THE ORIGINS OF AUTOCRACY
ALEXANDER YANOV
THE ORIGINS OF AUTOCRACY
IVAN THE TERRIBLE IN RUSSIAN HISTORY
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS BERKELEY LOS ANGELES LONDON
University of California Press Berkeley and Los Angeles, California
University of California Press, Ltd. London, England
© 1981 by
The Regents of the University of California Printed in the United States of America
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Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Yanov, Alexander, 1930- The origins of autocracy. Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Russia—History—Ivan IV, 1533-1584. 2. Ivan IV, the Terrible, Czar of Russia,
1530-1584. I. Title. DK106.Y36 947'.043 80-39528 ISBN 0-520-04282-4
No society in modern times has been more subject to conflicting assumptions and interpretations than that of Russia.
CYRIL E. BLACK
The bloody mire of Mongolian slavery, not the rude glory of the Norman epoch, forms the cradle of Muscovy, and modern Russia is but a metamorphosis of Muscovy.
KARL MARX
What was Russia's place in history? Was she properly to be regarded as one of the families of the Asian systems, as one of the European polities and societies, a variety of either, or as entirely
DONALD W. TREADGOLD
foreword
From Greatness to Obscurity ? 1
The Alternatives 7
On the Path to Re-Europeanization 10
The Choice 11
The Catastrophe 14
"A Riddle for the Mind" 16
Scholarship and Expertise 19
Justification of the Chapter 27
The Science of Despotology 32
Despotism 36
Absolutism 42
The Historical Function of Absolutism 48
Russian Autocracy 52
The Political Spiral 59
An Explanation to the Reader 65
The Oprichnina 67
The Struggle With Elementary Logic 71
The Lost Paradise of "Equilibrium" 77
Under the Ice of "Genuine Science" 83
The Punitive Expedition 87chapter hi The "Despotists": Captives of the Bipolar Model
The Three Faces of "Russian Despotism" 96
The "Tatar" Interpretation 97
Opportunity, Means, and Motive 104
The "Byzantine" Interpretation 107
The "Patrimonial" Interpretation 111
The Stereotype 123
"Patrimonies" Versus "Patrimony" 128
A Historical Experiment 132
The Reversed Stereotype 138
The Reformation Against the Reconquista 145
Money Versus Corvee 147
Two Coalitions 151
The Political Function of Secularization 153
The Preparation for the Assault 155
The Arguments of the Counter-Reformation 160
Before the Assault 162
The First Assault 166
The Pyrrhic Victory of the Josephites 173
The Heritage of the Absolutist Century 183
The Great Reform 186
At the Crossroads 191
The Anti-Tatar Strategy 197
Russia Versus Europe 201
The Last Compromise 203
The Autocrator's Complex 206
PART III IVA NIA N A
215 222
chapter vii The Dawn
Methodological Problems
At the Sources of IvanianaA Strange Conflict 225
The First Attack of the "Historiographic Nightmare" 230
"Hero of Virtue" and "Insatiable Bloodsucker" 233