'Ivan VI of Russia' (Ivan Antonovich; ), (
August 23,
1740 -
July 16,
1764), reigned as Emperor of
Russia 1740 -
1741. He was born in
Saint Petersburg to Prince
Antony Ulrich of Brunswick-Lüneburg and the princess
Anna Leopoldovna of
Mecklenburg.
Emperor of Russia
His great-aunt Empress
Anna of Russia adopted the eight-week-old boy and declared him her successor on
5 October 1740. On the death of Anna (
17 October of the
Julian Calendar/
28 October of the
Gregorian Calendar,
1740) Ivan was proclaimed Emperor, and on the following day
Ernst Johann von Biron, duke of
Courland, became Regent. On the fall of Biron (
8 November), the regency passed to the baby Tsar’s mother, though the capable vice-chancellor,
Andrei Osterman conducted the government.
Fall from the throne and imprisonment
Thirteen months later a
coup d'état placed the Tsarevna
Elizabeth on the throne (
December 6, 1741), and Ivan and his family were imprisoned in the fortress of
Dunamunde (
December 13,
1742) after a preliminary detention at
Riga, from whence the new Empress had at first decided to send them home to Brunswick. In June
1744, following the
Lopukhina Affair, they transferred him to
Kholmogory on the
White Sea, where Ivan, isolated from his family, and seeing nobody but his gaoler, remained for the next twelve years. Rumours of his confinement at Kholmogory having leaked out, he was secretly transferred to the fortress of
Shlisselburg (
1756), where he was still more rigorously guarded, the very commandant of the fortress not knowing the identity of "a certain arrestant".
On the accession of
Peter III (
1762) the condition of the unfortunate prisoner seemed about to improve, for the new emperor visited and sympathised with him; but Peter himself lost
power a few weeks later. In the instructions sent to Ivan’s guardian, the latter received orders to chain up his charge, and even to
scourge him should he become refractory.
Death
On the accession of
Catherine II (summer
1762) still more stringent orders were sent to the officer in charge of "the nameless one". If any attempt were made from outside to release him, the prisoner was to be put to death; in no circumstances was he to be delivered alive into anyone's hands, even if his deliverers produced the Empress’s own sign manual authorising his release. By this time, twenty years of solitary confinement had disturbed Ivan's mental equilibrium, though he does not seem to have been actually insane. Nevertheless, despite the mystery surrounding him, he was well aware of his imperial origin, and always called himself ''Gosudar'' (Sovereign). Though instructions had been given to keep him ignorant, he had been taught his letters and could read his Bible. Nor could his residence at Shlisselburg remain concealed forever, and its discovery was the cause of his ruin. A sub-lieutenant of the garrison,
Vasily Mirovich, found out about him, and formed a plan for freeing and proclaiming him Emperor. At midnight on
July 5,
1764, Mirovich won over some of the garrison, arrested the commandant, Berednikov, and demanded the delivery of Ivan. His jailers, on orders of their commander, a Lieutenant Chekin, murdered him then and there in obedience to the secret instructions already in their possession. He was buried quietly in the fortress, and his death secured Catherine II's position on the throne until her son came of age.
References
★
Robert Nisbet Bain, ''The Pupils of Peter the Great'' (
London,
1897)
★ M. Semevsky, ''Ivan VI Antonov’ich'' (in Russian) (
St. Petersburg,
1866)
★ A. Bruckner, ''The Emperor Ivan VI and his Family'' (in
Russian) (
Moscow 1874)
★ V. A. Bilbasov, ''Geschichte Catherine II'' (vol. ii.,
Berlin,
1891—
1893).