- Patriarch Filaret (Feodor Romanov)
Fyodor Nikitich Romanov ( _ru. Фёдор Никитич Романов) (1553 —
October 1 ,1633 ) was aRussia nboyar who after temporary disgrace rose to becomepatriarch of Moscow as Filaret ( _ru. Филарет), and became de-facto ruler of Russia during the reign of his son, Mikhail Feodorovich.Life
Fyodor was born in
Moscow the second son of the prominent boyarNikita Romanovich and was the first to bear theRomanov surname. During the reign of his first cousin Feodor I (1584-1598), young Feodor Romanov distinguished himself both as a soldier and a diplomatist, fighting against the forces ofJohn III of Sweden in 1590, and conducting negotiations with the ambassadors ofRudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor from 1593 to 1594. He was made aBoyar in 1583.On the death of the childless tsar, he was the popular candidate for the vacant throne; but he acquiesced in the election of
Boris Godunov , and shared the disgrace of his too-powerful family three years later, when Boris compelled both him and his wife,Xenia Shestova , to take monastic vows under the names of Philaret and Martha respectively.Philaret was kept in the strictest confinement in the Antoniev Monastery of the Russian North, where he was exposed to every conceivable indignity; but when the
False Dmitriy I overthrew the Godunovs, he released Philaret and made him metropolitan ofRostov (1605).In 1609 Philaret fell into the hands of
False Dmitriy II , who named himPatriarch of all Russia, though his jurisdiction only extended over the very limited area which acknowledged theimpostor . From 1610 to 1618 he was a prisoner in the hands of the Polish king,Sigismund III Vasa , whom he refused to acknowledge as tsar ofMuscovy on being sent on an embassy to the Polish camp in 1610. He was released on the conclusion of thetruce of Deulino (February 13 ,1619 ), and on2 June of the same year was canonically enthroned Patriarch ofMoscow and all of Russia.Henceforth, till his death, the established government of Muscovy was a
diarchy . From 1619 to 1633 there were two actual sovereigns, Tsar Michael and his father, the "most holy Patriarch Philaret". Theoretically they were co-regent s, but Philaret frequently transacted affairs of state without consulting the tsar. He replenished the treasury by a more equable and rational system of assessing and collecting thetax es. His most important domestic measure was the chaining of thepeasant ry to the soil, a measure directed against the ever increasing migration of the down-troddenserfs to thesteppe s, where they became freebooters instead of tax-payers. The taxation of the tsar's military tenants was a first step towards theproportional taxation of the hitherto privileged classes.Philaret's zeal for the purity of orthodoxy sometimes led him into excesses but he encouraged the publication of theological works, formed the nucleus of the subsequently famous Patriarchal Library, and commanded that every
archbishop should establish aseminary for the clergy, himself setting the example. Another great service rendered by Philaret to his country was the reorganization of the Muscovite army with the help of foreign officers. His death in October 1633 put an end to the Russo-Polish War (1632-33), withdrawing the strongest prop from a tsar feeble enough even when supported by all the weight of his authority.By his marriage he had: [The first date is of Russian Orthodox Calendar.]
* Boris (d.20 November /30 November 1592 )
* Nikita (d.29 November /9 December 1593 )
* Lev (d.21 September /1 October 1597 )
* Tatiana (d.4 November /14 November 1611 ), married to Prince Ivan Mikhailovich Katyrev-Rostovski (d. 1640)
* Mikhail Feodorovich Romanov
* Ivan (d.7 June /17 June 1599 )Notes
References
*1911
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