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James I, the Russia Company, and the Plan to Establish a Protectorate Over North Russia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 July 2014

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In the decade preceding the establishment of the Romanov dynasty in 1613, Muscovite Russia went through a catastrophic period known as the Time of Troubles which was characterized by political unrest, famine, regicide, social upheaval, and foreign intervention. In the final, darkest years of the Time of Troubles many people doubted that Muscovy, which for a time lacked a ruler or even a central government, would be able to survive as an independent state. It appeared more likely that Catholic Poland would conquer the country or that Sweden would come to dominate it. The English, who had established diplomatic and commercial relations with Muscovy in the 1550s and who watched events there with considerable interest, were horrified by reports that the Poles had captured Moscow, that the Swedes had seized much Russian territory, and that factions of the Muscovite lords were negotiating with their aggressive neighbors for a foreign tsar. This eventually led the English to contemplate acquiring North Russia and the commercially important port of Arkhangel'sk for themselves. As strange as it seems, for a brief period of time King James I actually dreamed of adding part of Muscovy to his “empire.”

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Research Article
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Copyright © North American Conference on British Studies 1989

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102 The letter contains information about the Diet summoned by King Sigismund in late March 1613. See Reddaway, W. F., et al., The Cambridge History of Poland to 1696 (Cambridge, 1950), p. 468.Google Scholar

103 On Margeret's knowledge of Muscovy, his military experience, and his prior contact with Merrick, John, see Margeret, , Russian Empire, pp. xvixxiii.Google Scholar

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107 Zhordaniia, , Ocherki, 1: 359–60Google Scholar. I have found no evidence to support the Soviet historian Got'e's contention that Merrick and Russell were denied permission to visit Moscow in 1613. See Ocherki istorii SSSR, p. 589. On the contrary, Tsar Mikhail actually gave Merrick permission to visit the capital. See HMC. Buccleuch, 1: 137.Google Scholar

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