Prince of Novgorod
The Prince of Novgorod (Russian: Князь новгородский, knyaz novgorodskii) was the chief executive of Novgorod the Great. The office was originally an appointed one until the late eleventh or early twelfth century, then became something of an elective one until the fourteenth century, after which the Prince of Vladimir (who was almost always the Prince of Moscow) was almost invariably the Prince of Novgorod as well.
The office began sometime in the ninth century when, according to tradition, the Viking (Varangian) Riurik and his brothers were invited to rule over the Eastern Slavs,[1] but real reliable information on the office dates only to the late tenth century when Vladimir the Great was prince of Novgorod. The office or title technically continued up until the abdication of Nicholas II in 1917 – among one of his titles (although his list of titles was rarely given in complete form) was Prince of Novgorod the Great.
After the chief Rurikid prince moved to Kiev in the late ninth century, he usually sent either his son or a posadnik (mayor), to rule on his behalf. Thus Sviatoslav I sent his son Vladimir the Great to rule in Novgorod, and after Vladimir became Grand Prince of Kiev, he sent his son, Yaroslav the Wise to reign in Novgorod.
Contents
Republican period
From the early twelfth century to 1478, the prince's power in the Republic of Novgorod was more nominal. Imperial and Soviet-era scholars often argued that the office was ineffectual after 1136, when Prince Vsevolod Mstislavich was dismissed by the Novgorodians, and that Novgorod could invite and dismiss its princes at will.[2] In this way, the prince of Novgorod was no longer "ruler" of Novgorod but became an elective or appointed executive official of the city-state.[3]
That being said, the traditional view of the prince being invited in or dismissed at will is an oversimplification of a long and complex history of the office. In fact, from the late tenth century to the fall of Novgorod in 1478, the princes of Novgorod were dismissed and invited only about half the time, and the vast majority of these cases occurred between 1095 and 1293, and not consistently so during that period. That is, the office was elective for perhaps two centuries and even then it was not always elective.[4] Even during this period, the nadir of princely power in the city, more powerful princes could assert their power independently over the city, as did Mstislav the Bold in the early 13th century, Alexander Nevsky in the 1240s and 50s, his brother Iaroslav in the 1260s and 70s, and others.[5]
According to a remark in the chronicles, Novgorod had the right, after 1196, to pick their prince of their own free will,[6] but again, the evidence indicates that even after that, princes were chosen and dismissed only about half the time, and Novgorod often chose the most powerful prince in Rus' as their prince.[7] That usually meant that the prince in Kiev, Vladimir or Moscow (who retained the title Grand Prince of Vladimir from about the 1320s onward, although there were several interruptions), either took the title himself or appointed his son or other relative to be prince of Novgorod. At times other princes, from Tver, Lithuania, and elsewhere, also vied for the Novgorodian throne. Thus Novgorod did not really choose its prince, but considering the political climate, they often very prudently went with the most senior or most powerful prince in the land if he did not impose himself (or his candidate) upon them.
What was different about Novgorod, then, was not so much that Novgorod could freely choose its princes - it really couldn't. Rather, what was unique was that no princely dynasty managed to establish itself within the city and take permanent control over the city. Rather, while other Rus' cities had established dynasties, the more powerful princes vied for control of Novgorod the Great, a most-desirable city to control given the vast wealth (from trade in furs) that flowed into the city in the medieval period.[8]
In the absence of firmer princely control the local elites, the boyars, took control of the city and the offices of posadnik and tysyatsky became elective.[9] The veche (public assembly) played a not insignificant role in public life, although the precise makeup of the veche and its powers is uncertain and still contested among historians. The posadnik, tysiatsky, and even the local bishop or archbishop (after 1165) were elected at the veche, and it is said the veche invited and dismissed the prince as well.
List of princes
House of Rurik
- 862-879 Rurik I
- 879-912 Oleg I
- 912-945 Igor I
- 945-957 (Regency of Olga of Kiev)
- 957-969 Sviatoslav I
- 969-977 Vladimir I (1st time)
- 977-979 Yaropolk I
- 979-988 Vladimir I (2nd time)
- 988-1010 Viacheslav I Vladimirovich
- 1010-1034 Yaroslav I the Wise
- 1034-1052 Vladimir II
- 1052-1054 Iziaslav I
- 1054-1067 Mstislav I Iziaslavich
- 1067-1078 Gleb I
- 1078-1088 Sviatopolk I
- 1088-1094 Mstislav II the Great (1st time)
- 1094-1095 David I
- 1095-1117 Mstislav II the Great (2nd time)
- 1117-1132 Vsevolod I (1st time)
- 1132 Sviatopolk II Mstislavich (1st time)
- 1132-1136 Vsevolod I (2nd time)
- 1136-1138 Sviatoslav II (1st time)
- 1138 Sviatopolk II Mstislavich (2nd time)
- 1138-1140 Rostislav I (1st time)
- 1140-1141 Sviatoslav II (2nd time)
- 1141 Sviatoslav III
- 1141-1142 Rostislav I (2nd time)
- 1142-1148 Sviatopolk II Mstislavich (3rd time)
- 1148-1154 Yaroslav II
- 1154 Rostislav II
- 1154-1155 David II
- 1155-1158 Mstislav III Iurevich
- 1158-1160 Sviatoslav IV Rostislavich (1st time)
- 1160-1161 Mstislav IV the Eyeless (1st time)
- 1161-1168 Sviatoslav IV Rostislavich (1st time)
- 1168-1170 Roman I the Great
- 1170-1171 Rurik II
- 1171-1175 Iuri I Bogolyubsky
- 1175 Sviatoslav V Mstislavich
- 1175-1176 Mstislav IV the Eyeless (2nd time)
- 1176-1177 Yaroslav III Mstislavich
- 1177-1178 Mstislav IV the Eyeless (3rd time)
- 1178 Yaropolk II
- 1178-1179 Roman II
- 1179-1180 Mstislav V the Bold
- 1180-1181 Vladimir III
- 1182-1184 Yaroslav IV Vladimirovich (1st time)
- 1184-1187 Mstislav VI Davydovich
- 1187-1196 Yaroslav IV Vladimirovich (2nd time)
- 1197 Yaropolk III Iaroslavich
- 1197-1199 Yaroslav IV Vladimirovich (3rd time)
- 1200-1205 Sviatoslav VI (1st time)
- 1205-1207 Konstantin I
- 1207-1210 Sviatoslav VI (2nd time)
- 1210-1215 Mstislav VII the Bold (1st time)
- 1215-1216 Yaroslav V (1st time)
- 1216-1217 Mstislav VII the Bold (2nd time)
- 1217-1218 Sviatoslav VII Mstislavich
- 1218-1221 Vsevolod II Mstislavich
- 1221 Vsevolod III Iurevich (1st time)
- 1221-1223 Yaroslav V (2nd time)
- 1223-1224 Vsevolod III Iurevich (2nd time)
- 1224-1226 Saint Mikhail I (1st time)
- 1226-1228 Yaroslav V (3rd time)
- 1228-1229 Saint Alexander I Nevsky (1st time) and Theodore Iaroslavich
- 1229 Saint Mikhail I (2nd time)
- 1229-1230 Rostislav III
- 1230-1236 Yaroslav V (4th time)
- 1236-1240 Saint Alexander I Nevsky (2nd time)
- 1241 Andrei I
- 1241-1252 Saint Alexander I Nevsky (3rd time)
- 1252-1255 Vasily I Aleksandrovich (1st time)
- 1255 Yaroslav VI Yaroslavich
- 1255-1258 Vasily I Aleksandrovich (2nd time)
- 1258-1260 Saint Alexander I Nevsky (4th time)
- 1260-1263 Dmitry I of the Terrible Eyes (1st time)
- 1264-1272 Vasily II (1st time)
- 1272-1273 Dmitry I of the Terrible Eyes (2nd time)
- 1273-1276 Vasily II (2nd time)
- 1276-1281 Dmitry I of the Terrible Eyes (3rd time)
- 1281-1285 Andrei II (1st time)
- 1285-1292 Dmitry I of the Terrible Eyes (4th time)
- 1292-1304 Andrei II (2nd time)
- 1304-1314 Mikhail II the Saint (1st time)
- 1314-1315 Afanasii Daniilovich (1st time)
- 1315-1316 Mikhail II the Saint (2nd time)
- 1316-1322 Afanasii Daniilovich (2nd time)
- 1322-1325 Iuri II, 1322–1325
- 1325-1327 Alexander II
- 1328-1337 Ivan I Kalita the Money-bag
- 1337-1353 Simeon the Proud
- 1353-1359 Ivan II the Fair
- 1359-1363 Dmitry II the One-eyed, 1359–1363
- 1363-1389 Dmitry III of the Don
Gediminids
- 1389-1407 Lengvenis
House of Rurik
- 1408-1425 Vasily III, 1408–1425
- 1425-1462 Vasily IV the Blind, 1425–1462
- 1462-1480 Ivan III the Great
References
- ↑ Dmitry Likhachev, ed. and trans., Povest Vremennikh Let (Moscow and Augsburg: Im Werden Verlag, 2003), 7.
- ↑ Boris Grekov, “Revoliutsiia v Novgorode v XII veke,” Uchenye zapiski Instituta Istorii Rossiiskoi assotsiatsii nauchno-issledovatel’skikh institutov obshchestvennykh nauk (RANION) vol. 4 (1929): 13-21; V. L. (Valentin Lavrent’evich) Yanin, “Problemy sotsial'noi organizatsii novgorodskoi respubliki,” Istoriia SSSR, 1 (1970), 44; Valentin Yanin, Novgoroskie Posadniki (Moscow: Yazyki Slavianskoi kul'tury, 2003), 64-135.
- ↑ Michael C. Paul, "Was the Prince of Novgorod a 'Third-rate bureaucrat' after 1136?" Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 56, No. 1 (Spring 2008): 72-113.
- ↑ Paul, "Was the Prince of Novgorod a 'Third-rate bureaucrat' after 1136?" 94-97.
- ↑ Michael C. Paul, “The Iaroslavichi and the Novgorodian Veche 1230-1270: A Case Study on Princely Relations with the Veche,” Russian History/ Histoire Russe 31, No. 1-2 (Spring-Summer, 2004): 39-59.
- ↑ Arseny Nasonov, ed., Novgorodskaia Pervaia Letopis Starshego i mladshego izvodov (Moscow and Leningrad, ANSSSR, 1950), 43, 236; Novgorodskaia chetvertaia letopis, vol. 4 of Polnoe Sobranie Russkikh Letopisei (Moscow: Iazyki russkoi kul'tury, 2000), 177; George Vernadsky, Kievan Russia (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1948), 197.
- ↑ N. L. (Natalia L’vovna) Podvigina, Ocherki sotsial’no-ekonomicheskoi i politicheskoi istorii Novgoroda Velikogo v XII-XIII vv. (Moscow: Vysshaia shkola, 1976), 114; Paul, "Was the Prince of Novgorod a 'Third-rate bureaucrat' after 1136?" 82-94.
- ↑ On the fur trade, see Janet Martin, Treasure of the Land of Darkness: The Fur Trade and Its Significance for Medieval Russia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985); Paul, "Was the Prince of Novgorod a 'Third-Rate Bureaucrat' after 1136?"; see also the relevant sections (re: Novgorod) in Janet Martin, Medieval Russia: 980-1584, (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1995).
- ↑ See Yanin, Novgoroskie Posadniki.
- ↑ See also the list in Paul, "Was the Prince of Novgorod a 'Third-rate bureaucrat' after 1136?" 109-113.