The Throne Struggle in Caesarean Russia 1530 - 1605

Abstract

Caesarean Russia enjoyed unstable periods of government, and since the terrible time of Ivan that the Boyars initially surrounded and controlled his movements, he managed to control their plans, and after his death, his son, Fyodor, took the throne whose tenure was not long. Boris Godunov, with his political savvy, managed to ascend the throne of Russia, but the latter did not rule only eight years, as he faced many difficulties, foremost of which was the famine that befell the Russians which led to a major uprising, and then the emergence of the second fraudster Dmitry who took advantage of the death of Godunov and ascended the throne in 1605.