Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya (Russian: Мария Ильинична Милославская, 1 April 1624 – 18 August 1669) was a Russian tsaritsa as the first spouse of tsar Alexis of Russia. She was the mother of tsar Feodor III of Russia, tsar Ivan V of Russia, and the princess regent Sophia Alekseyevna.

Maria Miloslavskaya
Depiction in a 1670s icon of the True Cross
Tsaritsa consort of All Russia
Tenure16 January 1648–18 August 1669
Born1 April 1624
Moscow, Russia
Died18 August 1669(1669-08-18) (aged 45)
Moscow, Russia
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1648)
Issue
among others...
Names
Maria Ilyinichna Miloslavskaya
HouseRomanov (by marriage)
FatherIlya Danilovich Miloslavsky
MotherEkaterina Feodorovna Narbekova
ReligionEastern Orthodox

Life edit

 
Tsar Alexei chooses his bride by Grigory Sedov, depicts Alexis I selecting Maria Miloslavskaya as his tsaritsa.

Maria Ilyinichna was a younger daughter of the noble Ilya Danilovich Miloslavsky (d. 1668) and Ekaterina Fedorovna Miloslavskaya (Narbekova). Her father was a relative and supporter of Boris Morozov, the influential tutor and favorite of the tsar.

Marriage edit

In 1647, tsar Alexis I of Russia reached the age required for marriage. The tsar was to choose his bride from a bride-show of hundreds of daughters of the nobility, who were summoned to the imperial court for selection. This method to select a bride for the tsar reportedly originated from the reign of Ivan III, whose spouse Sophia Palaiologina came from the Byzantine empire, where this method had once been used to choose a bride for the Byzantine emperor.

The bridal selection of Alexis I was managed by Boris Morozov, and gathered to almost two hundred daughters of the nobility, among them Maria Miloslavskaya. She had the support of Boris Morozov, who intended to marry her sister Anna Miloslavskaya, and hoped that Alexis I would choose Maria, which would make him the brother-in-law of the tsar. During the selection ceremony, however, the tsar chose Euphemia Fedorovna Vsevolozhskaya by presenting her with a handkerchief and a ring as a symbol of their engagement. Boris Morozov then bribed a courtier to make Vsevolozhskaya faint; he then bribed a court physician to diagnose her with epilepsy. This disqualified Vsevolozhskaya as tsaritsa and resulted in both her and her father to be exiled accused of attempting to hide her illness from the tsar, and thus the first choice of the tsar was annulled.

Maria Miloslavskaya was selected as the tsar's second choice. She was reportedly a beauty, and was declared perfectly healthy after an examination by a court physician. The wedding was conducted on 16 January 1648 in Moscow. Upon the advice of the tsar's confessor, the wedding was a very somber ceremony, excluding all music, games and other festivities except for religious singing, to follow the wish of the famously ascetic Patriarch Joseph of Moscow. Ten days after the wedding of the tsar to Maria Miloslavskaya, Boris Morozov married her sister Anna Miloslavskaya, making him brother-in-law to the tsar and strengthening his power at court. Her father, additionally, was made boyar and became one of the most influential power holders at court, making the Miloslavsky family a key power clan at the Russian court during Maria's tenure as tsaritsa.

Tsaritsa edit

The marriage between tsar Alexis of Russia and tsaritsa Maria Miloslavskaya is described as a happy one. During the Moscow uprising of 1648, which followed the wedding, she evacuated with the tsar to Kolomenskoye.

Tsaritsa Maria was described as beautiful, but there was also a rumor that Maria was a witch with a goat foot who could master sorcery.[1]

In contemporary Moscovian Russia, the role of the tsaritsa was semi-public; all Russian noblewomen were expected to live their lives in seclusion, with as little contact with men as possible.[2] Russian noblewomen did not socialize with male guests in their home, only meeting them for a ceremonial welcome before retiring without socializing with them; they traveled in covered sleighs and carriages when outside, and even the royal women, when visiting the church or participating in official processions, only did so covered by screens.[2] Despite this, however, the tsaritsa was expected to embody an ideal of female Orthodox devotion and, outside of her religious duties, manage the affairs of the court staff and participate in public charitable and religious activity.[2]

Tsaritsa Maria fulfilled her expected role both in regard to charity and religion. She engaged in charity public donations to the Moscow city hospitals for the poor sick and disabled, and supported the work of Fyodor Rtishchev. She acted as the protector of the cult of Mary of Egypt, and favored the Sretensky Monastery (Moscow). In 1651–1652, she commissioned an icon to the monastery. The saint favored by Maria was eventually to be regarded as a patron saint of the Romanov dynasty. She also benefited the Trinity Monastery Optina (Bolhov).

In 1654 and 1660, she gave audience to the Georgian queen Yelena Leonovna in the Golden Room. As the tsar was away at the time of the Moscow Plague of 1654–55, Maria took over and organized the measures taken by city authorities, giving the city officials order by correspondence so as not to break her seclusion,[3] and herself evacuated with her children and her court to Kalyazin Abbey.

Maria died of the fever after having given birth, several months after her father. When she died, it was first believed that her widower would never remarry.

Issue edit

Alexei's first marriage to Miloslavskaya was harmonious and felicitous. They had thirteen children (five sons and eight daughters) in twenty-one years of marriage, and she died only weeks after her thirteenth childbirth. Four sons survived her (Alexei, Fyodor, Semyon, and Ivan), but within six months of her death, two of these were dead, including Alexei, the 15-year-old heir to the throne. The couple's children were:

References edit

  1. ^ Troyat, Henri (1987). Peter the Great. Translated from the French by Joan Pinkham (1st American ed.). New York: Dutton. ISBN 978-0525245476.
  2. ^ a b c Massie, Robert K. (2012) [1998]. Peter the Great: His Life and World. Modern Library. ISBN 9780679645603.
  3. ^ A History of Women in Russia: From Earliest Times to the Present
  4. ^ "Sophia". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  5. ^ "Fyodor III". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
  6. ^ "Peter I". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
Russian royalty
Vacant
Title last held by
Eudoxia Streshneva
Tsaritsa consort of Russia
1648–1669
Vacant
Title next held by
Natalia Naryshkina