lecture iv-第7章
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punishment on a schismatic ruler; and they were also induced to
believe that the conquest of that city by the Turks ought to be
the occasion for the transfer of civil supremacy over the Greek
Church from Constantinople to Moscovy; from the Emperor to the
Grand Duke。
These ideas grew in strength when the last Emperor's sister;
Sophia Palaeologus; became by marriage the wife and mother of
Moscovite Princes。 A report was spread that the imperial title
had been transferred to the Grand Duke Ivan by no less a person
than his wife's brother; the legal heir of the Byzantine Empire。
The Grand Duke was anointed with great solemnity; and received
the title of 〃Tzar;〃 a title which; as we have seen; had hitherto
been exclusively given to the Greek Emperors。 An offer which the
German Emperor made through his special envoy; Herbertstein; to
grant the title of 〃king〃 to the Moscovite Grand Duke on
condition of his recognising his dependence upon the Holy Roman
Empire; was solemnly rejected; and in order to confirm the new
theory of the complete autonomy of the Russian tzardom; a
genealogy was invented; showing the direct descent of the house
of Rurik from Augustus and his supposed brother Pruss; the
mythical founder of Prussia。 One fact; however; stood in the way
of a universal recognition of these new pretensions to complete
autonomy; that was the continued dependence of the Moscovite
rulers on the khans of the Tartars。 But this was put an end to by
Ivan III; who was consequently the first to adorn himself with
the title of 〃Autocrat〃 (Samoderjez); which to this day continues
to be the title of the Russian Tzars。
As Greek monks; and among them the well…known Maxime; began
to settle in Russia; Byzantine ideas about the derivation of
monarchical power from God; which were already entertained by
some of our monkish writers; were rapidly spread among the
people。 It is not without good reason that the celebrated
antagonist of Ivan the Terrible; Prince Kourbsky; accuses the
monks of having been the chief source of the servile theory;
according to which 〃the Tzar; in order to preserve his
independence; ought to have no counsellors more intelligent than
himself。〃 This theory was accepted with avidity by such tyrants
as Ivan the Cruel; who refers to it more than once in his
correspondence with the Polish king; Stephen Bathory。 The fact
that this prince was surrounded by a sort of parliament; the
Polish Seim; was declared by the Russian Tzar to be a manifest
proof of his political inferiority。 〃Autocracy (samoderjavsto);〃
according to Ivan's idea; 〃was impossible with an elective
council; the autocrat must do everything by himself; he has to
give orders to his subjects; and these; last must obey like
serfs; and that according to the command of God。〃
These ideas; which had been expressed centuries before by
monkish writers; who had found them set forth in Byzantine
treatises; were far from being those of the generality of Russian
statesmen and thinkers。 When Prince Kourbsky advised the tyrant
Ivan to seek good and useful counsel; not only among the members
of his douma; a sort of curia regis but also among the
representatives of the people vsenarodnich chelovok he gave
utterance to an old political desire。 Another contemporary
writer; the unknown author of The Sermon of the Saints of Walaam;
gives way to the same feeling in the following terms: 〃The clergy
ought to advise the Tzar to keep a constant general council;
composed of persons coming from all the cities and districts of
his dominions。 Such a council must be kept; and their advice
taken day by day on every question which may occur。〃 Two
different institutions were meant by those who advised the Czar
to rule by the advice of his councillors。 One was as old as the
monarchy itself; and belonged to those old customs; which;
according to contemporary writers; had been scrupulously
maintained by former potentates。 I refer to the council of the
Boyars the Douma。 The other institution。 the history of which
will form the principal subject of our next lecture; was; on the
contrary; quite recent the States…General of Moscovy; the
Zemskii Sobor。
I will conclude what I have to say on the political
organisation of Russia during that intermediate period which
lasted from the fall of the ancient folkmotes to the convocation
of the States…General by a description of the first…named
council; the Douma。(4*) The study of the internal constitution of
the Douma is indispensable for the comprehension of the Part
which the higher nobility were called upon to play in the
management of the Moscovite State。 It will show that the power of
the Moscovite princes; absolute as it was; was yet to a certain
extent limited by the power of the nobility。 Up to the middle of
the sixteenth century the Boyars were the only persons admitted
to the exercise of executive; military; and judicial authority。
Under the name of voevods we find them at the head of provinces;
commanding their military forces and managing their
administrative interests。 As members of the Douma; they had to
advise the Tzar on all kinds of political; executive; military;
and financial questions。 No law was promulgated until after
previous deliberation on it by the Douma。 The same Douma
furnished the chief rulers of the State during the minority of
the Tzar; and it was in this way that the power of the Boyars
made itself felt among the lower classes of the population; who
soon came to look upon them as the chief cause of their misery。
The composition of the Moscovite council was at the beginning
very like that which we find in France under the early Capetian
kings。 The curia regis was chiefly formed from among the high
court officials; such as the majordome; the marshal; the
constable; the chancellor or cancellarius; the camerer or
camerarius; etc。 The same may be said of the Moscovite Douma of
the fourteenth century; as well as of the privy council of each
and every of the principalities into which medieval Russia was
divided anterior to the centralising growth of the Moscovite
power。 The business transacted at the court of a Russian prince
being distributed among different departments; the heads of these
departments were summoned to sit in the council and received the
name of boyars。 Money being scarce; the boyars were paid for
their services by the donation of crown lands; and this mode of
payment being known under the name of 〃pont;〃 the surname of the
boyars was 〃poutevii boyari。〃 Most of the boyars summoned to sit
in the Douma were exempted from military service; and especially
from the duty of opposing the enemy at the head of their own
retainers; not so much in the open country as in their own
castles。 Hence the origin of another surname 〃wedennii boiari〃
which distinguished the most powerful members of the Russian
medieval nobility。 If we inquire into the origin of those
admitted to the princely council; we shall see that they belonged
to the same class as that which furnished officers to the army
and the chiefs of the central and provincial administration。 This
class is precisely that known to the Anglo…Saxons as Thanes; and
to the Merovingian kings under the title of Antrustions。 The
peculiarity of medieval Russia consisted in this; that; being
divided into a great number of principalities; it left to the
knightly class the liberty of freely choosing the prince whom
they would like to follow。 The Russian knightly class;
corresponding to the 〃ministeriels〃 of feudal Germany; the
so…called 〃slougili liudi〃 or 〃men of service;〃 were authorised
by custom to remain in the service of any prince as long as they
pleased; and to change from one prince to another according to
their own pleasure。 Before attaching himself to any prince the
〃man of service〃 signed a sort of contract with the political
head of the country in which he intended to settle。 On taking
service; a charter was delivered to the knight in which his
duties and rights were precisely stated; and the prince had no
right to infringe these conditions。 In case of bad treatment; the
knight found no difficulty in leaving the prince whom he was
serving a