14. According to the prevailing stereotype, the cavalry of the service gentry revealed its technological backwardness only in the seventeenth century. However, this backwardness was obvious even two centuries earlier, in the time of Ivan III. For example, in 1501, when Plettenberg, the master of the Livonian Order, attacked Pskov, a huge army under the best Muscovite voevoda
, Daniil Shchenia, was sent against him. Though many times superior in numbers to the small Livonian detachment, this army could not defeat it, indicating that the Muscovite military organization suffered from some organic defect which compelled it to yield before the German infantry. The army of Ivan the Terrible, which knew only how to attack in a mass, and was quite lost when its furious assault did not lead immediately to decisive success, was on the Tatar level of military action, and not only was not capable of waging a European war, but needed European modernization even to win victories over the Tatars. All this was apparent even during the Kazan' War at the beginning of the 1550s. Russian historians, without a single exception, admit the technological, tactical, and organizational backwardness of the Muscovite army during the period of the Livonian War. Thus, in terms of technology and military organization, the modernization of the army became an urgent question as early as the middle of the sixteenth century.5. Russia Versus Europe
Livonia had regressed so thoroughly since the time of Ivan III that it
must have seemed an overripe fruit which would fall of its own accord
into the hands of the conqueror. In practical terms, it had ceased to be
a unified state, and had been transformed into an amorphous con
glomerate of commercial cities and the fiefs of bishops and knights.21
'P. Berezhkov, Plan zavoevantia Kryma,
p. 68.Lester Hutchinson, Introduction to Karl Marx's Secret Diplomatic History of the
Eighteenth Century, p. 19.
"The multilayered and divided government was extremely weak: five bishops, a
master of the order, eight commanders, and eight governors owned the land; each had
his cities, districts, staff, and customary laws," writes N. M. Karamzin (Istoriia gosudarstva
Rossiiskogo,
vol. 8, p. 261).37. Edward Keenan, "Vita: Ivan Vasil'evich, Terrible Tsar 1530-1584," p. 49.
39. R. Iu. Vipper, p. 130.
12. Ibid., p. 14.
14. Vipper, p. 31.
15. Veselovskii, pp. 36-37.
16. I. I. Smirnov, Ivan Groznyi,
p. 5.25. Ibid., pp. 167, 169.
26. Ibid., p. 170.
28. Ibid., p. 180.
31.
G. N. Moiseeva, Valaamskaia beseda . . .41. Cited in Zimin, Oprichnina
. . . , p. 10.43. Iu. Krizhanich, pp. 594, 597.
45.
V. N. Tatishchev, Istoriia Rossiiskaia s drevneishikh vremen, bk. I, pt. 2, p. 544.61. Ibid., p. 247. 62. Ibid., p. 256.
1. K. Kavelin, Sochineniia,
pt. 2, p. 112.