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Please select a historical
period:
25
years ago / 50 years ago
/ 80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700
years ago / 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years
ago
400
Years Ago in Northeastern Asia
In
1480, the Grand Duke Ivan III of Muscovy, called "the Great",
frees Moscow from Mongol or Tatar rule. Ivan began by subjugating
most of Moscow's rival cities, and by the time he defeated the
Tatars (what the Russians called the Mongols), he was in control
of a large region of central Russia. However, it wasn't until
the reign of his grandson, Ivan IV "the Terrible",
that Russia became a unified state.
Ivan the Terrible (1530-1584) succeeded his father Vasily III
as Grand Duke of Moscow in 1533 at the age of three. His mother
served as regent until she too died, when Ivan was eight. For
the next eight years, the young Grand Duke endured a series
of regents chosen from among the boyars, the local nobility.
Finally in 1547, he adopted the title of tsar (which is the
Russian form of "caesar") and set about crushing the
power of the boyars. In 1552 he conquered and sacked Kazan,
and in 1556 Astrakhan, having thus destroyed the lingering power
of the Golden Horde, the last of the Mongol kingdoms in the
west. Ivan's Tatar campaigns opened vast new areas for Russian
expansion, and it was during his reign that the conquest and
colonization of Siberia began.
The palace revolt of Prince Boris Godunov in 1598 (the subject
of a famous Russian opera by Mussgorsky), after the death of
Ivan's son Fyodor, leads to the so-called "Time of Troubles".
For eight years from 1604, there was outright civil war. The
Polish kingdom took advantage of Russian weakness to occupy
Moscow itself. But in 1613, the Poles were defeated, and the
boyars unanimously elected Michael Romanov as Tsar. The Romanov
dynasty was to rule Russia for the next 304 years, until the
Russian Revolution brought an end to the Tsarist state.
Nurhachi unites the Tungus clans living in eastern Siberia around
1600 to form the Manchu nation. From a loose collection of mounted
warriors, the Manchu army was reorganized into a tightly regimented
system, the whole divided into eight "banners". (Look
here for a typical rural landscape of eastern Siberia.)
In 1620, Nurhachi and his new army captured Mukden and made
it his capital. He died in 1628, but Manchu power grew. Korea
was occupied in 1637 and China itself invaded. Manchu troops
had first been invited into China by the Ming emperor Tsung-tseng
to help shore up his crumbling rule. But in 1644, the Manchu
took Beijing and set up their own dynasty, called the Qing.
back to map
25
years ago / 50 years ago
/ 80 years ago / 125
years ago / 150 years ago
250 years ago / 400
years ago / 700
years ago / 1,200 years ago
1,500 years ago / 2,000
years ago / 3,000 years ago
/ 4,000 years ago / 5,000
years ago / 10,000 years
ago
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