missing]
  • Resis, Albert. "Russophobia and the" Testament" of Peter the Great, 1812–1980". Slavic Review 44.4 (1985): 681–693 online[dead link].
  • Riasanovsky, Nicholas V. The Image of Peter the Great in Russian History and Thought (1985). [ISBN missing]
  • Waugh, Daniel Clarke. "We have never been modern: Approaches to the study of Russia in the age of Peter the Great". Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas H. 3 (2001): 321–345 online in English Archived 19 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Zitser, Ernest A. (Spring 2005). "Post-Soviet Peter: New Histories of the Late Muscovite and Early Imperial Russian Court". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. 6 (2): 375–392. doi:10.1353/kri.2005.0032. S2CID 161390436.
  • Zitser, Ernest A. "The Difference that Peter I Made". in The Oxford Handbook of Modern Russian History. ed. by Simon Dixon (2013) online[dead link]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Peter I (Russian: Пётр I Алексе́евич; 9 June [O.S. 30 May] 1672 – 8 February [O.S. 28 January] 1725), commonly known as Peter the Great, ruled as of from 1682, initially alongside his half-brother Ivan V until assuming sole power in 1696, and proclaimed himself in 1721 following victories in the .
During his 43-year reign, Peter implemented sweeping reforms to transform the backward Muscovite state into a European great power, including military reorganization with and modern artillery, administrative centralization via the and collegia, through incentives and expansion, and cultural enforced by decrees mandating European , beard taxes, and .
These changes facilitated Russia's emergence as a major military force, exemplified by the capture of from the Ottomans in 1696 and the decisive defeat of at in 1709, granting permanent Baltic access and elevating Russia's international stature, though achieved via autocratic absolutism, mass executions of rebels like the , and intensified that burdened the peasantry.
Peter's founding of in 1703 as the new capital symbolized his vision of a window to the West, constructed amid harsh conditions that claimed thousands of lives, underscoring the coercive nature of his modernization drive which prioritized state power over individual or traditional customs.

Early Life and Rise to Power

Birth, Family, and Childhood Influences

Pyotr Alekseyevich Romanov, later known as Peter the Great, was born on 9 June 1672 in Moscow to Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich and his second wife, Natalya Kirillovna Naryshkina. He was the first son from this marriage but the fourteenth child overall of the tsar, who had several children from his first wife, Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya. Alexei Mikhailovich, who reigned from 1645 to 1676, pursued policies of centralization and church reform amid ongoing conflicts like the Russo-Polish War, shaping the conservative Muscovite environment into which Peter was born. Natalya Naryshkina, daughter of a modest noble, had married Alexei in 1671 and exerted influence as Peter's mother, advocating for his interests after the tsar's death. Following Alexei's death on 29 January 1676, Peter's half-brother III ascended the throne, relegating young Peter and his mother to the village of Preobrazhenskoe near , away from court intrigues. There, Peter received rudimentary education from Nikita Zotov starting around age five, focusing on through religious texts such as the , primer, , and , though he displayed limited enthusiasm for formal scholarship. Zotov's instruction emphasized Orthodox piety and basic governance knowledge, but Peter's curiosity leaned toward practical pursuits, including and mock military drills with peasant boys, foreshadowing his later organizational skills. Peter's formative influences extended beyond traditional tutelage to the Nemetskaya Sloboda, Moscow's foreign quarter housing Protestant merchants, artisans, and technicians from , , and , who introduced him to Western mechanical devices, navigation instruments, and ship models. These encounters, often facilitated by his mother's connections, ignited Peter's fascination with , , and European , compensating for gaps in his clerical through hands-on experimentation and friendships with expatriates like Dutchman Frans Timmerman, who demonstrated boat construction. This exposure to pragmatic, technology-driven Western practices contrasted sharply with Muscovite , planting seeds for his drive to modernize via empirical adaptation rather than doctrinal adherence.

Youthful Rule and Power Consolidation

Following the death of Feodor III on April 27, 1682, a power struggle erupted within the Russian court, culminating in the that began on May 15, 1682. The mutinous stormed the , killing several Naryshkin relatives of Peter's mother in a bid to secure the throne for the elder half-brother Ivan V, who was physically and mentally frail. To quell the violence, both Peter, aged ten, and Ivan were proclaimed co-tsars on May 26, 1682, with their half-sister Sophia Alekseyevna assuming the regency due to the minors' ages and Ivan's incapacities. During Sophia's regency from 1682 to 1689, the adolescent Peter resided primarily at Preobrazhenskoe village near , where he pursued informal education in military arts, engaging in mock battles and shipbuilding experiments on a pond. These "play" regiments, formed around 1683 from children of boyars and peasants, evolved into the professional Preobrazhensky and Semyonovsky Guards by 1690, serving as Peter's loyal power base distinct from the unreliable . Sophia's failed Crimean campaigns in 1687 and 1689 eroded her support among the boyars and military, enabling Peter, now seventeen, to rally his guards and allies for a coup in 1689. Sophia was deposed and forcibly tonsured as a nun named Susanna, confined to the in by September 1689, effectively ending her political influence. Peter's mother, , assumed de facto regency until her death on January 27, 1694, after which Peter exercised greater autonomy while nominally sharing rule with the ineffective Ivan V. The death of Ivan V on January 29, 1696, without male heirs, left Peter as the unchallenged sole autocrat at age 23, marking the full consolidation of his power. This period of youthful maneuvering transformed Peter from a figurehead into a decisive ruler, reliant on personal guards and strategic alliances rather than traditional or boyar factions.

European Exposures and Strategic Learnings

Grand Embassy to the West

The Grand Embassy was a Russian diplomatic mission to Western Europe led by Peter the Great, departing Moscow on 9 March 1697 and concluding on 25 August 1698. The expedition's dual aims encompassed negotiating alliances against the Ottoman Empire to support Russia's Azov campaigns and systematically acquiring Western technical expertise, especially in shipbuilding, manufacturing, and military organization. Comprising roughly 250 personnel—including boyars, diplomats, officers, prospective students, translators, priests, cooks, and musicians—the group traveled in a substantial convoy of carriages and riders. Peter himself joined incognito as "Peter Mikhailov," a sergeant in the Preobrazhensky Regiment, to evade formal protocol and immerse directly in practical learning. The itinerary began with stops in Riga (Swedish Livonia) and Königsberg (Prussia), where Peter conferred with Elector Frederick III on 8 August 1697. Proceeding to the Netherlands, the delegation reached Zaandam on 18 August 1697, prompting Peter to labor incognito in local shipyards, wielding tools alongside Dutch carpenters to master vessel construction techniques. Relocating to Amsterdam for greater discretion, he apprenticed under master shipwrights like Gerrit Kist and studied at the Dutch East India Company's facilities, dissecting cadavers to learn anatomy and observing artillery foundries. In January 1698, Peter crossed to England, basing himself in Deptford and Woolwich dockyards; there, he worked on frigate assembly, inspected naval vessels, and held audiences with King William III, while visiting Oxford and Cambridge universities. Diplomatic overtures in the and sought to revive the against the Ottomans, but encountered reluctance amid European powers' focus on the and Louis XIV's campaigns. Peter also dispatched subgroups to and the for naval intelligence, though these yielded minimal strategic gains. Substantively, the embassy recruited over 800 artisans, engineers, and specialists in fields from to , many of whom relocated to to establish workshops and academies. Peter personally absorbed knowledge in , ordnance, and , commissioning portraits and acquiring scientific instruments to inform future reforms. The venture abbreviated upon intelligence of the Streltsy revolt in during June 1698, impelling Peter's precipitate departure from on 21 April 1698 via —where he met Emperor Leopold I—and , reentering on 25 August. While alliance-building faltered, the Grand Embassy's technological harvest catalyzed Russia's naval foundation, industrial inception, and administrative modernization, marking Peter's inaugural direct exposure to European advancements.

Technical and Naval Acquisitions

During the Grand Embassy of 1697–1698, Peter the Great prioritized acquiring practical knowledge in shipbuilding and navigation to establish a modern Russian navy. In the Netherlands, he worked incognito as a carpenter in the shipyards of Zaandam for several months, learning techniques from Dutch masters renowned for their maritime expertise. He then moved to Amsterdam, where he continued hands-on training and supervised the construction of the frigate Shtandart, built by Dutch shipwright Vybe Gerens as Russia's first purpose-built warship flagship. These efforts focused on mastering European methods of hull design, rigging, and sailmaking, which Peter applied directly upon his return to Russia. Peter extended his studies to England, visiting dockyards such as to observe advanced naval construction and operations. There, he examined practices and engaged with British experts, further refining his understanding of artillery integration and vessel maneuverability. Complementing his personal training, the embassy recruited approximately 500 foreign specialists, including shipwrights, navigators, and gunsmiths from the and , to transfer technical know-how to Russian facilities. These acquisitions emphasized empirical skills over theoretical knowledge, enabling Peter to oversee the launch of Russia's prototypes by 1700. Beyond , Peter sought technical innovations in related fields like and materials. He visited workshops producing navigational tools, such as astrolabes and compasses, and arranged for their importation alongside expert instruction. This pragmatic approach yielded verifiable results: Russian-built vessels incorporating Dutch and English designs demonstrated improved seaworthiness in early trials, marking a causal shift from reliance on foreign mercenaries to indigenous naval capacity.

Reign and Domestic Transformations

Peter the Great centralized Russia's administration by abolishing the Boyar Duma in 1711 and establishing the as the supreme organ for judicial, legislative, and administrative functions. The , decreed on February 22, 1711 (March 5 New Style), consisted of nine to ten members appointed directly by the to oversee governance during his absences, particularly amid the , thereby reducing aristocratic influence and enhancing monarchical control. To streamline provincial administration, Peter divided the into eight governorates (guberniyas) in 1708, each headed by a governor appointed by the , which facilitated better collection, , and local oversight while diminishing the autonomy of traditional estates. In 1718–1719, he replaced the obsolete prikazy (chanceries) with nine collegia (colleges or ministries) modeled on Swedish prototypes, including those for war, navy, , , , , , expenditure, and state income; these operated collegially under presidents and vice-presidents to promote and expertise over personal . A cornerstone of legal and administrative restructuring was the , promulgated on January 24, 1722 (February 4 New Style), which classified military, civil, and court service into 14 hierarchical grades, tying and privileges to merit-based promotion rather than . This system opened ranks to non-nobles, mandated lifelong service for nobles until reaching the 8th civil or 14th military grade for hereditary status, and undermined privileges by emphasizing competence and loyalty to the state. Peter's legal reforms supplemented these changes through oversight mechanisms like the fiscals (procurators) introduced with the in 1711, who investigated and enforced decrees empire-wide, and a 1700 commission to revise the Sobornoe Ulozhenie, though it yielded no comprehensive new code amid wartime priorities. These measures prioritized efficiency and absolutist authority, with justice collegium handling civil and criminal cases via rationalized procedures, though enforcement relied on tsarist edicts supplementing older statutes.

Military Modernization

Peter initiated military modernization by decisively suppressing the of 1698, which resulted in the execution of over 1,000 rebels and the complete disbandment of these hereditary musketeer regiments, long obsolete in discipline and equipment. This purge eliminated a source of internal resistance and cleared the path for a professionalized force modeled on Western European standards. In 1699, Peter established a comprising regular and regiments, shifting from reliance on feudal levies and Cossack to a conscript-based structure emphasizing merit and training. Soldiers were issued standardized green uniforms for —retained for over a century—and equipped with domestically produced muskets and bayonets, while rigorous drilling in linear tactics and maneuvers was enforced to instill . The force expanded rapidly, reaching more than 200,000 men by the early 1700s, supported by the introduction of systematic recruitment levies that drafted peasants from taxable households for lifelong or extended service. Artillery and engineering branches were reorganized with the creation of dedicated mobile units, incorporating advanced techniques and field guns learned from European models during Peter's travels. selection prioritized competence over birth, culminating in the 1722 , which classified 14 hierarchical levels across army, navy, and civil service, allowing non-nobles to rise through proven service and thereby incentivizing efficiency. Parallel to army reforms, Peter founded Russia's regular navy during the 1696 Azov campaign, constructing over 50 vessels at the Voronezh shipyards using foreign expertise to challenge Ottoman sea power. This Baltic and grew to hundreds of ships by the 1720s, with specialized academies training officers in navigation and gunnery, transforming Russia from a landlocked power into a maritime contender. These changes, enforced through harsh and state factories for arms production, enabled sustained campaigns despite initial setbacks.

Economic, Educational, and Cultural Initiatives

Peter the Great prioritized industrial expansion from 1700 onward, establishing metallurgical plants and manufacturing facilities on an unprecedented scale to bolster Russia's economy and military capabilities. He inherited about 20 iron foundries and invested in Ural mining operations using high-quality local ores, expanding to 21 iron and copper foundries by the end of his reign and making Russia the largest iron producer in Europe. By 1725, approximately 70 mines and factories were operational for copper and iron extraction and processing. Factories producing muskets, leather goods, textiles, and cannon were founded, with post-1721 additions including silk, china, crystal, and velvet works. Foreign trade volume grew sevenfold during his rule, supported by privileges for industrialists such as the right to purchase serfs for factory labor. Shipbuilding received emphasis through the Admiralty College established in 1718, alongside orders for canals linking major rivers to Baltic, Caspian, Black, and White Seas to facilitate commerce via the new port at St. Petersburg. In education, Peter founded the Navigation School on January 14 (25), 1701, as Russia's first specialized maritime institution. Between 1701 and 1719, he established additional technical schools including those for , , and a Naval in and St. Petersburg. The and School opened in in 1712 to train specialists for fortifications and ordnance. Secular schools were created for the children of soldiers, officials, and to promote and practical skills. He decreed the into existence in 1724 to advance knowledge through research and foreign expertise, which opened the following year. Supporting initiatives included the first Russian newspaper, Vedomosti, launched in 1703, alongside alphabet modernization and adoption of the from January 1, 1700. Cultural reforms aimed at Western European alignment included edicts mandating shaved beards and European-style clothing among elites, enforced after Peter's –1698 Grand Embassy observations. In 1698, upon returning to , he personally shaved the beards of boyars and imposed a of 100 rubles annually on those retaining , issuing tokens as . These measures, alongside promotion of secular customs and reduced clerical influence, sought to erode traditional isolation but met resistance from conservative elements valuing Orthodox norms.

Foreign Wars and Territorial Expansion

Conquest of Azov and Early Conflicts

In 1695, Peter I initiated the Azov campaigns as part of Russia's efforts within the Holy League against the Ottoman Empire, aiming to secure access to the Black Sea by capturing the strategic fortress of Azov at the mouth of the Don River. On 21 February 1695, Peter convened a council of war, mobilizing approximately 31,000 troops, including elite regiments under Patrick Gordon and forces directly under Peter, supported by Cossacks and peasant levies. The Russian army reached Azov between 27 March and 29 June, commencing the siege on 7 July. Despite artillery bombardments that destroyed several towers by 20 July and early August, Ottoman forces, numbering around 15,000 defenders, received continuous resupply via sea, which Russian land forces could not interdict due to the absence of a navy. Frontal assaults on 15 August and 25 September failed disastrously, with 1,500 Russians killed in the former and additional heavy losses in a Turkish counterattack that claimed 400 dead and 600 wounded. Lacking unified command and effective siege tactics, Peter ordered retreat on 27 September, completed by 2 December, marking the campaign's failure. Learning from the defeat, Peter oversaw extensive preparations during the winter of 1695–1696, directing the construction of Russia's first significant fleet at Voronezh on the Don, involving 28,000 laborers to build two ships of the line, four fireboats, 23 galleys, and over 1,300 barges. Appointing Alexis Shein as supreme commander, Peter assembled a larger force exceeding 75,000 men, comprising 46,000 peasants, 15,000 Cossacks, 3,000 Kalmuk cavalry, and elite regiments, alongside the new fleet. The fleet departed on 3 May 1696 and positioned to blockade Azov by 2 June, preventing Ottoman resupply. The army arrived by 10 June, resuming the siege at month's end; a Cossack sortie on 19 July breached the walls, leading to the fortress's surrender on 20 July. This victory, Russia's first major naval engagement, stemmed from the blockade, improved command structure, and refined siege methods. The conquest of provided temporary access and a foothold for further expansion, prompting Peter to fortify the region with new strongholds like . However, it did not decisively weaken Ottoman naval dominance, as the Russian fleet remained confined to the Sea of . These campaigns represented Peter's initial independent military endeavors, preceding the broader conflicts of the , and highlighted his emphasis on naval power and logistical innovation amid ongoing border skirmishes with allied to the Ottomans. The gains were formalized in the 1699 , retaining until its loss in the 1711 Pruth River Campaign.

Great Northern War

The Great Northern War erupted in 1700 when Tsar Peter I of Russia allied with Denmark-Norway and Saxony-Poland-Lithuania to challenge Swedish dominance in the , seeking secure outlets for Russian trade and expansion. Sweden, under King Charles XII, faced the coalition but swiftly countered by forcing out via the of Travendal in August 1700. Russia's declaration of war followed in August, prompting an initial offensive toward Swedish-held in . Early Russian efforts faltered disastrously at the Battle of Narva on November 20, 1700, where Charles XII's 8,000-man Swedish force routed Peter's besieging army of approximately 35,000-40,000 troops amid a fierce storm that hampered Russian artillery. Russian losses exceeded 8,000 killed and 10,000 captured, with much of their officer corps deserting or fleeing, exposing deficiencies in training, discipline, and supply lines. This humiliation compelled Peter to undertake sweeping military reforms, including , adoption of Western European drill and tactics, and creation of a standing professional army, while Charles XII campaigned south against Poland-Lithuania, granting Russia time to rebuild. By 1708, Peter's reorganized forces, numbering over 100,000, adopted a of attrition and defensive depth as invaded during the Great Frost, a severe winter that devastated the Swedish . The decisive clash occurred at on July 8, 1709, where Peter's 42,000 troops decisively defeated 's depleted 25,000-man army, weakened by hunger, disease, and prior foraging failures; Swedish casualties reached 6,900 dead and wounded, with 2,760 captured, while Russian losses were about 1,345 killed and 3,290 wounded. escaped to the , but the battle shattered Swedish field armies, enabling Russian advances into , , and . Subsequent campaigns saw Peter develop a from captured and newly built ships, culminating in naval victories that secured supply lines and blockaded Swedish ports. Russia sustained the prolonged conflict through economic mobilization, including expanded mining, metallurgy, and taxation, avoiding overextension by prioritizing limited territorial goals like for a new capital. The war concluded with the on September 10, 1721, by which ceded , , , and parts of to Russia, granting Peter control over key Baltic coastlines and elevating Russia to status.

Persian Campaign and Later Engagements

Following the on September 10, 1721 (O.S.), which concluded the with significant territorial gains in the , Peter I redirected Russian military efforts southward to exploit the collapse of Safavid authority in Persia amid Afghan invasions. The Afghan Hotaki dynasty had captured in October 1722, deposing Shah Sultan Husayn and creating a that Peter viewed as an opportunity for Russian expansion toward the , aiming to secure trade routes to and Persia while denying Ottoman influence in the . To preempt Ottoman intervention, Peter negotiated a prior agreement with the in June 1722, delineating spheres of influence and allowing Russian operations along the Caspian coast without immediate Turkish opposition. The campaign commenced in July 1722 with a Russian expeditionary force of approximately 22,000 troops, including , , and , transported by a from under Peter's personal command. Landing near the Agrakhan River on July 20 (O.S.), the army advanced through Daghestan despite logistical challenges from mountainous terrain, summer heat, and local resistance from Lezgin tribesmen, who inflicted casualties through guerrilla tactics. , a fortified port city, surrendered without significant fighting on August 23 (O.S.) after its khan, Shahgulu Khan, handed over the keys to Peter, marking the first major acquisition and providing a base for further operations. Russian forces then moved inland to occupy Shemakha in province by September, but Peter's deteriorating health—exacerbated by fever and exhaustion—forced his return to in October 1722, leaving subordinates like Fyodor Apraksin to consolidate gains amid supply shortages and disease that claimed thousands of troops. In 1723, Russian naval and land operations expanded into northern Persian provinces, capturing in Gilan by March through a combined amphibious assault that overwhelmed local Safavid garrisons weakened by civil strife. followed on July 26 (O.S.), falling after brief resistance from its khan, who fled, yielding control of key oil-rich areas and further coastline. These victories, achieved against fragmented Persian opposition rather than pitched battles, reflected Peter's strategy of rapid exploitation of internal disorder over prolonged sieges, though high attrition from climate and logistics limited deeper penetration into Persia's interior. The Treaty of , signed September 12, 1723 (O.S.), formalized Persian cessions to of , with , and the provinces of Gilan, Mazandaran, and Astrabad, while recognizing (Sultan Husayn's son) as legitimate shah in exchange for Russian support against Afghan forces; this granted dominance over the western Caspian littoral for commerce and fortification. Subsequent engagements involved diplomatic maneuvering rather than major combat, as Ottoman claims to Caucasian territories escalated tensions. Peter reinforced the new holdings with garrisons and planned counter-offensives, but the Treaty of on June 21, 1724 (O.S.), resolved Russo-Ottoman disputes by partitioning Persian territories: retained Caspian gains, while the Ottomans acquired western Georgia, , and parts of , stabilizing the frontier without further Russian military action under Peter. These acquisitions temporarily enhanced Russian naval projection on the Caspian but proved unsustainable; after Peter's death in February 1725, his successors retroceded most territories to Persia by 1735 to prioritize alliances against Ottoman threats, underscoring the campaign's reliance on Peter's personal oversight for retention.

Personal Affairs and Inner Circle

Marriages, Descendants, and Family Dynamics

Peter I married Fyodorovna Lopukhina on January 27, 1689 (Old Style), in an arrangement orchestrated by his mother, , to secure political alliances with the conservative factions. The union produced two sons: Alexei Petrovich, born February 28, 1690 (O.S.), and Alexander Petrovich, born October 1691, who died in infancy the following year. The marriage deteriorated rapidly due to Peter's growing aversion to 's traditionalist inclinations and her opposition to his Westernizing reforms; he separated from her in 1698 and formally divorced her in 1700, confining her to the Convent as a under the name Elena. Peter's second marriage was to , a Baltic peasant of Lithuanian and Swedish descent who later became known as Catherine I after her 1724 coronation. Captured during the and initially serving as a servant to Prince Alexander Menshikov, she became Peter's mistress around 1703 and married him secretly between October 23 and December 1, 1707 (O.S.), with a public ceremony following in 1712. Catherine bore Peter at least twelve children, though most died in infancy or early childhood, including several miscarriages and stillbirths documented in court records; the survivors were Anna Petrovna (born January 27, 1708, O.S.) and (born December 18, 1709, O.S.), who later ruled as Empress Elizabeth from 1741 to 1762. Family dynamics were marked by profound tensions, particularly between Peter and his Alexei, whom Peter viewed as embodying the backward Muscovite traditions he sought to eradicate. Raised under Eudoxia's influence, Alexei showed little enthusiasm for Peter's military drills or reforms, preferring monastic pursuits and clerical associations, which Peter interpreted as disloyalty and incompetence unfit for succession. In 1716, Alexei fled to seeking asylum from Charles VI, renouncing his claim to the throne, but returned under amnesty promises in 1718, only to face , , and death on June 26, 1718 (O.S.), officially from "" following a sentence of execution for treasonous . Alexei's , (born 1715), briefly succeeded as in 1727 under regency but died in 1730, ending that lineage; Peter instead groomed Catherine and their daughters as political assets, naming Catherine co-ruler in 1724 and bypassing traditional male . Peter's favoritism toward Catherine, whom he credited with emotional support during campaigns, contrasted sharply with his estrangement from Eudoxia's family and Alexei's faction, reflecting his prioritization of reformist allies over blood ties.

Religious Policies and Personal Faith

Peter I maintained adherence to Russian Orthodoxy as the established faith of his realm, yet his personal religiosity emphasized pragmatic utility over mystical devotion or traditional ritualism. As a , he exhibited conventional piety, participating in Orthodox rites amid the court's conservative milieu, but his extensive travels in Protestant from 1697 to 1698 exposed him to models prioritizing individual conscience and scriptural over hierarchical pomp. This influenced a view of as a tool for moral discipline and rather than an end in itself, leading him to critique clerical excesses while affirming core Christian tenets. His policies subordinated the church to state authority, aiming to eliminate perceived obstacles to administrative centralization and fiscal efficiency. Following the death of the last independent , , on October 16, 1700, Peter refused to convene a for a successor, exploiting the vacancy to assert control and prevent any figure from rivaling his . In January 1721, he promulgated the Spiritual Regulation, drafted by Ukrainian cleric Feofan Prokopovich, which abolished the patriarchal office and established the Most Holy Governing Synod—a collegial body of bishops and overseen by a lay ober-procurator appointed by the —as the church's supreme administrative organ. This structure mirrored Protestant consistories Peter observed abroad, transforming the church into a state department responsible for education, , and revenue collection, while stripping monasteries of vast landholdings to fund campaigns—reducing clerical from over half of 's arable land to state-controlled assets by the . Peter enforced conformity among dissenters, particularly the who rejected Nikon’s 17th-century liturgical reforms and viewed Peter's Westernizing edicts as Antichristian. He intensified prior persecutions, issuing a , 1716, ukase imposing on Old Believers, requiring them to wear distinctive red clothing or yellow badges for identification, and compelling registration under threat of property confiscation or . These measures, coupled with bans on traditional practices like sign-of-the-cross variations, drove mass exoduses to remote regions or , self-immolations among zealots, and an estimated one-third of the Orthodox population adhering to schismatic rites by the early despite coercion. Pragmatism tempered absolutism in foreign relations; a 1702 edict invited Protestant, Catholic, and other non-Orthodox foreigners to settle in without proselytizing restrictions, fostering technical expertise for modernization while preserving Orthodoxy's dominance domestically. Peter neither converted nor tolerated domestic challenges to Orthodox primacy, but his reforms eroded clerical autonomy, aligning functions with imperial and laying groundwork for that persisted until 1917.

Health Decline and Death

In the early 1720s, Peter began experiencing recurrent urinary tract difficulties, including painful urination and retention, which historians attribute to chronic inflammation or stricture, possibly exacerbated by long-term effects of untreated infections or kidney stones. These symptoms persisted amid his demanding schedule, including oversight of construction projects and military preparations, yet he underwent no major interventions until his final illness. Speculation in contemporary accounts and later analyses linked the issues to or excessive alcohol consumption, given Peter's documented and heavy drinking, though direct evidence remains circumstantial and findings point primarily to obstructive uropathy rather than active venereal disease at death. The terminal episode commenced in late January 1725 (Old Style), when Peter traveled to the to inspect flood defenses during the Epiphany celebrations. Observing a capsize amid icy waters, he waded in to assist workers, becoming thoroughly soaked in freezing conditions, which triggered a severe chill. Returning to St. Petersburg, his preexisting urinary problems escalated into acute retention; physicians employed catheterization to extract over a liter of infected urine, but this intervention failed to halt the progression to , in the , and uremic poisoning. Despite rallying briefly and dictating orders, including a failed attempt to name a successor, Peter's condition deteriorated rapidly over ten days. Peter died on February 8, 1725 (Old Style), at the age of 52, in his residence. An autopsy conducted by court surgeons revealed extensive gangrene of the bladder and kidneys, confirming death from acute renal failure secondary to urinary obstruction and infection. His body was embalmed and interred in the Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg, with his widow Catherine ascending the throne amid uncertainty over succession.

Assessments of Rule and Enduring Impact

Achievements in State-Building and Empire Foundation

Peter the Great centralized administrative authority by establishing the on March 5, 1711 (Old Style), as the supreme organ of state to manage legislative, judicial, and executive functions in his absence during campaigns, replacing the obsolete Boyar Duma. In 1718, he replaced the inefficient prikazy system with nine colleges—specialized ministries modeled on Swedish prototypes—for areas like , , and admiralty, expanding to twelve by 1722 to systematize governance. The , promulgated on January 24, 1722, created a merit-based of fourteen grades across , civil, and court services, enabling promotion by service rather than birth alone, with hereditary nobility granted only from the eighth rank upward, thus eroding traditional privileges and fostering a service nobility loyal to the state. Military reforms underpinned empire foundation, as Peter disbanded the unreliable Streltsy corps after their 1698 revolt and formed a professional standing army in 1699 through conscription, standardizing uniforms, training, and Western-style organization, growing it to approximately 200,000 infantry and cavalry by the early 1720s. He personally oversaw shipbuilding during his 1697–1698 Grand Embassy to Western Europe, founding Russia's Baltic Fleet at Voronezh in 1696 and later at Kronstadt, constructing over 800 warships by 1725 to project power seaward. Provincial subdivisions advanced control, with eight governorates created in 1708—later increased to twelve—each led by a governor appointed by Peter, enhancing tax collection, recruitment, and local administration to sustain wartime efforts. The founding of on May 27, 1703 (Old Style), on marshy River islands captured from , symbolized by serving as a fortified "window to ," relocated as capital in 1712 to bypass conservative influences, with forced labor from serfs and soldiers constructing the as its core. Economic measures supported these structures, including state-directed factories for munitions, textiles, and leather by the 1710s, protective tariffs favoring domestic goods, and monopolies on exports like and iron to fund military expansion, doubling industrial output in key sectors despite high costs. Culminating territorial gains solidified the empire: the , signed September 10, 1721, ended the , ceding Sweden's Baltic provinces—Ingria, , , and parts of —to , securing a permanent outlet to the . On November 2, 1721, the proclaimed Peter Emperor of All , elevating the tsardom to imperial status and formalizing conquests that expanded territory by over square miles, integrating diverse regions under centralized rule. These reforms transformed a fragmented into a cohesive absolutist state capable of European great-power rivalry, though reliant on coercive taxation and labor extraction.

Criticisms of Methods, Tyranny, and Social Costs

Peter's enforcement of Westernizing reforms often involved coercive measures, including and . In 1698, he imposed a ranging from 60 to 100 rubles annually on nobles and merchants, while forcibly shaving the beards of commoners who resisted, viewing as a symbol of backwardness incompatible with European norms. Resistance to such mandates, including dress codes mandating European-style , sparked sporadic revolts, which were met with violent suppression to compel compliance. His suppression of opposition exemplified tyrannical absolutism, particularly in the crushing of the 1698 . Upon returning from his Grand Embassy, Peter ordered the interrogation and execution of rebel musketeers, with estimates indicating over 1,000 tortured and beheaded, their bodies displayed along roadsides as deterrents; he personally participated in some beheadings to underscore his resolve. The Preobrazhensky Prikaz, his apparatus, routinely employed —such as the (a multi-thonged whip)—to extract confessions, institutionalizing fear as a governance tool. The execution of his son Tsarevich Alexei in 1718 highlighted the personal brutality of his rule. Accused of plotting against him after fleeing to , Alexei was subjected to repeated knouting sessions under Peter's orders, dying on June 26 from the after confessing under duress; associates faced , breaking on the wheel, or similar fates. Social costs were immense, driven by wartime demands and infrastructural projects. The construction of from 1703 onward relied on forced labor from peasants and soldiers in malarial marshes, contributing to tens of thousands of deaths from exhaustion, disease, and exposure, though exact figures remain debated due to incomplete records. Heavy taxation, including a 1718 of 70 kopecks per male peasant (triple prior household levies) and monopolies on salt and alcohol, exacerbated , fueling riots in 1704–1706 and 1720–1725 that were quelled by punitive military expeditions. Conscription for the drained villages, leaving fields fallow and intensifying serf burdens, as nobles transferred fiscal pressures downward. These policies, while enabling military success, entrenched a system of state that prioritized imperial expansion over societal welfare.

Historiographical Perspectives and Modern Reappraisals

In early Russian historiography, Peter's reign was depicted as a foundational era of state transformation, with Ivan Golikov's Dela Petra Velikago (1788–1789) drawing on archival sources to portray him as an active reformer whose policies laid the groundwork for imperial expansion. By the nineteenth century, Sergei Solov'ev emphasized Peter's central role in consolidating centralized authority and territorial growth, viewing his military and administrative innovations as essential to Russia's emergence as a European contender. Vasilii Kliuchevskii, however, offered a more , arguing that Peter's reforms accelerated industrialization and but at the expense of organic social evolution, imposing European models that strained traditional agrarian structures and exacerbated burdens on the peasantry. The contemporaneous Slavophile-Westernizer further polarized interpretations: Slavophiles, such as Aleksei Khomiakov, condemned Peter's as a violent rupture from Slavic communal traditions and Orthodox spirituality, favoring pre-Petrine customs over imposed foreign practices; Westernizers like Timofey Granovsky, in contrast, defended the reforms as pragmatic necessities for civilizational advancement, crediting Peter with averting stagnation. Soviet historiography reframed Peter within a Marxist framework, portraying him as a progressive absolutist who dismantled feudal remnants through coercive modernization, forging a centralized capable of withstanding external threats—evident in works like Nikolai Pavlenko's analyses, which highlighted industrial and military gains as steps toward historical inevitability, despite his monarchical form. This view aligned with state ideology under , who endorsed literary depictions of Peter as a resolute leader overcoming adversity, as in Alexei Tolstoy's novel Peter the First (1929–1945), awarded the Stalin Prize for reinforcing narratives of strong rule against chaos. Post-Soviet Russian scholarship, exemplified by Evgenii Anisimov's The Reforms of Peter the Great (1980s onward), introduced greater scrutiny of the human costs, including mass executions like the 1698 revolt suppression (over 1,000 killed) and forced labor for St. Petersburg's construction (estimated 30,000–100,000 deaths from 1703–1725), questioning whether short-term gains justified long-term authoritarian precedents and cultural alienation. Western historiography often balances acclaim for Peter's tangible achievements—such as the (1722), which meritocratically restructured nobility and bureaucracy, enabling Russia's victory (1700–1721)—against the coercive mechanisms, as in Lindsey Hughes' Russia in the Age of Peter the Great (1998), which details how reforms permeated daily life via taxes, , and beard taxes, modernizing the state but entrenching serfdom's exploitative dynamics. Paul Bushkovitch portrays the era as a pivotal shift from isolation to imperial engagement, driven by Peter's personal agency in army reorganization and naval creation, yet notes resistance from groups like the , whose schism intensified under his policies. James Cracraft underscores cultural imports, like the 1708 civil script alphabet reform, as catalysts for literacy and administration, though implemented via top-down fiat rather than consensus. Modern reappraisals sustain the hero-villain dichotomy: proponents credit Peter with causal foundations for Russia's longevity as a , evidenced by post-reform territorial doublings (to 15 million square kilometers by 1725) and economic baselines for later industrialization; critics, including post-Soviet analysts, highlight enduring legacies of centralized and social trauma, such as the 1705–1706 (suppressed with 10,000+ Cossack casualties), arguing his methods prioritized state power over individual agency. In contemporary discourse, figures like have invoked Peter to frame territorial reclamations—e.g., citing 2022 actions as continuations of historical reclamation—yet historians like those in recent anniversary reflections differentiate his context-bound conquests from modern , cautioning against ahistorical analogies given Peter's reliance on Western alliances absent in current alignments. Overall, empirical assessments affirm Peter's reforms' efficacy in military projection (e.g., Azov capture in 1696, Baltic access via 1721 Nystad ) but underscore their extractive toll, with no consensus on net societal benefit due to unverifiable counterfactuals of non-intervention.

References

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