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Tsar and Vasili
* September 12 – Tsar Vasili IV of Russia ( b. 1552 )
* September 22 – Tsar Vasili IV of Russia ( d. 1612 )
Vasili IV of Russia | Tsar Shuisky and his Brothers before the King Sigismund III in the Senate Chamber at the Royal Castle, Warsaw | Royal Castle in Warsaw
At the beginning of that year Charles had concluded an alliance with Tsar Vasili IV of Russia against their common foe, the Polish king ; but when, in 1610, Vasili was deposed by his own subjects and the whole tsardom seemed to be on the verge of dissolution, Sweden's policy towards Russia changed its character.
Vasili Shuisky took his place as Tsar Vasili IV.
Vasili Shuisky, whom Dmitri earlier pardoned for conspiring against him, took his place as Tsar.
Vasili IV of Russia (, Vasíliy Ivánovich Shúyskiy, other transliterations: Vasiliy, Vasily, Vasilii ) ( 22 September 155212 September 1612 ) was Tsar of Russia between 1606 and 1610 after the murder of False Dmitriy I.
After the assassination of False Dmitriy I, Ignatius was removed from his see and confined in the Chudov Monastery by the order of Tsar Vasili IV.
The second wave started in 1607 and lasted until 1609, when Tsar Vasili made a military alliance with Sweden.
Vasili Shuiski took his place as Tsar.
In 1609 the Zebrzydowski Rebellion ended when Tsar Vasili signed a military alliance with Charles IX of Sweden that year ( on 28 February 1609 ).
During the reign of Vasili IV, Skopin-Shuisky became a close associate of his cousin, the Tsar.

Tsar and Shuiski
He was reinforced by the Poles, and in the spring of 1608 advanced upon Moscow, routing the army of Tsar Vasily Shuiski at Bolkhov.
Voluyev sent word for Dmitriy Shuiski ( Tsar Shuiski's brother ) to come to their aid and lift the siege.
The Russian Duma voted for Tsar Shuiski to be removed from the throne.

Tsar and was
He was born in Moscow, the son of Tsar Peter I and his first wife Eudoxia Lopukhina.
He was left in the hands of reactionary boyars and priests, who encouraged him to hate his father and wish for the death of the Tsar.
Another influence was Alexander Kikin, a high-placed official who had fallen out with the Tsar and had been deprived of his estates.
A larger variation of the same design which Sakharov worked on was the 50MT Tsar Bomba of October 1961, which was the most powerful nuclear device ever exploded.
Commander-in-Chief was Tsar Ferdinand, while the actual command was in the hands of his deputy, General Mikhail Savov.
It was popular as a village instrument for centuries, particularly with the skomorokhs, sort of free-lance musical jesters whose tunes ridiculed the Tsar, the Russian Orthodox Church, and Russian society in general.
There, with the active aid of the Russian government, he at length got access to the remainder of the precious Sinaitic codex, and persuaded the monks to present it to Tsar Alexander II of Russia, at whose cost it was published in 1862 ( in four folio volumes ).
Indeed he was never rich, but he staunchly defended the rights of the monks at St. Catherine's Monastery when he persuaded them eventually to send the manuscript to the Tsar.
Later on, he was a tutor to the later Tsar Peter II in 1728.
In 913, Simeon I of Bulgaria was crowned Emperor ( Tsar ) by the Patriarch of Constantinople and imperial regent Nicholas Mystikos outside of the Byzantine capital.
The Bulgarian imperial title " Tsar " was adopted by all Bulgarian monarchs up to the fall of Bulgaria under Ottoman rule.
It should be noted that after Bulgaria obtained full independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1908, its monarch, who was previously styled " Knyaz ", i. e. Prince, took the traditional title of " Tsar " which in Bulgarian means King and was recognized internationally as such.
In 1345, the Serbian King Stefan Uroš IV Dušan proclaimed himself Emperor ( Tsar ) and was crowned as such at Skopje on Easter 1346 by the newly created Patriarch of Serbia, and by the Patriarch of Bulgaria and the autocephalous Archbishop of Ohrid.
The word Tsar derives from Latin Caesar, but this title was used in Russia as equivalent to King ; the error occurred when medieval Russian clerics referred to the biblical Jewish kings with the same title that was used to designate Roman and Byzantine rulers-Caesar.
On 31 October 1721, Peter I was proclaimed Emperor by the Senate-the title used was Latin " Imperator ", which is a westernizing form equivalent to the traditional Slavic title " Tsar ".
She often wrote to its then ruler, Tsar Ivan IV, on amicable terms, though the Tsar was often annoyed by her focus on commerce rather than on the possibility of a military alliance.
This was because his great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, suggested the nickname of " Nicky ", however it got mixed up with the many Nickys of the Russian Imperial Family (" Nicky " was particularly used to refer to Nicholas II, the last Tsar ) so they changed it to Dickie.
The Congress was a personal triumph for Francis, where he hosted the assorted dignitaries in comfort, though Francis undermined his allies Tsar Alexander and Frederick William III of Prussia by negotiating a secret treaty with the restored French king Louis XVIII.

Tsar and unpopular
The marriage was unpopular both with the family and with the people, but the Tsar forced them to accept it.

Tsar and weak
He was succeeded by his weak and sickly son, George XII, after whose death Tsar Paul I annexed, in 1801, Kartli-Kakheti to Russia, terminating both Georgia's independence and a millennium-long rule of the Bagrationi Dynasty.
Sixteen members of the family signed a letter asking the Tsar to reconsider his decision due to Dmitri's weak health, but Nicholas II refused to consider the petition.

Tsar and Russia
* Alexius Mikhailovich ( 1629-1676 ), Tsar of Russia
Tsar Paul I of Russia sent, among other rewards, a gold box studded with diamonds and similar gifts in silver arrived from other European rulers.
' Just think how rich they are, how many Pasternaks they have -- as many as there were Pushkins in the Russia of Tsar Nicholas ... Not much has changed.
Tsar Nicholas II of Russia, being well informed, tried to stop the upcoming conflict on 8 June, by sending an identical personal message to the Kings of Bulgaria and Serbia, offering to act as arbitrator according to the provisions of the 1912 Serbo-Bulgarian treaty.
* 1825 – Tsar Alexander I of Russia ( b. 1777 )
* 1825 – Advocates of liberalism in Russia rise up against Tsar Nicholas I and are put down in the Decembrist Revolt in St. Petersburg.
Tsar Michael of Russia reportedly had a bulat helmet made for him in 1621.
* 1613 – Mikhail I is elected unanimously as Tsar by a national assembly, beginning the Romanov dynasty of Imperial Russia.
* 1728 – Tsar Peter III of Russia, husband of Catherine the Great ( d. 1762 )
But in 1648 beginning of the Khmelnytsky Uprising in Ukraine, at this time in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which continues until 1654, and results is concluded in the city of Pereyaslav during the meeting between the Cossacks of the Zaporozhian Host and Tsar Alexey I of Russia the Treaty of Pereyaslav.
As the result of the battle, the Seven Boyars, a group of Russian nobles, deposed the tsar Vasily Shuysky on, and recognized the Polish prince Władysław IV Vasa as the Tsar of Russia on.
Election of 16-year old Michael I of Russia | Mikhail Romanov, the first Tsar of the Romanov dynasty
Napoleon made a major misstep when he declared war on Russia after a dispute with Tsar Alexander I and launched an invasion of Russia in 1812.
Since playing a major role in the defeat of Napoleon, Russia had been regarded as militarily invincible, but, once pitted against a coalition of the great powers of Europe, the reverses it suffered on land and sea exposed the weakness of Tsar Nicholas ' regime.
Hotel Astoria ( Saint Petersburg ) | Hotel Astoria and a statue of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia in front, in Saint Petersburg, Russia
The last attempted impeachment occurred in 1848, when David Urquhart accused Lord Palmerston of having signed a secret treaty with Imperial Russia and of receiving monies from the Tsar.
* 1676 – Feodor III becomes Tsar of Russia.
* 1676 – Tsar Alexis I of Russia ( b. 1629 )
* 1696 – Tsar Ivan V of Russia, Russian tsar ( b. 1666 )
* 1918 – Bolsheviks kill Tsar Nicholas II of Russia and his family ( Julian calendar date ).
" After the paper published an article strongly criticising the monarchy in Russia, the Russian Tsar Nicholas I, an ally of the Prussian monarchy, requested that the Rheinische Zeitung be banned.

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