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      • At the time, the title did not mean absolute power but referred to a ruler who did not have to pay allegiance to a foreign sovereign.
      www.worldhistory.org › Tsar
  1. Vasili III Ivanovich (Russian: Василий III Иванович; 25 March 1479 – 3 December 1533) was Grand Prince of Moscow and all Russia from 1505 until his death in 1533. He was the son of Ivan III and Sophia Paleologue and was christened with the name Gavriil (Гавриил).

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  3. Absolutism in Russia refers to the period of centralized power under the rule of the Tsars, particularly during the reign of Peter the Great and his successors. This form of government was characterized by the monarch's absolute authority over all aspects of society, including politics, the economy, and culture.

  4. Nov 29, 2023 · Ivan III (Ivan the Great) adopted the title of tsar during his reign, although he was never formally crowned as one. In those days, the tsar did not symbolise a ruler with absolute power but an independent sovereign who ruled over the lands that were listed in their full title.

  5. VASILII III (MUSCOVY) (1479 – 1533; ruled 1505 – 1533), grand prince of Muscovy. Vasilii III Ivanovich was the second son of Ivan III. His mother was the Greek princess Sofiia Paleologue. Coming to the throne in 1505, he pursued his father's policy of expansion and consolidation of territory. In 1510 he annexed the trading town of Pskov and ...

  6. May 21, 2012 · This essay closely examines the highly contested but widely employed historiographical category ‘absolutism’. Why are scholars so divided on whether it is even legitimate to use the term and, if they agree to do so, why are they still much at odds in explaining what it is? What are the main historiographical currents in the study of absolutism?

    • Cesare Cuttica
    • 2013
  7. Vasily III successfully completed his father Ivan the Greats policy of uniting the Russian territories under the tsar’s firm power. He was the father of Ivan the Terrible. Background. Lived: 1479-1533.

  8. Vasily III summoned him to Moscow, where he imprisoned him, and turned his land into his domain. Also, the principality of the north was annexed in 1523. As a result, the Moscow prince became the sole ruler of the entire Moscow principality.

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