The 'zemsky sobor' (
Russian: зе́мский собо́р) was the first
Russian
parliament of the feudal Estates type, in the
16th and
17th centuries. The term roughly means ''assembly of the land''.
It could be summoned either by
tsar, or
patriarch, or the
Boyar Duma. Three categories of population participated in the assembly:
# Nobility and high bureaucracy, including the
Boyar Duma.
# The ''
Holy Sobor'' of high Orthodox clergy.
# Representatives of merchants and townspeople (
third estate).
The first ''zemsky sobor'' was held by tsar
Ivan the Terrible in
1549. During his reign he held a number of such gatherings and they became a common tool used to enact major pieces of legislation or to decide controversial issues. Although the Sobors were primarily a tool used to rubberstamp decisions that Ivan had already made, sometimes initiative was taken by the lower nobility and townsfolk. For instance, the tsar was scandalized when the assembly of
1566 asked him to abolish the
Oprichnina.
When the
Rurik Dynasty died out in
1598 it was a ''sobor'' that appointed
Boris Godunov as the next tsar. Another grand council, featuring even peasants, elected
Mikhail Romanov to take the throne in
1613. During Mikhail's reign, when the
Romanov dynasty was still weak, such assemblies were summoned annually.
Once the Romanovs were firmly in power, however, the ''sobor'' gradually lost its power. A major council assembled to ratify the
Treaty of Pereyaslav in
1654 was the last for thirty years. The last sobors were held by the great
Galitzine in
1682, to abolish the ''mestnichestvo'', and in
1684, to ratify the "Eternal Peace" with
Poland.

Attendees of the 1922 Zemskiy Sobor in Priamursky Kray
Four years after the death of the last Russian tsar, on July 23, 1922,
General Diterikhs of the Far Eastern
White Army convened the ''Zemskiy Sobor of Amur region'' (Приамурский Земский Собор) in
Vladivostok. This sobor, calling to all Russian people to repent for the overthrow of the tsar, reinstituted a monarchy by naming
Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaievich Romanoff as tsar.
Patriarch Tikhon (who was not present; neither was the Grand Duke) was named as the honorary chairman of the sobor. Two months later the
Amur region fell to the
Bolsheviks.
References
★ С.Л. Авалиани. "Литературная история земских соборов". Odessa, 1916.
★ The encyclopedia Brockhaus and Efron, Moscow, 1993,
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