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  1. Prince Fedor Ivanovich Mstislavsky (died: 16 December 1622) was a Russian boyar, one of the leaders of the Duma aristocracy, leader of the Seven Boyars (who governed Russia for a brief period between 1610 and 1612) and the Chairman of Zemsky Sobor of 1613 .

    • 16 December 1622
    • Dmitry Troubetskoy (as the leader of the Zemsky government)
  2. Fedor Ivanovich Mstislavsky. Leader of the Seven Boyars. In office July 17, 1610 – December 16, 1612. Preceded by. Vasili IV (as Tsar of Russia) Succeeded by. Dmitry Troubetskoy (as the leader of the Zemsky government) Personal details. Died.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MstislavskyMstislavsky - Wikipedia

    His son, Fedor Mstislavsky was one of the Russian magnates during the Time of Troubles and the leader of the Seven Boyars who temporarily ruled the country. External links. Mstislavsky princes in History of the Russian nobility

    • Prelude
    • The Siege
    • Aftermath

    After Battle of Dobrynichy, most noblemen and mercenaries with whom False Dmitry Ibegan his campaign left him, but under his banner, peasants and Cossacks flocked massively, dissatisfied with the rule of Godunov and who supposedly believed False Dmitry to be "the lawful sovereign".

    A small garrison of Kromy was reinforced by five hundred Cossacks led by the ataman Andrei Korela, who retreated here after the battle of Dobrynichi. The walls were destroyed by artillery fire, but the defenders of Kromy effectively defended themselves in the system of trenches, which they dug in the city. Nevertheless, the losses on both sides wer...

    On April 13, 1605, Boris Godunov died and his son, Fedor, became Tsar. Many of the boyars began to look for ways to get rid of the elected Zemstvo dynasty. On May 7, most of the government army, following the agitation of the hero of the Novgorod-Seversk siege, Peter Basmanov (who took part in the conspiracy against the Godunovs), took the side of ...

  4. Ivan named as regents two leading boyars; Fedor's uncle, Nikita Romanovich Zakharyin-Yuriev (head of the Romanov clan), and Prince Ivan F. Mstislavsky; he also named two leading members of his own court: a premier prince of the blood, the popular and heroic Prince Ivan Petrovich Shuisky, and Fedor's brother-in-law, Boris Godunov.

  5. Fiódor Mijáilovich Dostoyevski (en ruso: Фёдор Миха́йлович Достое́вский; Moscú, 11 de noviembre de 1821- San Petersburgo, 9 de febrero de 1881) fue uno de los principales escritores de la Rusia zarista, cuya literatura explora la psicología humana en el complejo contexto político, social y espiritual de la sociedad rusa de la segunda mitad del s...

  6. In 1610 the Seven Boyars, notably his former adherents Princes Ivan Mikhailovich Vorotynsky and Fedor Ivanovich Mstislavsky, deposed him. He was forcibly made a monk and eventually transported together with his two brothers to Warsaw by the Polish hetman Stanisław Żółkiewski.