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Feodor and Theodore
Fyodor ( Theodore ) I Ivanovich ( or Feodor I Ioannovich ; 31 May 1557 16 / 17 January ( NS ) 1598 ) was the last Rurikid Tsar of Russia ( 1584 1598 ), son of Ivan IV ( The Terrible ) and Anastasia Romanovna.
Feodor Stratilat 46 ( Theodore Stratelates )
Russians pronounced these names with the sound / f / instead of / θ / ( like the pronunciation of ⟨ th ⟩ in " thin "), for example " Theodore " was pronounced as " Feodor " ( now " Fyodor ").

Feodor and III
* 1676 Feodor III becomes Tsar of Russia.
* 1682 Feodor III of Russia ( b. 1661 )
Upon his death, there was a period of dynastic struggles between his children by his first wife Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya ( Feodor III, Sofia Alexeevna, Ivan V ) and his son by his second wife Nataliya Kyrillovna Naryshkina, the future Peter the Great.
* June 9 Tsar Feodor III of Russia ( d. 1682 )
* May 7 Tsar Feodor III of Russia ( b. 1661 )
* January 29 Feodor III becomes Tsar of Russia.
Upon the death of Feodor III of Russia in April 1682, their enemies insinuated that the Naryshkins had Ivan strangled, thus fomenting the Moscow Uprising of 1682, which was put to an end only after Ivan was demonstrated by his relatives to the furious crowd.
simple: Feodor III of Russia
After the death of Feodor III, who spent most of his time there, the monastery declined.
Artemy's father was one of the dignitaries at the court of Feodor III, and also a voivod in Kazan.
# REDIRECT Feodor III of Russia
# REDIRECT Feodor III of Russia
The Apraksin brothers were launched to prominence after the marriage of their sister Marfa to Tsar Feodor III of Russia in 1681.
# REDIRECT Feodor III of Russia
Pyotr Tolstoy, assumed by some to be an " okolnichy ", while for other historians he came from a " boyar " background, socially speaking, served in 1682 as Chamberlain at the court of childless Tsar Feodor III Alekseevich, Tsar 1676 1682.
On account of his family relationship with the Miloslavsky family, he miscalculated the strength of the tsarevna Sophia Alekseyevna, ( September 17 September 27, 1657 regent of Russia ( 1682 1689 ) July 3 July 14, 1704 ), full sister of Feodor III and third daughter, also, of Tsar Alexei I of Russia by his first wife, Maria Miloslavskaya and became one of her most energetic supporters, but contrived to join the other, and winning, side just before the final catastrophe.
Peter was the only son from Tsar Alexei I of Russia's second marriage ( to Nataliya Kyrillovna Naryshkina ), and therefore, was the younger half-brother of childless Tsar Feodor III and of Sophia, temporary regent of Russia.
During the reign of his first cousin Feodor I ( 1584 1598 ), young Feodor Romanov distinguished himself both as a soldier and a diplomat, fighting against the forces of John III of Sweden in 1590, and conducting negotiations with the ambassadors of Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor from 1593 to 1594.
In 1504, Ivan III gave it to Prince Feodor Belsky, who escaped to Moscow from Lithuania and married Ivan's niece.
The Ukrainian and Polish influence was paramount at the court of Tsar Feodor III.
Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (, 1625 1669 ) was the first wife of tsar Alexis of Russia and mother of the tsars Feodor III of Russia and Ivan V of Russia, as well as regent princess Sophia Alekseyevna.
Maria had thirteen children but only two sons survived infancy: the future tsar Feodor III of Russia and the future Ivan V of Russia, who co-ruled with his half-brother Peter I of Russia.

Feodor and Russia
* 1605 After only three months as tsar, 16-year-old Feodor II of Russia is assassinated.
* January 7 Boris Godunov seizes the throne of Russia, following the death of his brother-in-law, Tsar Feodor I ; the Time of Troubles starts.
* January 6 Tsar Feodor I of Russia ( b. 1557 )
* May 31 Tsar Feodor I of Russia ( d. 1598 )
* July 20 Tsar Feodor II of Russia ( b. 1589 )
** Tsar Feodor II of Russia
Russia: Feodor I of Russia | Feodor I.
In the early 20th century, revivals of the opera were associated particularly with the famous Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin: he sang the title role on the occasion of his first appearance outside Russia ( La Scala, Milan, 16 March 1901 ) and also on his North American debut ( Metropolitan Opera, New York, 20 November 1907 ).
** Irina Godunova ( 1557 1603 ), wife of Feodor I of Russia, who adopted the name Alexandra when she tooked the monastic vow
# REDIRECT Feodor I of Russia
# REDIRECT Feodor I of Russia
# REDIRECT Feodor II of Russia

Feodor and Russian
* 1873 Feodor Chaliapin, Russian bass ( d. 1938 )
In 1907 he presented five concerts of Russian music in Paris, and in 1908 mounted a production of Boris Godunov, starring Feodor Chaliapin, at the Paris Opera.
Count Feodor Petrovich Tolstoy ( 1783 1873 ), sympathetically mentioned by Pushkin in Eugene Onegin, was one of the most fashionable Russian drawers and painters of the 1820s.
* February 13 Feodor Chaliapin, Russian bass opera singer ( d. 1938 )
* April 13 Tsar Boris Godunov dies ; Feodor II accedes to the Russian throne.
* June 1 Russian troops in Moscow imprison Feodor II and his mother, later executing them.
Fryderyk Skowroński, renamed Feodor Samuilovich Skavronsky, was created a Count of the Russian Empire on 5 January 1727 and was married twice: to N, a Lithuanian woman, and to Ekaterina Rodionovna Saburova, without having children by either of them .< ref >
He had begun work on music for a film, Adventures of Don Quixote ( 1933 ) from Miguel de Cervantes's celebrated novel, featuring the Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin and directed by G. W. Pabst.
The expedition then moved on sledges to go further north, then to open water, where they used boats to reach the Black Cape of Novaya Zemlya and would eventually contact a Russian schooner, " Nikolaj ", under Captain Feodor Veronin, and get to Vardø, Norway, where they took the mail boat south and eventually returned to Vienna.
Tsars Feodor and Boris Godunov directed the construction of fortified settlements and military installations in order to defend their subjects from raiding nomadic tribesmen and to exert authority over local populations, specifically over the tribute-paying Tatars of The Baraba Lands and the recently founded Tara uyezd ( a local administrative unit of the Russian empire ).
Proponents point to the fact that the Mongol court was frequented by Russian princes, notably Yaroslavl's Feodor the Black, who boasted his own ulus near Sarai, and Novgorod's Alexander Nevsky, the sworn brother ( or anda ) of Batu's successor Sartaq Khan.
Feodor was a simple minded man who took little interest in politics, and was never considered a candidate for the Russian throne until the death of his elder brother Ivan Ivanovich.
During this time he attained a working knowledge of Russian and attended opera performances in which Feodor Chaliapin performed.
His greatest successes were Manon in 1884, Werther in 1892, and Thaïs in 1894. Notable later operas were Le jongleur de Notre-Dame, produced in 1902, and Don Quichotte, produced in Monte Carlo 1910, with the legendary Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin in the title-role.
In the same year, the famous Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin and Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes with conductor Ernest Ansermet were guest performers.
Feodor Protar, who arrived in 1893, was a disciple of Russian author and pacifist Leo Tolstoy.
The current official version, however, states that the present city was founded in 1585 by Feodor I as a fort protecting the Russian state from the raids of Crimean and Nogay Tatars.
The Time of Troubles () was a period of Russian history comprising the years of interregnum between the death of the last Russian Tsar of the Rurik Dynasty, Feodor Ivanovich, in 1598, and the establishment of the Romanov Dynasty in 1613.
His final big-screen appearance was in 1953's Tonight We Sing, playing the famous Russian bass Feodor Chaliapin in a movie biography of impresario Sol Hurok.
The music for the Easter Midnight Mass scene is a Russian Orthodox Church hymn, " Bogoroditse Devo " ( Rejoice, O Virgin ) from " Three Choruses from ' Tsar Feodor Ioannovich '", taken from the album Sacred Songs of Russia by Gloriae Dei Cantores.
Famous Russian bass singer Feodor Chaliapin performed here in the 1910s and the early 1920s.
Feodor Ivanovich Chaliapin ( Russian: < span lang =" ru "> Фёдор Ива ́ нович Шаля ́ пин, Fyodor Ivanovich Shalyapin </ span >; April 12, 1938 ) was a Russian opera singer.

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