(Redirected from Mikhail I of Russia)
'Mikhail Feodorovich Romanov' (In
Russian Михаи́л Фёдорович Рома́нов) (
July 12,
1596 –
July 13,
1645) was the first
Russian tsar of the house of
Romanov, being the son of
Feodor Nikitich Romanov, afterwards the
Patriarch Filaret, and
Xenia (of disputed family), afterwards the ''great nun'' Martha. His reign marked the end of the
Time of Troubles.
Life and reign
Mikhail was unanimously elected
tsar of Russia by a
national assembly on
February 21,
1613, but not till
March 24 did the delegates of the council discover the young tsar and his mother at the
Ipatiev Monastery near
Kostroma. At first Martha protested that her son was too young and tender for so difficult an office in such troublesome times. At the last moment, however, Michael consented to accept the throne, but not till the weeping boyars had solemnly declared that if he persisted in his refusal they would hold him responsible to God for the utter destruction of
Russia.
Michael's election and accession to the throne form the basis of the
Ivan Susanin legend, which Russian composer
Mikhail Glinka dramatised in his opera ''
A Life for the Tsar''.
In so dilapidated a condition was the capital at this time that Michael had to wait for several weeks at the
Troitsa monastery, 75 miles off, before decent accommodation could be provided for him at
Moscow. He was crowned on the 22nd of July. The first task of the new tsar was to clear the land of the robbers infesting it.
Sweden and
Poland were then dealt with respectively by the
peace of Stolbovo (
February 17,
1617) and the
Truce of Deulino (
December 1,
1618). The most important result of the Truce of Deulino was the return from exile of the tsar's father, who henceforth took over the government till his death in October 1633, Michael occupying quite a subordinate position.
Tsar Michael suffered from a progressing leg injury (a consequence of a horse accident early in his life), which resulted in his not being able to walk towards the end of his life. He was a gentle and pious prince who gave little trouble to anyone and effaced himself behind his counsellors. Sometimes they were relatively honest and capable men like his father; sometimes they were corrupted and bigoted, like the
Saltykov relatives of his mother. He was married twice, first to Princess
Maria Vladimirovna Dolgorukova (1624) who died four months after the marriage, and then to
Eudoxia Streshneva (1608–45), who brought him 10 children. Michael's failure to wed his daughter Irene with Prince
Waldemar of Denmark, in consequence of the refusal of the latter to accept
Orthodoxy, so deeply afflicted him as to contribute to bringing about his death on
July 12,
1645.
----