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Ruthless Tsarinas and Palace Coups: Anna I and Elizabeth I
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Catherine I, b. 1684, r. 1725-1727 Peasant background Peter I’s second wife Married 1707, bore nine children, two survived to adulthood: Anna and Elizabeth. 1724 named co-ruler. Ruled mostly in name only Privy Council (A. Menshikov and P. Tolstoi) - the real ruler. First woman to rule Russia Founded the Russian Academy Built bridges and palaces in “Piter”
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Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov, 1673-1729 Born a petty noble Franz LeFort found him selling pirozhki on the streets of Moscow. LeFort died in 1699 Menshikov replaced him as Peter I’s first advisor. Pushkin’s “half-tsar”
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Tsarina Evdokiya Feodorovna Lopukhina (Peter’s first wife) Married to Peter, 1689- 1698. b. 1669; d. 1731 Gave birth to three sons, but only Alexei survived to adulthood Before Alexei died from torture/interrogation, his wife, Charlotte, bore Peter II.
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Peter II, b. 1715, r. 1727-1730 Grandson of Peter I Ruled initially in name only Aleksandr Menshikov and Andrei Osterman ran the government. But Peter turned his back on Menshikov and “Piter.” Menshikov was ruined; exiled to Siberia. Prince Vasily Dolgorukov took him to Moscow. Died on his wedding day, 30 January 1730, of smallpox.
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Empress Anna Ivanovna b. 1693, ruled 1730-1740 Daughter of Ivan V (Peter’s co- tsar) Duchess of Courland, 1711-1730 Privy Council (Prince Dmitri Galitzine) thought her compliant. Instead she ruled in fact Humiliated Russian nobles Appointed Baltic Germans. Brought Russia into the War of Polish Succession, 1733-35 Died at 47 of kidney disease
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Ivan VI, r. 1740-41 Born 1740 Anna adopted him and appointed him as successor. Replaced in Elizabeth’s coup. Imprisoned for the rest of his life. Killed in 1764.
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Elizabeth I, b. 1709, r. 1741-1761 Daughter of Peter I and Catherine I War of Austrian succession, 1740-48 Seven Years’ War, 1756-63 Established the University of Moscow (1755) and the Academy of Fine Arts. Ended the death penalty. Removed internal tariffs. Spread Enlightenment ideas. Laid groundwork for Catherine II.
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