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Tsar
(redirected from Russian Emperor)

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tsar

 or czar

Byzantine or Russian emperor. The title, derived from caesar, was used in the Middle Ages to refer to a supreme ruler, particularly the Byzantine emperor. With the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, the Russian monarch became the only remaining Orthodox monarch, and the Russian Orthodox clergy considered him a possible new supreme head of Orthodox Christianity. Ivan IV (the Terrible) was the first to be crowned tsar, in 1547. Though theoretically wielding absolute power, he and his successors were limited by the power of the Orthodox church, the Boyar Council, and the successive legal codes of 1497, 1550, and 1649. In 1721 Peter I changed his title to “Emperor of All Russia,” but he and his successors continued to be popularly called tsars.


tsar, czar
1. (until 1917) the emperor of Russia
2. Informal a public official charged with responsibility for dealing with a certain problem or issue
3. (formerly) any of several S Slavonic rulers, such as any of the princes of Serbia in the 14th century

Tsar 

(also, czar; from the latin caesar, the title used by the Roman emperors), in Russia and Bulgaria, the official title of the monarch. In Russia the title of tsar was first adopted by Ivan IV (Ivan the Terrible) in 1547. From 1721 the Russian tsars adopted the title of emperor. In Bulgaria the monarchs bore the title of tsar from the end of the 19th century to the proclamation of the People’s Republic in 1946.



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In 1916I the Russian emperor issued the order, according to which all men aged from 19 to 45 years in Eastern Siberia, Turkestan and Kazakhstan were due to be drafted into the tsarist army as unskilled workers.
Last October, a bogus antique toy train made by a fraudster who claimed it used to be the plaything of a Russian emperor, was sold at a Vectis auction for pounds 25,000.
Nichols argues his case quite persuasively, dividing Yeltsin's presidency into the "First Republic" (up to the shelling of parliament by tanks in October 1993) and the "Second Republic," when Yeltsin carved out for himself a presidential republic, in which the Duma became in large measure a deliberative organ, as during the rule of the last Russian emperor, Nicholas II.
 
 
 
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