Coronation of the Russian monarch: Difference between revisions
→The "many years" and the anointing: In this and the previous section I added English translations of the actual texts used I found in books I own. |
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''The Orthodox Word'', 153 (1990), pg. 200. At [http://users.sisqtel.net/williams/stnicholas.pdf The Royal Passion-Bearer: Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II], pg. 3. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref> |
''The Orthodox Word'', 153 (1990), pg. 200. At [http://users.sisqtel.net/williams/stnicholas.pdf The Royal Passion-Bearer: Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II], pg. 3. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref> |
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After the prayer, the Holy Unction portion of the ceremony took place, as part of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy. After the singing of the pre-Communion hymn, the Tsar and his Empress ascended the [[Ambo (liturgy)|Ambo]] in front of the iconostasis in turn, where each was anointed with holy [[myrrh]] by the Patriarch or Metropolitan. The Emperor was anointed on his forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, ears, breast and both sides of each hand, while his consort was anointed on her forehead only |
After the prayer, the Holy Unction portion of the ceremony took place, as part of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy. After the singing of the pre-Communion hymn, the Tsar and his Empress ascended the [[Ambo (liturgy)|Ambo]] in front of the iconostasis in turn, where each was anointed with holy [[myrrh]] by the Patriarch or Metropolitan. The Emperor was anointed on his forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, ears, breast and both sides of each hand, while his consort was anointed on her forehead only<ref>Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., [http://www.archive.org/stream/coronationrites00wooluoft/coronationrites00wooluoft_djvu.txt Coronation Rites]. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 28. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref>, each anointing being accompanied by the words, ''"the seal of the gift of the Holy Spirit."''<ref>A Manuel. The Orthodox Church's Divine Services. Complied by D. Sokolof, Arch-priest.</ref> Bells and a second 101-gun salvo ensued. During the partaking of Holy Communion toward the end of the Liturgy, the Tsar entered the altar through the Royal Doors (normally permitted only to ordained clergy), and partake of the bread and wine separately, in clerical fashion.<ref>[http://www.angelfire.com/pa/ImperialRussian/royalty/russia/coronation.html Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar]. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.</ref> This was the only time the Emperor—or any Orthodox layperson—was ever permitted to receive communion in this manner.<ref>Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, [http://www.themolloys.net/molloy/romanov/coronation.htm The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna], Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.</ref> Unlike the Tsar, the Empress remained outside the Royal Doors and communicated in standard Orthodox lay fashion, receiving both the bread and the wine together on a spoon.<ref>Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., [http://www.archive.org/stream/coronationrites00wooluoft/coronationrites00wooluoft_djvu.txt Coronation Rites]. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 28. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref> |
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After his anointing, but prior to the partaking of Holy Communion, the Tsar recited a coronation [[oath]], in which he swore to preserve the [[autocracy]] intact and to rule his realm with justice and fairness.<ref>R. Monk Zachariah Liebmann, "Martyrology of the Communist Yoke: The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", |
After his anointing, but prior to the partaking of Holy Communion, the Tsar recited a coronation [[oath]], in which he swore to preserve the [[autocracy]] intact and to rule his realm with justice and fairness.<ref>R. Monk Zachariah Liebmann, "Martyrology of the Communist Yoke: The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", |
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[[File:Homage to Alexander II.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Homage to Alexander II]] |
[[File:Homage to Alexander II.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Homage to Alexander II]] |
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===The service concludes=== |
===The service concludes=== |
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After receiving Holy Communion, the Emperor and Empress returned to their thrones, where the Prayers After Receipt of Holy Communion were read over them. Following this, the Tsar received homage from his wife, mother (if living) and other family members, nobles, and notable subjects present at his coronation. The dismissal was read, as the [[Archdeacon]] intoned a special blessing for the Tsar and Imperial Family, with the choir singing "many years" three times.<ref>Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., [http://www.archive.org/stream/coronationrites00wooluoft/coronationrites00wooluoft_djvu.txt Coronation Rites]. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 29. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref> This concluded the portion of the coronation conducted inside the cathedral, but other separate ceremonies and celebrations still remained. |
After receiving Holy Communion, the Emperor and Empress returned to their thrones, where the Prayers After Receipt of Holy Communion were read over them. Following this, the Tsar received homage from his wife, mother (if living) and other family members, nobles, and notable subjects present at his coronation. The dismissal was read, as the [[Archdeacon]] intoned a special blessing for the Tsar and Imperial Family, with the choir singing "many years" three times.<ref>Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., [http://www.archive.org/stream/coronationrites00wooluoft/coronationrites00wooluoft_djvu.txt Coronation Rites]. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 29. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.</ref> This concluded the portion of the coronation conducted inside the cathedral, but other separate ceremonies and celebrations still remained. |
Revision as of 21:57, 6 January 2010
The Coronation of the Russian monarch was a religious ceremony of the Russian Orthodox Church, the state church of the Russian Empire, in which the Emperor of Russia (generally referred to as the Tsar) was crowned and invested with regalia, then anointed with chrism and formally blessed by the church to commence his reign. Although rulers of Muscovy had been crowned prior to the reign of Ivan III, their coronation rituals assumed overt Byzantine overtones as the result of the influence of Ivan's wife Sophia Paleologue, and the imperial ambitions of his grandson, Ivan IV.[1] These elements remained, as Muscovy was transformed first into the Tsardom of Russia and then into the Russian Empire, until the abolition of the monarchy in 1917. Since Tsarist Russia claimed to be the "Third Rome" and the replacement of Byzantium as the true Christian state,[2] the Russian rite was designed to link its rulers and prerogatives to those of the so-called "Second Rome".[3]
While months or even years could elapse between the initial acession of the sovereign and the performance of this ritual, church policy held that the monarch must be anointed and crowned according to the Orthodox rite to have a successful tenure.[4] As the church and state were essentially one in Imperial Russia, this service invested the Tsars with political legitimacy; however, this was not its only intent. It was equally perceived as conferring a genuine spiritual benefit that mystically wedded sovereign to subjects, bestowing divine authority upon the new ruler. As such, it was similar in purpose to other European coronation ceremonies from the medieval era.
Even when the imperial capital was located at St. Petersburg (1713–1728, 1732–1917), Russian coronations were always held in Moscow at the Cathedral of the Dormition in the Kremlin. The last coronation service in Russia was held on 26 May 1896 for Nicholas II and his wife Alexandra Feodorovna, who would be the final Tsar and Tsaritsa of Russia. The Russian crown jewels survived the subsequent Russian Revolution and the Communist period, and are currently on exhibit in a museum.
Symbolism
In medieval Europe, the anointed Christian ruler was viewed as a mixta persona, part priest and part layman, but never wholly either.[5] While Western Europe gradually shed this view of its sovereigns, to the point of dispensing with coronations altogther (or at least radically changing their purpose and structure), this notion persisted into the twentieth century in Tsarist Russia. According to the teaching of the deeply-conservative Russian Orthodox church, the Tsar was considered to be "wedded" to his subjects through the Orthodox coronation service.[6]
The Orthodox concept on this subject was explained by Russian bishop Nektarios Kontzevich, a prelate of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad:
:"The Tsar was and is anointed by God. This mystery is performed by the Church during the coronation, and the Anointed of God enters the Royal Doors[7] into the altar,[8] goes to the altar table and receives the Holy Mysteries as does the priest, with the Body and Blood taken separately.[9] Thus the Holy Church emphasises the great spiritual significance of the podvig (struggle) of ruling as a monarch, equalling this to the holy sacrament of the priesthood... He (the Tsar) is the sacramental image, the carrier of the special power of the Grace of the Holy Spirit."[10]
Since no Orthodox layperson, regardless of societal or political rank, was ever permitted to pass through the Royal Doors or partake of communion in both kinds separately, the permission given to the Tsar to do both during his coronation ritual was intended to demonstrate both the solemn nature of the ritual, and the special duties and authority devolving upon the new monarch. Sacred and secular, church and state, God and government were all welded together by the coronation service in the person of the anointed Tsar—or so many Russians believed.[11]
Since the newly-ascended sovereign was permitted all the privileges of rule immediately upon his ascession, coronations were not necessarily held right away. Instead, one or more years might be permitted to elapse between the initial ascession of a Tsar and the ceremony itself. This allowed the court to finish its mourning for the new sovereign's predecessor, and permitted completion of the immense arrangements involved in staging the ritual.[12]
Imperial regalia
As in most European monarchies, the Tsars of Russia retained a sizable collection of Imperial regalia, some of which was used in their coronation ceremonies. The most important items included:
The Tsar's crown
Tsars and Grand Princes from Dmitri Donskoi to Peter the Great utilized the Cap of Monomakh, a fourteenth-century gold filigree cap with sable trimming, adorned with pearls and other precious stones. Although Russian legend held that it had been given to Vladimir Monomakh by the Byzantine emperor Constantine IX, more modern scholarship assigns an Asian origin to this diadem.[13]
When Peter the Great proclaimed himself Emperor of Russia in 1721, he replaced Monomakh's diadem with one modelled on the private crowns of the Holy Roman emperors, of which the Imperial Crown of Austria is one example. Peter's wife, who succeeded him as Catherine I, was the first to wear this type of diadem. For the coronation of Catherine the Great in 1762, court jewelers Ekhart and Jeremia Pauzie decided to manufacture a new crown, known as the Great Imperial Crown, which used the style of a mitre divided into two half-spheres with a central arch between them topped by diamonds and a 398.72-caret red spinel from China.[14] This nine-pound crown was used in all coronations from Paul I to Nicholas II—although the latter tried (but failed) to replace it with Monomakh's Crown for his ceremony.[15] It survived the subsequent revolution, and is today exhibited in a Kremlin museum.
Empress's crown
A smaller crown, virtually identical in appearance and workmanship to the Great Imperial Crown, was manufactured for the crowning of the Tsar's consort. It was encrusted with diamonds, and first used for Empress Maria Fedorovna, wife of Paul I, being last used at the coronation of Alexandra Fedorovna, consort of Nicholas II. This crown was often referred to as the "Smaller Imperial Crown", to differentiate it from the Emperor's Great Imperial Crown.[16]
Sceptre and orb
The Imperial sceptre was manufactured during the reign of Catherine the Great, and comprised "a burnished shaft of three sections containing eight rings of brilliant-cut diamonds", topped by the Orlov Diamond which was itself surmounted by a double-headed eagle with the coat of arms of Russia at it's center.[17]
The orb was manufactured in 1762 for Catherine II's coronation, and consisted of a polished hollow ball made from red gold encircled by two rows of diamonds and surmounted by a large sapphire topped by a cross.[18]
The banner of state
Each Tsar had a Banner of State manufactured for his coronation and reign. This banner was blessed on the eve of the coronation, in the armory room of the Kremlin Palace, and was present at his crowning the next day, as well as at significant events during his reign thereafter.[19]
The coronation
Entry into Moscow
Russian coronations took place in Moscow, the country's ancient capital. The new ruler made a great processional entrance on horseback into the city, accompanied by multiple cavalry squadrons, his consort (in an accompanying carriage) and the pealing of literally thousands of church bells. The new Tsar stopped at the Chapel of Our Lady of Iver, home of the Icon of the Blessed Virgin of Iver, one of the most revered icons in Moscow. It was a tradition with Russian Tsars that every entry to the Kremlin be marked by the veneration of this image.[20] As the procession passed various Orthodox churches along its route to the Kremlin, clergy from those churches stepped outside with icons and crosses to bless the passing Emperor.[21]
Following his entry into the city the new Tsar and his entourage took time to rest and prepare for the following day's ceremony, while heralds in medieval clothing read out special proclamations to "the good people of Our first capital".[22] Receptions were held for foreign diplomats, the Banner of State was consecrated, and the imperial regalia were brought from the Kremlin armory to the throne hall for the procession to the cathedral.[23] In conjunction with the Tsar's entry into Moscow, fines were remitted, prisoners pardoned, and a three-day holiday was proclaimed.[24]
Coronation procession
The Tsar was met on the morning of his coronation at the Kremlin Palace's Red Porch, where he took his place beneath a large canopy held by thirty-two Russian generals, with other officers providing additional support. Accompanied by his spouse (under a separate canopy)[25] and the regalia, he proceeded slowly toward the Cathedral of the Dormition, where his anointing and crowning would take place. Among the items of regalia in the parade were the Chain of the Order of St. Andrew the First-Called for the Tsarina, the Sword of State, the Banner of State, the State Seal, the Purple Robe for the Tsar, the Orb, the Sceptre, the Small Imperial Crown and the Great Imperial Crown, all arranged in a strict order. Aides-de-camp to the Tsar, genrals of the Suite and the Horse Guards troop lined up along the route, from the Red Porch to the Cathedral. The Hof-Marshal, the Hof-Marshal in Chief and the Supreme Marshal, each with a mace in his hand, silently joined the procession, which also boasted the Ministers of the War Office and Imperial Court, the Commander of the Imperial Residence, the Adjutant General of the Day, the orderly Major General of the Suite and the Commander of the Horse Guards regiment, among others.[26]
The Tsar and his wife were met at the cathedral door by the Orthodox prelates, chief among them either the Patriarch of Russia or (during times when there was no Patriarch) the Metropolitan Bishop of Moscow. The presiding bishop offered the Cross to the monarchs for kissing, while another hierarch sprinkled them with holy water. Once they had entered the cathedral, they venerated the icons there three times, then took their places on the cathedral dias, where two large thrones had been set up. One of these was the throne of Tsar Michael I, first Tsar of the Romanov dynasty, who ascended the throne in 1613; the other was that of Ivan III, who created the title of "Tsar of all the Russia's" in the fifteenth century.[27]
Crowning the Tsar
The ceremony itself commenced with the singing of the 101st Psalm, as the Tsar was invited to recite the Nicene Creed according to the Eastern Orthodox usage, without the Filioque clause. Then the Tsar was given a book containing a prayer for him to read, following which the prelate pronounced a blessing upon him.[28] Further hymns were sung, and three scripture lessons were read: Isaiah 49:13-19, Romans 13:1-7 and Matthew 22:15-22.[29]
The Tsar now removed the chain of the Order of St. Andrew, and was robed in Purple by the Metropolitans of St. Petersburg and Kiev. Bowing his head, he now had hands laid upon him by the presiding hierarch, who read two prayers over him. These two prayers originated in and were identical with those found in the the Byzantine coronation ritual. The use of two prayers at this formal inauguration into the imperial office corresponds to the two prayers used in the ritual for the ordination into the diaconate, the presbyterate and the episcopacy in Byzantine liturical tradition. In the first of these prayers the presiding Metropolitan prayed:
- "O Lord our God, King of kings and Lord of lords, who through Samuel the prophet didst choose thy servant David and didst anoint him to be king over thy people Israel; hear now the supplication of us though unworthy, and look forth from thy holy dwelling place and vouchsafe to anoint with the oil of gladness thy faithful servant N., whom thou hast been pleased to establish as king over thy holy people which thou hast made thine own by the precious blood of thine Only-begotten Son. Clothe him with power from on high; set on his head a crown of precious stones; bestow on him length of days, set in his right hand a scepter of salvation; establish him upon the throne of righteousness; efend him with the panoply of thy Holy Spirit; strengthen his arm; subject to him all the barbarous nations; sow in his heart the fear of Thee and feeling for his subjects; preserved him in the blameless faith; make him manifest as the sure guardian of the doctrines of thy Holy Catholic Church; that he may judge thy people in righteousness and thy poor in judgment , (and) save the sons of those in want and may be an heir of thy heavenly kingdom. [Aloud] For thine is the might and thine is the kingdom and the power. Amen."[30]
After the greeting "Peace be with you" by the Metropolitan and the deacon's command "Bow your heads", the Metropolitan prayed the second prayer:
- "To Thee alone, King of mankind, has he to whom thou hast entrusted the earthly kingdom bowed his neck with us. And we pray Thee, Lord of all, keep him under thine own shadow; strengthen his kingdom; grant that he may do continually those things which are pleasing to Thee; make to arise in hi8s days righteousness and abundance of peace; that in his tranquility we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and gravity. For Thou art the King of peace and the Saviour of our souls and bodies and to Thee we ascribe glory. Amen."[31]
Following this the new ruler directed the Metropolitan or Patriarch to hand him the Imperial Crown, which he took from his hands and placed upon his own head.[32] This was in keeping with the custom inherited from the Byzantine Emperors, and was intended to indicate the imperial power, which the Tsars viewed as the direct continuation of the Christian Roman Empire (see Byzantium), came directly from God. The prayer of the Metropolitan or Patriarch, similar to that of the Patriarch of Constantinople for the Byzantine Emperor, confirmed the imperial supremacy:
- "Most God-fearing, absolute, and mighty Lord, Tsar of all the Russias, this visible and tangible adornment of thy head is an eloquent symbol that thou, as the head of the whole Russian people, art invisibly crowned by the King of kings, Christ, with a most ample blessing, seeing that He bestows upon thee entire authority over His people."[33]
Crowning of the empress-consort
The Tsar next received other items of the Imperial regalia, and was seated upon his throne holding the orb in his left hand, and the sceptre in his right. Summoning an aide, he divested himself of the sceptre and orb as his wife knelt upon a crimson cushion before him. Taking off his crown, the Tsar placed it briefly upon her head before returning it to his own. The Tsar next placed the Empress's crown upon his consort's head and a chain of the Order of St. Andrew around her neck, accompanied by a purple mantle, signifying her sharing in his dignity and responsibility for the nation's welfare.[34]
According to Baroness Sophie Buxhoeveden, lady-in-waiting and friend of the last Tsaritsa Alexandra Fedeorovna, the Empress Alexandra saw her role in her husband's coronation as "a kind of mystic marriage to Russia. She became one with Russia, sealed forever a Russian in heart and soul, and so she remained from that day and all her life. The long Mass, the robing of the Emperor, his investiture with the Imperial insignia, she saw as in a dream." According to Buxhoeveden, Alexandra never tired at all throughout the five-hour ritual, insisting that everything was "beautiful".[35]
The "many years" and the anointing
Following this, the newly-crowned Tsar retrieved his orb and sceptre, while the cathedral choir intoned the Orthodox prayer for "many years" of health and a long, prosperous reign for both Tsar and Tsaritsa. This was accompanied by the ringing of bells and a 101-gun salute outside the cathedral. Kneeling, the Tsar again handed his orb and sceptre to his attendant, then recited a prayer. Following this, he rose to his feet, while the presiding bishop and all others present knelt to pray for him on behalf of all the Russian people while the choir sang: "We praise Thee, O God".[36]
The text of the Tsar's prayer read as follows:
- Lord God of our fathers, and King of Kings, Who created all things by Thy word, and by Thy wisdom has made man, that he should walk uprightly and rule righteously over Thy world; Thou hast chosen me as Tsar and judge over Thy people. I acknowledge Thy unsearchable purpose towards me, and bow in thankfulness before Thy Majesty. Do Thou, my Lord and Governor, fit me for the work to which Thou hast sent me; teach me and guide me in this great service. May there be with me the wisdom which belongs to Thy throne; send it from Thy Holy Heaven, that I may know what is well-pleasing in Thy sight, and what is right according to Thy commandment. May my heart be in Thy hand, to accomplish all that is to the profit of the people commietted to my charge and to Thy glory, that so in the day of Thy judgment I may give Thee account of my stweardship without blame; through the grace and mercy of Thy Son, Who was once crucified for us, to Whom be all honor and glory with Thee and the Holy Spirit, the Giver of Life, for ever and ever. Amen.[37]
After the prayer, the Holy Unction portion of the ceremony took place, as part of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy. After the singing of the pre-Communion hymn, the Tsar and his Empress ascended the Ambo in front of the iconostasis in turn, where each was anointed with holy myrrh by the Patriarch or Metropolitan. The Emperor was anointed on his forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, ears, breast and both sides of each hand, while his consort was anointed on her forehead only[38], each anointing being accompanied by the words, "the seal of the gift of the Holy Spirit."[39] Bells and a second 101-gun salvo ensued. During the partaking of Holy Communion toward the end of the Liturgy, the Tsar entered the altar through the Royal Doors (normally permitted only to ordained clergy), and partake of the bread and wine separately, in clerical fashion.[40] This was the only time the Emperor—or any Orthodox layperson—was ever permitted to receive communion in this manner.[41] Unlike the Tsar, the Empress remained outside the Royal Doors and communicated in standard Orthodox lay fashion, receiving both the bread and the wine together on a spoon.[42]
After his anointing, but prior to the partaking of Holy Communion, the Tsar recited a coronation oath, in which he swore to preserve the autocracy intact and to rule his realm with justice and fairness.[43] Russia's last Tsar, Nicholas II, would refer to his coronation oath as one reason he could not give in to demands for a liberal constitution and parliamentary government.[44]
The service concludes
After receiving Holy Communion, the Emperor and Empress returned to their thrones, where the Prayers After Receipt of Holy Communion were read over them. Following this, the Tsar received homage from his wife, mother (if living) and other family members, nobles, and notable subjects present at his coronation. The dismissal was read, as the Archdeacon intoned a special blessing for the Tsar and Imperial Family, with the choir singing "many years" three times.[45] This concluded the portion of the coronation conducted inside the cathedral, but other separate ceremonies and celebrations still remained.
After the service
Return to the palace
At the conclusion of the Liturgy, the Tsar and his entourage proceeded to the nearby Archangel and Annunciation cathedrals within the Kremlin, where further rites were conducted. After this, the Emperor and Empress proceeded under canopies back to the Red Porch of the Kremlin, where they rested and prepared for a great ceremonial meal at the Kremlin's Hall of Facets. During their procession back to their Kremlin palace, later rulers (starting with Nicholas I) stopped on the Red Staircase and bowed three times to the assembled people in the courtyard, symbolizing what one historian has called "an unspoken bond of devotion" between ruler and subjects.[46]
Inside the palace, the Tsar and Tsaritsa greeted representatives of their many Muslim subjects, whose religion did not permit them to enter a Christian church. In another room of the palace stood a group of people in normal clothes; these were descendants of people who had saved the lives of Russian rulers at one time or another.[47] After greeting all of these people, the sovereigns rested for a short while and prepared for the evening's banquet.
The coronation banquet
The Tsar's coronation banquet was held on the evening of his coronation, in the Granovitaya Palata, council chamber of Muscovite Tsars. The walls were adorned with frescoes, and a special table was set for the Emperor and his consort, who dined alone while being served by high-ranking members of the court. Foreign ambassadors were admitted one at a time, and the new sovereign drank a toast with each in turn. Foreign princes (no foreign rulers were ever invited to a Russian coronation, but foreign princes attended as representatives of their own monarchs) were seated in an upper gallery or Tainik, as only Russians could take part in the banquet itself.[48]
According to biographer Robert K. Massie, the following items were served at Nicholas II's coronation dinner in 1896:[49]
- Borsch and pepper-pot soup,
- Turnovers filled with meat,
- Steamed fish,
- Whole spring lamb,
- Pheasants in cream sauce,
- Asparagus and Salad,
- Sweet fruits in wine,
- Ice cream.
Other celebrations
Following the banquet, the newly-crowned monarchs attended other ceremonies, often including a grand illumination of the Kremlin, fireworks, operas, and various balls. A special celebration was often organized for the common people of Moscow, usually a day or so after the ceremony at a nearby location where the Tsar and Empress would attend a feast held for their subjects and inexpensive souvenirs were given away. The celebration at Nicholas II's coronation in 1896 was marred by the Khodynka Tragedy, when 1,389 persons were trampled to death during a stampede prompted by rumors that there were not enough mementos to go around.[50]
With the abolition of the monarchy after the Russian Revolution of 1917, coronation ceremonies no longer play any role in Russian political or religious life.
List of Russian coronations
While earlier rulers of Muscovy had been crowned prior to Prince Ivan III, the coronation ceremony in its "Byzantine" form was first brought to Russia by Ivan's wife, Sophia Paleologue, niece to the last Emperor of Byzantium, Constantine XI. Sophia is credited with introducing this and other Byzantine ceremonies and customs, which were adopted by her husband Ivan III and continued under his Muscovite and "All-Russian" successors.[51]
Rurik dynasty
Grand Prince Ivan III of Moscow was the first Russian ruler to break free of the Tatar Yoke; he claimed the title "Grand Prince of All Russia" and used the title "Tsar" in diplomatic correspondence. His grandson, Ivan IV, was the first to be formally crowned as "Tsar of All Russia," as opposed to his predecessors' formal title.[52]
Coronation | Picture | Name | Reign | Other regnal titles |
---|---|---|---|---|
April 14, 1502 | Ivan III | 1462-1505 | Grand Prince of all Russia | |
April 14, 1502 (with his father) | Vasili III | 1505-1533 | Grand Prince of all Russia | |
January 16, 1547 | Ivan IV | 1533-1584 | ||
May 31, 1584 | Feodor I | 1584-1598 |
Time of Troubles
Following the death of Tsar Feodor I, Russia descended into a fifteen-year period of political unrest, famine, upheaval and foreign invasion known as the Time of Troubles. Some of the rulers during this period did not reign long enough or enjoy the political stability necessary to hold a coronation, while one was a foreigner, Wladyslaw IV Vasa of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. From July of 1610 to July of 1613, two rival councils of nobles claimed power; Russia had no Tsar at all from December 4, 1612 to July 26, 1613, when Michael Romanov was elected to the throne by the Zemsky Sobor, establishing the Romanov Dynasty.
Coronation | Picture | Name | Reign | Other regnal titles |
---|---|---|---|---|
February 21, 1598 | File:Borisgudonov.jpg | Boris Godunov | 1598-1605 | |
July 21, 1605 | Dmitriy I the False | 1605-1606 |
Romanov dynasty
The Romanov dynasty came to power in July of 1613, and ruled Russia until the Russian Revolution of 1917, when the monarchy was abolished. Tsars Ivan VI and Peter III were never crowned, as neither reigned long enough to have a coronation ceremony. Peter the Great adopted the formal title of "Emperor" during his reign and his successors used it until the Revolution, but common usage still assigned the title of "Tsar" to the Russian monarch.
Coronation | Picture | Name | Reign | Other regnal titles |
---|---|---|---|---|
July 22,1613 | Michael I | 1613-1645 | ||
September 28, 1645 | Alexis I | 1645-1676 | ||
June 18, 1676 | Feodor III | 1676-1682 | ||
June 25, 1682 | Peter I "The Great" with Ivan V |
1682-1725 | ||
June 25, 1682 | Ivan V with Peter I "The Great" |
1682-1696 | ||
May 7, 1724 | Catherine I | 1725-1727 | ||
February 25, 1728 | File:Tsar Peter II, circa 1730 -2a.JPG | Peter II | 1727-1730 | |
April 28, 1730 | Anna Ivanova | 1730-1740 | ||
March 6, 1742 | Elizabeth | 1741-1762 | ||
September 12, 1762 | Catherine II "The Great" | 1762-1796 | ||
April 5, 1797 | Paul I | 1796-1801 | ||
September 15, 1801 | Alexander I | 1801-1825 | King of Poland Grand Duke of Finland | |
September 3, 1826 | Nicholas I | 1825-1855 | King of Poland Grand Duke of Finland | |
September 7, 1856 | Alexander II | 1855-1881 | King of Poland Grand Duke of Finland | |
May 15, 1883 | Alexander III | 1881-1894 | King of Poland Grand Duke of Finland | |
May 26, 1896 | Nicholas II | 1894-1917 | King of Poland Grand Duke of Finland |
External links
Video
- Coronation of Nicholas II. Rare outdoor video footage from Nicholas II's crowning ceremony, on YouTube.
Photos
- 1896 Coronation of Nicholas II and Alexandra. Contains hundreds of photos from Nicholas II's coronation.
- Coronation of Nicholas II. Contains drawings from a commemorative album of Nicholas II's coronation. Includes portraits of the heralds, entry procession, and of Nicholas receiving Holy Communion at the cathedral altar.
- The Russian Crown Jewels. Contains photos of the Imperial crown, sceptre and orb, with details about each.
- In Memory of the Coronation of their Imperial Majesties. Contains scenes from another commemorative album of Nicholas II's coronation.
References
- ^ Muscovy, Sections "The Evolution of the Russian Aristocracy" and "Ivan IV". Retrieved on 2010-01-03. For crownings of earlier rulers of Muscovy, see Alfred Rambaugh Rambaud on the Rise of the Grand Princes of Moscow. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Moscow the Third Rome. Retrieved on 2010-01-04. See also Moscow Becomes the Third Rome. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Wortman, Richard S., [http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/i8227.html Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas II]. Princeton University Press, 2006; pg. 10. Retrieved on 2009-12-31. A political theory prevalent amongst many Orthodox Russians into the twentieth century postulated that there were three "Romes": the first (Rome) had allegedly apostatized from true Christianity after the Great Schism of 1054 between Roman Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy; the second (Constantinople) had equally apostatized by accepting Roman Catholicism at the Council of Florence and had subsequently fallen to the Turks; Moscow and "Holy Russia" were the third Rome, and (according to this doctrine) "a fourth there shall never be". A History of Russia, Chapter 1: Medieval Russia, Section "Ivan the Great". Retrieved on 2010-01-05.
- ^ New York Times, May 31, 1896. Quoted in Wortman, Richard S., [http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/i8227.html Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas II]. Princeton University Press, 2006; Introduction. Retrieved on 2009-12-31. See also Blech, Annalise, The Russian Orthodox Church: History and Influence, University of Texas at Austin, 2008, pg. 9. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ "Coronation". Encyclopedia Britannica. 1911. Retrieved 2008-09-25.
- ^ Oldenburg, Sergei S. (1975). Last Tsar: Nicholas II, His Reign and His Russia. Vol. I. Gulf Breeze, FL: Academic International Press. pp. 59–60. ISBN 068683125X.
- ^ A set of doors in the center of an Orthodox iconostasis, the often-ornate icon screen separating the altar area (called the "sanctuary") from the rest of the church (the nave). Only an Orthodox bishop, priest or deacon may ever pass through them, and then only at certain specified points in the service.
- ^ In Russian Orthodox usage, "altar" refers both to the altar itself, and the area behind the iconostasis (also called the sanctuary) where it is situated.
- ^ In Russian Orthodox usage, the bread at Holy Communion is broken into tiny pieces by the priest and placed into the communion cup with the wine after all of the clergy present have communed. Laymen (regardless of societal or political rank) take the bread and wine together, from a small spoon held by the priest. The Tsar was the only layman permitted to partake as a clergyman, and that only once, at his coronation ceremony.
- ^ Quoted in Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II and His Family. Retrieved on 2009-12-31. The Tsar, however, did not receive the priesthood or any other clerical order as a result of his coronation, and could not perform sacraments or any other clerical functions.
- ^ Tauschev, Archbishop Averkey, Archbishop Averkey's View on Monarchy, retrieved on 2009-12-31. See also Royal Family Regalia, quote after paragraph 3; and Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Massie, Robert K., Nicholas and Alexandra. Athenium Books, 1967, pg. 52.
- ^ Crown of Monomach. Retrieved on 2010-01-03. See also Royal Family Regalia, which contains photos of the Crown of Monomach and several other items of Russian regalia.
- ^ Russian Crown Jewels. Retrieved on 2010-01-03.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ The Tsarina's Crown Monde. Retrieved on 2010-01-04. See Royal Family Jewelry for a photo of the Empress's crown, together with the orb, sceptre and Great Imperial Crown.
- ^ Burton, E. (1986). Legendary Gems or Gems That Made History, pp. 45-47. Chilton Book Company, Radnor, PA. See also The Orlov, which contains photos of the sceptre itself and a portrait of Catherine the Great holding it.
- ^ Russian Crown Jewels. Retrieved on 2010-01-03.
- ^ Finial of the Russian National Banner. Retrieved on 2010-01-03. See also Nicholas II's Throne Speech, 1906, which contains photo's from Nicholas II's opening of the first State Duma in 1906; the Imperial Banner is being held by a Grand Duke to Nicholas's left (a close-up photo may be seen by scrolling down this page). Retrieved on 2010-01-03.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Coronation of the Last Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., Coronation Rites. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 28. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ Coronations Rites by Reginald Maxwell, Woolleys, B.D. Cambridge at the University Press. 1915. 22-23.
- ^ Ibid, 233/
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Thurston, Herbert (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- ^ R. Monk Zachariah Liebmann, "Martyrology of the Communist Yoke: The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", The Orthodox Word, 153 (1990), pg. 200. At The Royal Passion-Bearer: Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II, pg. 4. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ R. Monk Zachariah Liebmann, "Martyrology of the Communist Yoke: The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", The Orthodox Word, 153 (1990), pg. 200. At The Royal Passion-Bearer: Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II, pg. 3. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., Coronation Rites. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 28. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ A Manuel. The Orthodox Church's Divine Services. Complied by D. Sokolof, Arch-priest.
- ^ Last Coronation of a Russian Tsar. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., Coronation Rites. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 28. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ R. Monk Zachariah Liebmann, "Martyrology of the Communist Yoke: The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", The Orthodox Word, 153 (1990), pg. 200. At The Royal Passion-Bearer: Tsar-Martyr Nicholas Alexandrovich Romanov II, pg. 4. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ Massie, Robert K., Nicholas and Alexandra. Athenium Books, 1967, pg. 395.
- ^ Wooley, Maxwell, B.D., Coronation Rites. Cambridge University Press, 1915, pg. 29. Retrieved on 2010-01-01.
- ^ Wortman, Richard S., [http://press.princeton.edu/chapters/i8227.html Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas II]. Princeton University Press, 2006; Introduction. Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Massie, Robert K., Nicholas and Alexandra. Athenium Books, 1967, pg. 57.
- ^ Buxhoeveden, Baroness Sophie, The Life and Tragedy of Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, Chapter 7, "The Coronation". Retrieved on 2009-12-31.
- ^ Margaret Odrowaz-Sypniewski, B.F.A.,The Princes of Novgorod and the Grand Princes of Moscow. Section "Ivan III". Retrieved on 2010-01-04.
- ^ Margaret Odrowaz-Sypniewski, B.F.A.,The Princes of Novgorod and the Grand Princes of Moscow. Section "Ivan IV". See also Ivan the Terrible. Retrieved on 2010-01-04.