home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0652>
- <link 93TO0064>
- <link 93TG0134>
- <link 93HT1363>
- <link 91TT1958>
- <link 90TT0434>
- <title>
- Mar. 12, 1990: A Land Great & Rich In Search Of Order
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 12, 1990 Soviet Disunion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL SECTION: THE SOVIET EMPIRE, Page 46
- A Land Great and Rich in Search of Order
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>From the days of a Viking Rus named Rurik to Ivan the Terrible
- to Joseph Stalin, the territory now ruled by Moscow has been
- soaked in blood and steeped in conquests
- </p>
- <p>By Otto Friedrich
- </p>
- <p> The Soviet Empire, like many such conglomerations, slowly
- evolved out of centuries of aggression, anarchy and pure
- accident. About 500 years ago, the Muscovy state that was
- beginning to emerge from Mongol rule extended over just a few
- hundred miles on the upper reaches of the Volga. Today the
- U.S.S.R. represents one-sixth of the world's landmass, and its
- 289 million people include Armenians, Buddhists, Muslims,
- Tatars, Uzbeks, Yakuts--more than a hundred different national
- and religious groups united mainly by their mistrust of their
- rulers and one another.
- </p>
- <p> Before this empire was even born, the fertile steppe north
- of the Black Sea was repeatedly swept by nomadic tribes from
- Central Asia. The first known invaders were the fierce
- Scythians, who swarmed in from the east around 700 B.C., driving
- out the resident Cimmerians. The Greek historian Herodotus, who
- lived for a time in the Black Sea trading post of Olbia, wrote
- with a shudder that the Scythians' customs "are not such as I
- admire." Among them: human sacrifice, blinding of slaves and
- drinking from the skulls of fallen enemies. Still stronger
- tribes kept invading and conquering this region that is now the
- Ukraine: first the Sarmatians; then, in Roman times, the Goths
- and Huns; then, after the fall of Rome, the Avars and Khazars.
- The Khazar dynasty took the unusual course of adopting Judaism
- in about A.D. 740, whereupon Jewish refugees from Christian
- Constantinople helped create a Golden Age of trade and learning
- on the Black Sea.
- </p>
- <p> Somewhat to the north, a people known as the East Slavs
- began settling in the dense forests in about A.D. 500, finally
- occupying an area from what is now Leningrad to Kiev. From their
- forests, they shipped furs and honey down the Dnieper to the
- imperial capital of Constantinople. In 862, according to a 12th
- century document known as the Primary Chronicle, there occurred
- a semi-legendary encounter when the quarreling Slavs sent a
- delegation to Scandinavia to negotiate with the Vikings, whom
- they called Varangians, specifically with a tribe known as the
- Rus. "Our whole land is great and rich, but there is no order
- in it," said the Slavs. "Come to rule and reign over us." Though
- patriotic Soviet historians have strenuously challenged this
- saga, the Chronicle reports that a Viking Rus named Rurik went
- to take over the region, and that it "became known as the land
- of the Rus."
- </p>
- <p> Rurik's sons and grandsons not only united the Slavs of the
- Dnieper Valley but also were soon trying to expand. In 907
- Prince Oleg invaded the Eastern Roman Empire with 2,000 ships,
- "accomplished much slaughter among the Greeks" and supposedly
- nailed his shield to the imperial gates of Constantinople. From
- this foray, the Russians brought home to their capital in Kiev
- an advantageous trade treaty and an even more advantageous
- contact with the Christian religion and sophisticated culture
- of Constantinople. Thus emerged the first Russian state, known
- as Kievan Russia.
- </p>
- <p> When Oleg's successor Igor was killed in battle by a tribe
- known as the Drevlianians, his widow Olga took over in 945 and
- reigned for the next 17 years, thus becoming the first
- celebrated Russian woman. When the Drevlianian prince proposed
- that she marry him, she asked him to send envoys to bring her
- to him by boat; she then had the envoys and their boat flung
- into a pit, where they were buried alive. She next asked that
- the Drevlianians send their leading men to provide an escort,
- then offered them a bath, locked them in the bathhouse and set
- it afire. Thus avenged, Olga became the first Slav ruler to
- convert to Christianity, and the Orthodox Church allied itself
- to the ruling family by making her its first Russian saint.
- </p>
- <p> Kievan Russia prospered for about three centuries,
- dominating the main trade route from Scandinavia to
- Constantinople. Then there suddenly sounded new hoofbeats from
- the East.
- </p>
- <p> The Mongol Empire forged by Genghis Khan in 1206 was one of
- the most astonishing creations in history. His cavalry pierced
- the Great Wall of China and overwhelmed the Chin Empire in what
- has been described as the conquest of 100 million people by
- 100,000 soldiers. It was Genghis Khan's grandson Batu who first
- swept into Russia. When Kiev resisted, Batu besieged the city
- in 1240, burned it to the ground and massacred all its
- inhabitants. "When we passed through that land," wrote
- Archbishop Plano Carpini, a papal legate bound for the new power
- center in Mongolia, "we found lying in the field countless heads
- and bones of dead people. This city had been extremely large and
- very populous, whereas now it has been reduced to nothing."
- </p>
- <p> Batu charged onward to conquer Poland and Hungary, and it
- was probably only the death in 1242 of Batu's uncle, the Great
- Khan Ugedey (he was apparently poisoned by a jealous woman in
- his entourage), that saved Western Europe from the fate of Kiev.
- Batu decided to retrench and consolidate his rule over the
- khanate of the Golden Horde. Spread thin though they were, the
- Mongols of the Golden Horde ruled Russia for more than two
- centuries, and it was a harsh rule. Mongol tax collectors
- beggared the peasantry, and occupied Russia remained completely
- isolated from what the West came to know as the Renaissance.
- One unexpected consequence: the devastation of southern Russia
- stimulated the growth of the north, of the trading center in
- Novgorod and the nearby town of Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> The future metropolis was still an insignificant place. On
- the death in 1263 of Alexander Nevsky, who had defended Novgorod
- from the attacking Swedes and Teutonic Knights, the division of
- his lands gave the 500-sq.-mi. principality of Moscow to his
- youngest son Daniel. This son and his successors began buying
- and occasionally seizing more land, and unlike most Russian
- princes, they used primogeniture to preserve what they acquired.
- Ivan I, who became Grand Prince of Moscow in 1328, increased his
- territory fivefold, and the Metropolitan of the Russian
- Orthodox Church moved his headquarters there.
- </p>
- <p> In 1378 Prince Dmitri refused to pay tribute to the Mongols,
- then raised an army of 150,000 and defeated the Golden Horde on
- the banks of the Don. Ivan III, known as Ivan the Great
- (1462-1505), carried this "gathering of the Russian land" to a
- new height when he took over Novgorod and its extensive
- territories to the northeast. He also attacked the Lithuanians
- and captured Smolensk and the Volga trading center of Tver.
- </p>
- <p> Ivan saw himself as far more than a prince. He married
- Sophia Paleologus, a niece of the last Byzantine Emperor, who
- had been killed in battle when the Turks conquered
- Constantinople in 1453. Ivan thereupon laid claim to the title
- of Russian Emperor and took to calling himself a Czar, or ruler.
- He added to his family crest the two-headed eagle that had once
- stood for the Eastern Roman Empire. Muscovy's hereditary
- aristocrats, known as boyars, resisted Ivan's imperial
- pretensions, but the Russian clergy reassured him that he was
- personally descended from Augustus Caesar and that since
- Constantinople had fallen, Moscow was now "the Third Rome."
- Though the Mongols might once have punished such claims, their
- long-invincible empire was disintegrating. The Golden Horde
- dissolved into three different territories, the khanates of
- Kazan, Astrakhan and Crimea.
- </p>
- <p> The first two lasted only until the reign of Ivan's
- grandson, Ivan the Terrible (a term that in Russian means
- awesome rather than horrifying), who invaded Kazan in 1552 and
- routed all opposition. Ivan built Moscow's beautiful onion-domed
- St. Basil's Cathedral at the edge of Red Square to celebrate his
- victory, but he is mainly remembered for his pathological
- cruelty. Even as a boy, he liked to throw animals off the
- Kremlin's towers. "If hee misliked a face or person of any man
- whom hee met by the way," British Ambassador Sir Giles Fletcher
- reported on the young Czar, "hee would command his head to be
- strook off." Ivan had a paranoid suspicion that the boyars were
- scheming to overthrow him, and anyone he suspected, he killed.
- He not only liked to imagine new forms of torment (e.g.,
- vertical impalement) but also liked to watch them being carried
- out.
- </p>
- <p> Ivan killed his eldest son, apparently in a fit of rage, and
- so the throne passed to a second son, Fedor, who was mentally
- retarded and spent most of his time in prayer. The real ruler
- of Russia was Czar Fedor's brother-in-law, Boris Godunov, and
- when Fedor died childless in 1598, the dynasty that traced its
- origins back to the Varangian Rurik came to an end. An assembly
- of nobles elected Godunov Czar, but a rival faction in Poland
- began an insurrection. It was led by a youth known as the False
- Dmitri, who claimed to be the third son of Ivan the Terrible.
- Godunov had nearly defeated Dmitri's forces when he sickened and
- died. The False Dmitri ruled for a year, then was overthrown and
- executed. Sweden and Poland both laid claim to the throne and
- invaded. The Roman Catholic Poles even seized Moscow, but the
- Orthodox Church issued an appeal for the salvation of Holy
- Russia. A huge army soon gathered and expelled the invaders. In
- 1613 the victors then elected a new Czar to begin a new dynasty,
- the 16-year-old Michael Romanov.
- </p>
- <p> Almost unnoticed during this extended Time of Troubles was
- an event immensely important to the growth of the Russian
- Empire, the gradual takeover of Siberia. This remarkable process
- started back in the 14th century, and it was spearheaded not by
- the government but by the church. From the Holy Trinity-St.
- Sergius Monastery just north of Moscow, dozens of monks set
- forth into the forests to establish new monasteries where they
- could pray in isolation. In their footsteps came hunters and
- trappers, fortune hunters and hard-bitten frontiersmen known as
- cossacks. The remnants of the Mongol Empire were powerless to
- stop them.
- </p>
- <p> A cossack pirate named Yermak Timofeyevich, in the employ
- of the Stroganovs (later famous for their beef stew), led a band
- of 840 musket-armed men through the Urals and defeated the
- lancers of the Khan of Sibir in 1572. He offered this doorway
- to Siberia to the Czar, who happily accepted. More cossacks came
- pouring in, for the profits were enormous. Two sable skins could
- buy a house, yet nearly 7,000 sables were trapped in one year.
- The conquest of this frozen wilderness took only 80 years. By
- 1647 the cossacks had established one of their ostrogs (forts)
- on the Sea of Okhotsk. Pressing southward to the Amur valley,
- they encountered the soldiers of China's Manchu Empire, who
- halted the cossacks' advance at the northern frontier of
- Manchuria.
- </p>
- <p> What lay to the east of Kamchatka Peninsula remained a
- mystery, so Czar Peter the Great assigned a Danish shipmaker,
- Vitus Bering, to find out. It took him eight years to work his
- way across Siberia, then build a ship and sail across the strait
- that now bears his name. On July 18, 1741, he spotted the
- snow-covered mountains of Alaska. Cruising offshore for several
- months, he finally ran aground on a desolate island, and there
- Bering and many of his men died. But in his wake, more fur
- trappers peacefully took possession of Alaska and established
- forts as far south as California.
- </p>
- <p> The Czar who sent Bering to death and fame had larger
- projects on his mind. A giant of 6 ft. 7 in., reputedly strong
- enough to roll up a silver plate like a parchment scroll, Peter
- was determined to wrestle his nation into the modern world of
- the West. Defeated by a smaller Swedish force at Narva in 1700,
- he rebuilt, retrained and rearmed his entire military, then
- routed Sweden's King Charles XII at Poltava in 1709. His victory
- eventually gave the Russians control of the Baltic states of
- Estonia and Latvia, and thus a large window to the West. In the
- swamps at the mouth of the Neva River, he had already begun
- building himself a modern capital. He dragooned tens of
- thousands of soldiers, peasants and prisoners into laboring
- under such appalling conditions that the city was said to be
- built on bones. But in ten years he laid the foundations for one
- of the wonders of the world, the parks and canals and esplanades
- of St. Petersburg, now Leningrad.
- </p>
- <p> The process of Westernization continued under Catherine the
- Great, a highly intelligent German princess of polyandrous
- tastes (one husband, murdered under mysterious circumstances,
- and 21 known lovers). In the previous century the Poles had
- occupied Moscow, but now Catherine wrote to King Frederick II
- of Prussia, "We will give a King to Poland." Moving Russian
- troops across the Polish border and spreading bribes liberally,
- Catherine got one of her discarded lovers, Stanislaw
- Poniatowski, elected King of Poland in 1764. This led to civil
- strife and a sudden intervention by the Turks. Catherine
- defeated both Poles and Turks handily, then joined with Prussia
- and Austria in a partial dismemberment of Poland.
- </p>
- <p> By this partition of 1772, Russia acquired 55,000 sq. mi.
- of White Russia. From the Turks it won control of that Mongol
- relic, the khanate of Crimea. Both Turks and Poles tried to
- retake the conquered land and were again defeated. Russia
- annexed not only Crimea but the adjoining Ukrainian lands
- between the Bug and the Dniester. The Poles were partitioned
- again in 1793, with Russia gaining an additional 130,000 sq.
- mi., and then, in a third partition in 1795, all of Poland
- disappeared from the map for the next 125 years. "The more she
- wept for Poland, the more she took of it," said Prussia's
- admiring King Frederick II. Catherine had thus advanced Russia's
- western borders to the Prussian frontier and the headwaters of
- the Vistula.
- </p>
- <p> The next man to attack Russia was Napoleon Bonaparte, and
- the man who had to defend it was Catherine's enigmatic grandson
- Alexander I, whom Napoleon once described as "the northern
- Sphinx." France and Russia were allies when Alexander came to
- the throne after the murder of his father in 1801, but he soon
- joined the British-led coalition against France. Napoleon
- skillfully defeated the coalition, captured Vienna and Berlin,
- then met with Alexander in 1807 on a raft in the Neman River,
- which separated their two empires. In the manner customary
- during this period, the two enemies pledged friendship and
- proceeded to redraw the map. Napoleon endorsed the idea of
- Alexander seizing Finland from the Swedes, which he did a few
- months later. The treaty also freed Alexander to expand
- southward in the Caucasus. Clashing with both the Persians and
- the Turks, he annexed the autonomous Christian state of Georgia
- and Muslim Azerbaijan. From the Turks he also took a slice of
- Bessarabia and won extensive rights in the Danubian provinces
- of Moldavia and Walachia (now Romania).
- </p>
- <p> In June 1812, Napoleon tried to redraw the map once again
- by invading Russia. His Grande Armee of 600,000 men seemed
- invincible, and the Czar ordered a scorched-earth policy while
- his army retreated eastward. Seventy-five miles outside Moscow
- the Russians made a stand at Borodino (a battle later
- immortalized by one of the participants, Count Leo Tolstoy, in
- War and Peace). After a slaughter that inflicted 100,000
- casualties, the Russians withdrew again, and Napoleon marched
- into deserted Moscow unopposed, the last invader ever to do so.
- </p>
- <p> The first fires broke out that same night, and new ones kept
- starting. The victorious Napoleon offered peace; the beaten
- Alexander refused to negotiate. The victorious Napoleon decided
- he had to retreat; the Russians harried him all the way back to
- Germany. Closer to home, Napoleon was still able to beat back
- all attackers, but Alexander persuaded the Prussians and
- Austrians to march directly on Paris. Napoleon's underlings
- succeeded in persuading him to abdicate. Alexander's triumph
- made Russia for the first time a great European power, and
- filled the Russians with an intoxicating sense of greatness.
- From now on, not only Alexander but his successors felt they had
- a God-given right to intervene in the Balkans, to keep attacking
- the Ottoman Empire, to expand anywhere they wanted in the
- wastelands of Central Asia.
- </p>
- <p> It was Alexander's brother Nicholas I who took over northern
- Armenia from Persia in 1828, then invaded the Balkans to make
- the Turks recognize him as the protector of all Christians. The
- British and French joined in resisting that demand in the bloody
- stalemate of the Crimean War (1853-56). Resisted in the West,
- the succeeding Czar Alexander II looked east. He was repeatedly
- urged in this direction by Prussia's Chancellor Otto von
- Bismarck. "Russia has nothing to do in the West," Bismarck once
- declared. "There she can only catch nihilism and other diseases.
- Her mission is in Asia. There she represents civilization."
- </p>
- <p> This new crusade began with the seizure of the east bank of
- the Amur valley as far south as Vladivostok, which a now
- enfeebled China ceded in 1860. On the enormous Pacific island
- of Sakhalin, the Russians first established a joint
- "condominium" with the Japanese in 1855, then took over the
- whole place in 1875. In the rugged and thinly settled
- borderlands of Central Asia, the Russians simply invaded. They
- stormed legendary Tashkent in 1864 and turned the whole of
- Turkistan into a Russian province. They besieged the sacred city
- of Samarkand, site of the tomb of the medieval chieftain Timur
- the Great (the Tamburlaine of Christopher Marlowe's epic play),
- and pillaged it for four days. It was from these little noticed
- conquests that there emerged the until recently little noticed
- Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kirghizia, Tadzhikistan,
- Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan. "The policy of Russia is
- changeless," said one disapproving observer, Karl Marx. "Its
- methods, its tactics, its maneuvers may change, but the polar
- star of its policy--world domination--is a fixed star."
- </p>
- <p> The one Eastern outpost where the Russian Empire retreated
- was Alaska. The U.S. had made an offer for it back during the
- Crimean War, but the Russians refused. In 1867 Secretary of
- State William Seward tried again, asking first for various
- fishing and trading rights. The Russian Minister to the U.S.,
- Eduard de Stoekl, refused. "Very well," said Seward. "Will
- Russia sell the whole territory?" Stoekl said the Russians might
- consider it if the price were right. Seward consulted President
- Andrew Johnson, then offered $5 million. Stoekl, who had been
- authorized to sell at that price, refused, saying he could not
- consider less than $7 million. Seward grudgingly raised his bids
- until they reached $7 million. He then found that the Senate,
- already embroiled in the post-Civil War quarrels that would lead
- to the impeachment of President Johnson, refused to ratify
- "Seward's Folly." Only after Stoekl spread substantial sums of
- money among influential Senators did the legislators suddenly
- see wisdom in the spectacular bargain.
- </p>
- <p> Despite the ill-considered sale of Alaska, the Romanov
- Empire by now extended over nearly 7,000 miles, but the vast
- structure had little strength. The Empire of Japan, newly
- reopened after its long isolation, proved that in the war of
- 1905. Though outnumbered, the Japanese pushed back a Russian
- invasion of Manchuria and virtually annihilated the Russian
- Navy. Czar Nicholas II barely survived the humiliation and the
- subsequent revolution that swept over Russia. Eleven years later
- he blundered into another war, another defeat, another
- revolution. In the 1918 Treaty of Brest Litovsk, the Germans'
- price for making peace with the shaky new Bolshevik regime
- included stripping away Russia's western holdings: Finland,
- Poland and the Baltic states all regained their independence.
- </p>
- <p> Other territories the new Bolshevik regime fought to retain.
- The Ukraine declared its independence in 1918, but the Red Army
- recaptured it the following year. Azerbaijan, Georgia and
- Armenia similarly declared their independence, then formed a
- Transcaucasian Federation that even won de facto recognition
- from the Western allies, but here too the Red Army soon marched
- in and took over. And so things remained until World War II,
- when Joseph Stalin began trying to re-create the empire of the
- Czars--and more. By attacking the Finns in 1939, he seized a
- slice of southern Finland; by making a deal with the Germans,
- he once again annexed the Baltic states. Then, after repelling
- the Nazi invasion, he established the Red Army in occupied East
- Germany in 1945, moved the Polish frontiers some 200 miles to
- the West and established a buffer zone of Communist satellites
- all across Central Europe. When China too went Communist in
- 1949, Stalin could claim suzerainty over the largest empire
- since that of the Mongols. And though nobody realized it then,
- it was just as doomed.
- </p>
- <p>-- Research by Anne Hopkins
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-