June 16, 2014 <Back to Index>
PAGE SPONSOR |
Stepan (Sten'ka) Timofeyevich Razin (Russian: Степан (Стенька) Тимофеевич Разин; 1630 – June 16 [O.S. June 6] 1671) was a Cossack leader who led a major uprising against the nobility and Tsar's bureaucracy in South Russia. He is first noted by history in 1661, as part of a diplomatic mission from the Don Cossacks to the Kalmyks. That same year Razin went on a long distance pilgrimage to the great Solovetsky Monastery on the White Sea for the benefit of his soul. After that, all trace of him is lost for six years, when he reappears as the leader of a robber community established at Panshinskoye, among the marshes between the rivers Tishina and Ilovlya, from whence he levied blackmail on all vessels passing up and down the Volga. A long war with Poland in 1654 - 1667 and Sweden in 1656 - 1658 put heavy demands upon the people of Russia. Taxes increased as did conscription. Many peasants hoping to escape these burdens fled south and joined the bands of Razin's marauding Cossacks. They were also joined by many other disaffected with the Russian government, including people of the lower classes as well as representatives of non - Russian ethnic groups, such as Kalmyks, that were being oppressed. Razin's first considerable exploit was to destroy the great naval convoy consisting of the treasury barges and the barges of the patriarch and the wealthy merchants of Moscow. Razin then sailed down the Volga with a fleet of thirty - five galleys, capturing the more important forts on his way and devastating the country. At the beginning of 1668 he defeated the voivode Yakov Bezobrazov, sent against him from Astrakhan, and in the spring embarked on a predatory expedition into Daghestan and Persia which lasted for eighteen months. Russia began the 17th century with the Time of Troubles, which lasted from 1598 to 1613. This time marked the end of the Rurik dynasty and the beginning of the Romanov dynasty. Michael Romanov (tsar from 1613 to 1645) and his son Alexis (tsar
from 1645 to 1676) both strove to strengthen the power of the tsar in
order to stabilize the country after the turmoil of the Time of Troubles. As a result, the Zemsky Sobor and the boyar council, two other bodies of government in Russia, slowly lost influence. The Russian population went from fifteen years of “near anarchy” to the reigns of two strong, centralizing autocrats. In addition, a deep divide existed between the lower peasant class in Russia and the noble class. Recent changes in the treatment and legal standing of peasants, including the institutionalization of serfdom in the Law Code of 1649 also contributed to the unrest among the peasant class. The Don Cossacks, a lower class group that lived independently near the Don River and whom the tsar’s government supplied in exchange for defending Russia, led Razin’s rebellion. Historian Paul Avrich characterizes Razin’s revolt as a “curious mixture of brigandage and revolt,” similar to other popular uprising of the period. Razin revolted against the “traitor - boyars” rather than the tsar. The Cossacks supported the tsar because they worked for him.
In
1667 Razin gathered a small group of Cossacks and left the Don for an
expedition in the Caspian Sea. He aimed to set up a base in
Yaitsk (now
known as Oral, located in Kazakhstan on the Ural River) and plunder
villages from there. However, Moscow learned of Razin’s plans and
attempted to stop him. As Razin traveled down the Volga River to Tsaritsyn, the voevodes of Astrakhan warned Andrei Unkovsky (the voevoda or governor of Tsaritsyn) of Razin’s arrival and recommended that he not allow the Cossacks to enter the town. Unkovsky
attempted to negotiate with Razin, but Razin threatened to set fire to
Tsaritsyn if Unkovsky interfered. When he encountered a group of
political prisoners being transported by the tsar’s representatives on
his way from the Don to the Volga, Razin reportedly said, “I shall not
force you to join me, but whoever chooses to come with me will be a
free Cossack. I have come to fight only the boyars and the wealthy
lords. As for the poor and plain folk, I shall treat them as brothers.” However,
when Razin sailed by Tsartisyn, Unkovsky did not attack (possibly
either because Unkovsky felt that Razin posed a threat or the guards of
Tsaritsyn sympathized with Razin’s Cossacks). This incident gave Razin
the reputation of an “invincible warrior endowed with supernatural
powers.” He continued his travels down the Volga and into the Caspian Sea, defeating several detachments of streltsy,
or armed guardsmen. In July 1667, Razin captured Yaitsk by disguising
himself and some of his companions as pilgrims to pray at the
cathedral. Once inside Yaitsk, they opened the gates for the rest of
the troops to enter and occupy the city. The opposition sent to fight
Razin felt reluctant to do so because they sympathized with the
Cossacks’ lower class background. In the spring of 1668, Razin led the majority of his men down the Yaik River (also
known as the Ural River) while a small portion stayed behind to guard
Yaitsk. However, the government defeated Razin’s men in Yaitsk and
Razin lost his base there.
After losing Yaitsk, Razin sailed south down the coast of the Caspian Sea to continue his pillaging. He and his men took
Baku (located on the Absheron Peninsula in present day Azerbaijan) easily, but at Rasht (in the southwest Caspian Sea in modern Iran) the Persians killed roughly 400 Cossacks in a surprise attack. Razin went to Isfahan to
ask the shah for land in Persia in exchange for loyalty to the shah,
but departed on the Caspian for more pillaging before they could reach
an agreement. Razin arrived in Farahabad (on
the southern shore of the Caspian Sea in Iran) and masqueraded as a
merchant in the city for several days before he and his men pillaged
the city for two days. That winter the Cossacks with Razin fended off
starvation and disease on the Mian Kaleh Peninsula, and in the spring
of 1669 Razin built a base on the eastern side of the Caspian Sea and
began raiding Turkmen villages. Then
in the spring of 1669 he established himself on the isle of Suina , off
which, in July, he annihilated a Persian fleet sent against him. Stenka
Razin, as he was generally called, had now become a potentate with whom princes did not disdain to treat. In August 1669 he reappeared at Astrakhan, and accepted a fresh offer of pardon from tsar Aleksey Mikhailovich there;
the common people were fascinated by his adventures. The lawless
Russian border region of Astrakhan, where the whole atmosphere was
predatory and many people were still nomadic, was the natural milieu for such a rebellion as Razin's. In 1670 Razin, while ostensibly on his way to report himself at the Cossack headquarters on the Don, openly rebelled against the government, captured Cherkassk, and Tsaritsyn.
After capturing Tsaritsyn, Razin sailed up the Volga with his army of
almost 7000 men. The men traveled toward Cherny Yar, a government
stronghold between Tsaritsyn and Astrakhan. Razin and his men swiftly
took Cherny Yar when the Cherny Yar streltsy rose up against their
officers and joined the Cossack cause in June 1670. On
June 24 he reached the city of Astrakhan. Astrakhan, Moscow’s wealthy
“window on the East,” occupied a strategically important location at
the mouth of the Volga River on the shore of the Caspian Sea. Razin
plundered the city despite its location on a strongly fortified island
and the stone walls and brass cannons that surrounded the central
citadel. The local streltsy’s rebellion allowed Razin to gain access to
the city. After massacring all who opposed him (including two Princes Prozorovsky) and giving the rich bazaars of the city over to pillage, he converted Astrakhan into a Cossack republic, dividing the population into thousands, hundreds and tens, with their proper officers, all of whom were appointed by a veche or general assembly, whose first act was to proclaim Stepan Timofeyevich their gosudar (sovereign). After
a three weeks carnival of blood and debauchery Razin quit Astrakhan
with two hundred barges full of troops to establish the Cossack
republic along the whole length of the Volga, as a preliminary step
towards advancing against Moscow. Saratov and Samara were captured, but Simbirsk defied all efforts, and after two bloody encounters close at hand on the banks of the Sviyaga River (October 1 and 4), Razin was ultimately routed by the army of Yuri Baryatinsky and fled down the Volga, leaving the bulk of his followers to be extirpated by the victors. But
the rebellion was by no means over. The emissaries of Razin, armed with
inflammatory proclamations, had stirred up the inhabitants of the
modern governments of Nizhny Novgorod, Tambov and Penza, and penetrated even so far as Moscow and Novgorod. It was not difficult to stir the oppressed population to revolt by
promising deliverance from their yoke. Razin proclaimed that his object
was to root out the boyars and
all officials, to level all ranks and dignities, and establish
Cossackdom, with its corollary of absolute equality, throughout Muscovy. Even
at the beginning of 1671 the issue of the struggle was doubtful. Eight
battles had been fought before the insurrection showed signs of
weakening, and it continued for six months after Razin had received his
quietus. At Simbirsk his prestige had been shattered. Even his own
settlements at Saratov and Samara refused to open their gates to him,
and the Don Cossacks, hearing that the patriarch of Moscow had anathematized Stenka, also declared against him. The tsar sent troops to suppress the revolt. As Paul Avrich notes in Russian Rebels: 1600 - 1800,
“The brutality of the repressions by far exceeded the atrocities
committed by the insurgents.” The tsar’s troops mutilated the rebels’
bodies and displayed them in public to serve as a warning to potential
dissenters. In 1671 he and his brother Frol Razin were captured at Kaganlyk, his last fortress, and carried to Moscow, where, after tortures, Stepan was quartered alive in the Red Square at the Lobnoye Mesto.
However, the rebellion did not end with Razin’s death. The rebels in
Astrakhan held out until November 26, 1671, when Prince Ivan
Miloslavsky restored government control.
Razin originally set out to loot villages, but as he became a symbol of peasant unrest, his movement turned political. Razin
wanted to protect the independence of the Cossacks and to protest an
increasingly centralized government. The Cossacks supported the tsar
and autocracy, but they wanted a tsar that responded to the needs of
the people and not just those of the upper class. By destroying and
pillaging villages, Razin intended to take power from the government
officials and give more autonomy to the peasants. However, Razin’s
movement failed and the rebellion led to increased government control.
The Cossacks lost some of their autonomy, and the tsar bonded more
closely with the upper class because both feared more rebellion. On the
other hand, as Avrich asserts, “[Razin’s revolt] awakened, however
dimly, the social consciousness of the poor, gave them a new sense of
power, and made the upper class tremble for their lives and
possessions.”
Razin is the subject of a
symphonic poem by Alexander Glazunov and a cantata by Shostakovich. Stenka Razin is the hero of a popular Russian folk song, Ponizovaya Volnitsa, better known by the words Volga, Volga mat' rodnaya. The words were written by Dmitri Sadovnikov (Дмитрий Николаевич Садовников) in 1883; the music is folk. The song gave the title to the famous Soviet musical comedy Volga - Volga. The melody was used by Tom Springfield in the song "The Carnival Is Over" that placed The Seekers at #1 in 1965 in Australia and the UK. The lyrics of the song were dramatized in one of the very first Russian narrative films, Stenka Razin directed by Vladimir Romashkov in 1908. The film lasts about 10 minutes. The screenplay was written by Vasily Goncharov, and the music (the first film music to be specially written to accompany a silent film) was by Mikhail Ippolitov - Ivanov. На простор речной волны, Na prostor rechnoy volny, To the river wide and free Обнявшись, сидит с княжной, Obnyavshis', sidit s knyazhnoy, With his princess by his side Нас на бабу променял! Nas na babu promenyal! "He has left his sword to woo; Слышит грозный атаман, Slyshit groznyi ataman, Of his discontented band Надвигается гроза. Nadvigaetsya groza. As the waves of anger rise; Буйну голову отдам!" — Bujnu golovu otdam!" — Head and heart and life and hand." Волга, русская река, Volga, russkaya reka, Wide and deep beneath the sun, Между вольными людьми, Mezhdu vol'nymi ljud'mi, In this band so free and brave Он красавицу княжну On krasavitsu knyazhnu He has raised his bride on high Эй, ты, Филька, черт, пляши! Ej, ty, Fil'ka, chert, pljashi! What is this that's in your eyes? На простор речной волны, Na prostor rechnoy volny, To the river wide and free |