(Redirected from Andrei Kurbskii)Knyaz 'Andrey Mikhailovich Kurbsky' (''Андрей Михайлович Курбский'' in
Russian) (
1528-
1583) was an intimate friend and then a leading political opponent of the Russian tzar
Ivan the Terrible. His correspondence with the
tzar is a unique source for the history of 16th-century Russia.
Kurbsky belonged to a family of
Rurikid princes, which got its name from the village of Kurba near
Yaroslavl. At an early age, he gained renown for the courage displayed in
the annual campaigns against
Kazan. During the decisive siege of Kazan he commanded the right flank of the Russian army and was wounded. Two years later, he defeated the
Udmurt rebels and was appointed
boyar. At that time, Kurbsky became one of the closest associates and advisors to the tsar.
During the
Livonian War, Kurbsky led the Russian troops against the fortress of
Yuryev, which he took. After Ivan failed to renew his commission, Kurbsky defected to
Lithuania on
April 30,
1564, citing
impending repressions as his reason. Later the same year he led a Polish-Lithuanian army against
Muscovy and devastated the region of
Velikie Luki. The Polish king gave him the town of
Kovel in
Volhynia, where he lived in peace, defending his
Orthodox subjects from Polish encroachments.
Kurbsky is best remembered for a series of vitriolic letters he exchanged with the tsar between
1564 and
1579. In
1573, he wrote a political
pamphlet, which voiced the former independent princeling's disapproval of Ivan's slide towards
absolutism. In his writings, Kurbsky blames the tsar for a number of pathologically cruel crimes, but historians still disagree as to whether his claims should be given credit. Kurbsky's language is remarkable for abundance of foreign loans, especially from
Latin, which he had mastered in emigration.
References
★
Ruslan Skrynnikov. ''Ivan Grosny''. Moscow: AST, 2001.
External links
★
Correspondence of Ivan IV and Kurbsky (in Russian)
★
Kurbsky's ''History of the Grand Prince of Moscow'' (in Russian)