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  1. Anna Vasilchikova (Анна Васильчикова) was Tsaritsa of the Tsardom of Russia and was the fifth spouse of Ivan the Terrible (Иван Грозный). Very little is known of her background. She married Ivan in January 1575 without the blessing of the Ecclesiastical Council of the Russian Orthodox Church.

  2. Anna Vasilchikova. Iván el Terrible se casó por quinta vez sin el permiso de la Iglesia: sin embargo, el clero dejó de intervenir en los asuntos personales del zar en ese momento, conocedor de su...

  3. 25 de oct. de 2023 · Ana se acabaría convirtiendo en la quinta esposa del zar Iván IV de Rusia, más conocido como Iván "El Terrible", pero a diferencia de sus anteriores esposas,...

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  4. 8 de ago. de 2018 · Within a year, the suffering Russian tsar proceeded to marry his fourth spouse, in 1572. Her name was Anna Alexeievna Koltovskaya. As it turned out, Ivan’s fourth tsarina was infertile and so she was sent to a nunnery. Now the path was clear for Ivan’s fifth wife: Anna Vasilchikova.

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    • Married Life Gone Bad
    • The Divorcing Tsar
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    In 1505 the time came for Vasiliy, the 26 year-old Grand Prince of Moscow, to marry. Traditionally, an unmarried Grand Prince wasn’t considered fit to rule. According to custom, 500 of the most beautiful virgin noblewomen were summoned from all over the Muscovy Tsardom. “Of these, 300 were selected, then 200, and finally 10, which were examined by ...

    Before Vasiliy III, the wives of the Moscow Princes only took monastic orders as widows, a normal practice in the 14th-15th centuries. Historian Tatiana Grigorieva says that, “To enter a monastery and take the tonsure meant not only formally pronouncing monastic vows and cutting your hair. A monk or a nun symbolically "died" to worldly life and dev...

    In the 17th century, the practice of forced tonsure continued. In 1600, Ksenia and Fyodor Romanov, the parents of the would-be first Romanov Mikhail Fyodorovich, were made to accept monastic orders – Fyodor Romanov was then one of the contenders for the throne and was thus thrown out of the game (a tonsured man could never become the tsar). In abou...

  5. The first crowned tsar of all Russia went down in history as a despotic ruler and a man of a short-tempered nature. He was looking for a wife his entire life, but he wasn’t so lucky. Anastasia...

  6. Anna Vasilchikova was the sixth wife of Ivan the Terrible. She married Ivan IV in January 1575. Two years later, she was banished to the Convent of the Intercession in Suzdal, where she allegedly died of a “chest complaint” in 1579. Random articles. Russo-Japanese War (1904–05)