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<text id=90TT0652>
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<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>