1686 eternal peace with Poland. Eternal Peace

330 years ago, on May 16, 1686, the "Eternal Peace" between Russia and the Commonwealth was signed in Moscow. The world summed up the results of the Russian-Polish war of 1654-1667, which went for the Western Russian lands (modern Ukraine and Belarus). The Andrusovo truce ended the 13-year war. "Eternal Peace" confirmed the territorial changes made under the Andrusov Treaty. Smolensk forever retreated to Moscow, Left-bank Ukraine remained part of Russia, Right-bank Ukraine remained part of the Commonwealth. Poland abandoned Kyiv forever, receiving compensation of 146 thousand rubles for this. The Commonwealth also refused to protectorate over the Zaporozhian Sich. Russia broke off relations with the Ottoman Empire and had to start a war with the Crimean Khanate.

Poland was an old enemy of the Russian state, but during this period, the Port became a stronger threat to it. Warsaw repeatedly made attempts to conclude an alliance with Russia against the Ottoman Empire. Moscow was also interested in creating an anti-Turkish alliance. War 1676-1681 with Turkey strengthened Moscow's desire to create such an alliance. However, repeated negotiations on this issue have not reached a result. One of the most important reasons for this was the resistance of the Commonwealth to the Russian demand to finally abandon Kyiv and some other territories. With the resumption in 1683 of the war with the Porte, Poland, in alliance with which Austria and Venice were, developed a stormy diplomatic activity in order to attract Russia to the anti-Turkish league. As a result, Russia joined the anti-Turkish alliance, which led to the beginning of the Russian-Turkish war of 1686-1700.

Thus, the Russian state finally secured a part of the Western Russian lands for itself and annulled preliminary agreements with the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate, joining the anti-Turkish Holy League, and also pledged to organize a military campaign against the Crimean Khanate. This was the beginning of the Russian-Turkish war of 1686-1700, the campaigns of Vasily Golitsyn to the Crimea and Peter to Azov. In addition, the conclusion of the "Eternal Peace" became the basis of the Russian-Polish alliance in the Northern War of 1700-1721.

background

The traditional opponent of the Russian state in the West for several centuries was Poland (the Commonwealth - the state union of Poland and Lithuania). The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth during the crisis of Russia captured the vast western and southern Russian regions. In addition, the Russian state and Poland fought hard for leadership in Eastern Europe. The most important task of Moscow was to restore the unity of the Russian lands and the divided Russian people. Even during the reign of the Rurikovichs, Russia returned part of the previously lost territories. However, the Time of Troubles at the beginning of the 17th century. led to new territorial losses. As a result of the Deulino truce of 1618, the Russian state lost the troops recaptured from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania at the very beginning of the 16th century. Chernigov, Smolensk and other lands. An attempt to win them back in the Smolensk War of 1632-1634. did not lead to success. The situation was aggravated by the anti-Russian policy of Warsaw. The Russian Orthodox population of the Commonwealth was subjected to ethnic, cultural and religious discrimination by the Polish and Polonized gentry. The bulk of the Russians in the Commonwealth were practically in the position of slaves.

In 1648, an uprising began in the Western Russian regions, which grew into a people's liberation war. It was headed by Bogdan Khmelnitsky. The rebels, which consisted mainly of Cossacks, as well as philistines and peasants, won a number of serious victories over the Polish army. However, without the intervention of Moscow, the rebels were doomed, since the Commonwealth had a huge military potential. In 1653, Khmelnitsky turned to Russia with a request for help in the war with Poland. On October 1, 1653, the Zemsky Sobor decided to satisfy the request of Khmelnitsky and declared war on the Commonwealth. In January 1654, the famous Rada took place in Pereyaslav, at which the Zaporizhzhya Cossacks unanimously spoke in favor of joining the Russian kingdom. Khmelnitsky, in front of the Russian embassy, ​​took an oath of allegiance to Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich.

The war began successfully for Russia. It was supposed to solve a long-standing national task - the unification of all Russian lands around Moscow and the restoration of the Russian state within its former borders. By the end of 1655, all of Western Russia, except for Lvov, was under the control of Russian troops and hostilities were transferred directly to the ethnic territory of Poland and Lithuania. In addition, in the summer of 1655, Sweden entered the war, whose troops captured Warsaw and Krakow. The Commonwealth was on the verge of a complete military-political catastrophe. However, Moscow is making a strategic mistake. On a wave of dizziness from success, the Moscow government decided to return the lands that the Swedes captured from us during the Time of Troubles. Moscow and Warsaw signed the Vilna truce. Even earlier, on May 17, 1656, the Russian Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich declared war on Sweden.

Initially, Russian troops achieved some success in the fight against the Swedes. But in the future, the war was fought with varying success. In addition, the war with Poland resumed, and in 1657 Khmelnitsky died. The partially Polonized Cossack foreman immediately began to pursue a "flexible" policy, betraying the interests of the masses. Hetman Ivan Vyhovsky sided with the Poles and Russia faced a whole enemy coalition - the Commonwealth, Vyhovsky's Cossacks, Crimean Tatars. Soon Vygovsky was removed, and his place was taken by the son of Khmelnitsky Yuri, who first spoke on the side of Moscow, and then took an oath of allegiance to the Polish king. This led to a split and struggle among the Cossacks. Some were guided by Poland or even Turkey, others - by Moscow, others - fought for themselves, creating gangs. As a result, Western Russia became the field of a bloody battle, which completely devastated a significant part of Little Russia. In 1661, the Kardis Peace Treaty was concluded with Sweden, which established the boundaries provided for by the Stolbovsky Peace of 1617. That is, the war with Sweden only dispersed the forces of Russia and was in vain.

In the future, the war with Poland went on with varying success. Russia lost a number of positions in Belarus and Little Russia. On the southern front, the Poles were supported by traitorous Cossacks and the Crimean horde. In 1663-1664. a large campaign of the Polish army led by King Jan-Kazimir took place in conjunction with detachments of the Crimean Tatars and the right-bank Cossacks to the Left-Bank Little Russia. According to the strategic plan of Warsaw, the main blow was delivered by the Polish army, which, together with the Cossacks of the right-bank hetman Pavel Teteri and the Crimean Tatars, having captured the eastern lands of Little Russia, was to advance on Moscow. An auxiliary blow was delivered by the Lithuanian army of Mikhail Pats. Pac was supposed to take Smolensk and connect with the king in the Bryansk region. However, the campaign, which began successfully, failed. Jan Casimir suffered a heavy defeat.

In Russia itself, problems began - the economic crisis, the Copper Riot, the Bashkir uprising. Poland was no better off. The Commonwealth was devastated by wars with Russia and Sweden, raids by Tatars and various bands. The material and human resources of the two great powers were exhausted. As a result, at the end of the war, forces were mainly sufficient only for small skirmishes and local battles in both the northern and southern theaters of operations. They were not of great importance, except for the defeat of the Poles from the Russian-Cossack-Kalmyk troops in the battle of Korsun and in the battle of Belaya Tserkov. The exhaustion of both sides took advantage of the Port and the Crimean Khanate. The right-bank hetman Pyotr Doroshenko rebelled against Warsaw and declared himself a vassal of the Turkish sultan, which led to the beginning of the Polish-Cossack-Turkish war of 1666-1671.

Bloodless Poland lost to the Ottomans and signed the Treaty of Buchach, according to which the Poles abandoned the Podolsky and Bratslav voivodeships, and the southern part of the Kyiv voivodeship went to the right-bank Cossacks of Hetman Doroshenko, who was a vassal of the Porte. Moreover, militarily weakened Poland was obliged to pay tribute to Turkey. The offended proud Polish elite did not accept this world. In 1672 a new Polish-Turkish war began (1672-1676). Poland was again defeated. However, the Zhuravensky Treaty of 1676 somewhat softened the conditions of the previous, Buchach peace, abolishing the requirement for the Commonwealth to pay an annual tribute to the Ottoman Empire. The Commonwealth was inferior to the Ottomans Podolia. Right-bank Ukraine-Little Russia, with the exception of the Belotserkovsky and Pavolochsky districts, passed under the rule of the Turkish vassal, Hetman Petro Doroshenko, thus becoming an Ottoman protectorate. As a result, the Port became a more dangerous enemy for Poland than Russia.

Thus, the depletion of resources for further military operations, as well as the general threat from the Crimean Khanate and Turkey, forced the Commonwealth and Russia to negotiate peace, which began in 1666 and ended with the signing of the Andrusovo truce in January 1667. Smolensk passed to the Russian state, as well as lands that had previously been ceded to the Commonwealth during the Time of Troubles, including Dorogobuzh, Belaya, Nevel, Krasny, Velizh, Seversk land with Chernigov and Starodub. Poland recognized Russia's right to the Left-Bank Little Russia. According to the treaty, Kyiv temporarily passed to Moscow for two years (Russia, however, managed to keep Kyiv to itself). Zaporizhzhya Sich passed under the joint control of Russia and the Commonwealth. As a result, Moscow was able to recapture only part of the original Russian lands, which was the result of managerial and strategic mistakes of the Russian government, in particular, the war with Sweden was a mistake, which dispersed the forces of the Russian army.

On the way to "Eternal Peace"

At the turn of the XVII-XVIII centuries. two old adversaries - Russia and Poland, faced the need to coordinate actions in the face of the strengthening of two powerful enemies - Turkey and Sweden in the Black Sea and the Baltic. At the same time, both Russia and Poland had long-standing strategic interests in the Black Sea region and the Baltic. However, for success in these strategic areas, it was necessary to unite efforts and carry out internal modernization, primarily of the armed forces and state administration, in order to successfully resist such strong enemies as the Ottoman Empire and Sweden. The situation was aggravated by crisis phenomena in the internal structure and internal politics of the Commonwealth and Russia. It is worth noting that the Polish elite was never able to get out of this crisis, which ended with the complete degradation of the state system and the divisions of the Commonwealth (the liquidation of the Polish state took place). Russia, on the other hand, was able to create a new project, which led to the emergence of the Russian Empire, which eventually solved the main tasks in the Baltic and Black Sea regions.

Already the first Romanovs began to look more and more to the West, to adopt the achievements of military affairs, science, as well as elements of culture. Princess Sophia continued this line. After the death of the childless Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich, the Miloslavsky boyars, led by Sophia, organized the Streltsy rebellion. As a result, on September 15, 1682, Princess Sophia, the daughter of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, became regent for the young brothers Ivan and Peter. The power of the brothers almost immediately became nominal. Ivan Alekseevich was sickly from childhood and incapable of governing the state. Peter was small, and Natalya and her son moved to Preobrazhenskoye in order to protect themselves from a possible blow.

Princess Sophia in historical popular science and fiction is often presented in the form of a kind of woman. However, this is a clear slander. She came to power at the age of 25, and the portraits convey to us the image of a somewhat overweight, but pretty woman. Yes, and the future Tsar Peter described Sophia as a person who “could be considered both bodily and mentally perfect, if not for her boundless ambition and insatiable thirst for power.”

Sophia had several favorites. Among them, Prince Vasily Vasilyevich Golitsyn stood out. He received under the command of the Ambassadorial, Discharge, Reitarsky and Foreign orders, concentrating in his hands enormous power, control over foreign policy and the armed forces. He received the title of "Royal Great Seal and State Great Ambassadorial Affairs Saver, Neighbor Boyar and Governor of Novgorod" (actually the head of government). The leadership of the Kazan order was received by the cousin of V.V. Golitsyn - B.A. Golitsyn. The Streltsy order was headed by Fyodor Shaklovity. A native of the Bryansk children of the boyars, who owed his exaltation only to Sophia, he was infinitely devoted to her (perhaps, like Vasily Golitsyn, he was her lover). Sylvester Medvedev was exalted, becoming the tsarina's adviser on religious issues (Sophia was on cold terms with the patriarch). Shaklovity was the "faithful dog" of the queen, but almost all state administration was entrusted to Vasily Golitsyn.

Golitsyn was a Westerner of that time. The prince bowed before France, was a real Francophile. The Moscow nobility of that time began to imitate the Western nobility in every possible way: the fashion for Polish outfits was preserved, perfume came into fashion, a craze for coats of arms began, it was considered the highest chic to acquire a foreign carriage, etc. Golitsyn was the first among such Western nobles. Noble people and wealthy citizens, following the example of Golitsyn, began to build houses and palaces of the Western type. Jesuits were admitted to Russia, Chancellor Golitsyn often held closed meetings with them. In Russia, Catholic worship was allowed - the first Catholic church was opened in the German Quarter. Golitsyn began to send young people to study in Poland, mainly at the Krakow Jagiellonian University. They taught not the technical or military disciplines necessary for the development of the Russian state, but Latin, theology and jurisprudence. Such personnel could be useful in the transformation of Russia according to Western standards.

Golitsyn was most active in foreign policy, since in domestic politics the conservative wing was too strong, and the tsarina restrained the prince's reformist ardor. Golitsyn actively negotiated with Western countries. And during this period, almost the main business of Europe was the war with the Ottoman Empire. In 1684, the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, King of Bohemia and Hungary Leopold I sent diplomats to Moscow who began to appeal to the “brotherhood of Christian sovereigns and invited the Russian state to join the Holy League. This alliance consisted of the Holy Roman Empire, the Venetian Republic and the Commonwealth and opposed the Porte. Moscow received a similar proposal from Warsaw.

However, the war with a strong Turkey did not meet the national interests of Russia at that time. Poland was our traditional enemy and it still owned vast Western Russian territories. Austria was not a country for which our soldiers were worth shedding blood. It was only in 1681 that the Bakhchisaray peace treaty was concluded with Istanbul, which established peace for a 20-year period. The Ottomans recognized the Left-Bank Ukraine, Zaporozhye and Kyiv as the Russian state. Moscow has significantly strengthened its position in the south. The Turkish Sultan and the Crimean Khan pledged not to help the enemies of the Russians. The Crimean horde pledged to stop raids on Russian lands. In addition, the Port did not take advantage of a series of unrest in Russia, the struggle for power in Moscow. At that time, it was more profitable for Russia not to get involved in a direct battle with Porta, but to wait for its weakening. There was more than enough land for development. It was better to focus on the return of the original Russian territories in the west, taking advantage of the weakening of Poland. In addition, the Western "partners" traditionally wanted to use the Russians as cannon fodder in the fight against Turkey and get all the benefits from this confrontation.

Golitsyn, however, gladly accepted the opportunity to enter into an alliance with the "progressive Western powers." The Western powers turned to him, called him as a friend. Therefore, the Moscow government put forward only one condition for joining the Holy Alliance, for Poland to sign "eternal peace." True, the Polish lords indignantly rejected this condition - they did not want to forever abandon Smolensk, Kyiv, Novgorod-Seversky, Chernigov, Left-Bank Ukraine-Little Russia. As a result, Warsaw itself pushed Russia away from the Holy League. Negotiations continued throughout 1685. In addition, in Russia itself there were also opponents of this union. Participation in the war with the Porte was opposed by many boyars, who feared a long war of attrition. Against the union with Poland was the hetman of the Zaporozhian Army Ivan Samoylovich. Little Russia lived only a few years without the annual raids of the Crimean Tatars. The hetman pointed to the treachery of the Poles. In his opinion, Moscow had to stand up for Russian Orthodox Christians who were subjected to oppression in the Polish regions, to recapture the Russian ancestral lands from the Commonwealth - Podolia, Volhynia, Podlachie, Pidhiria and all of Chervona Rus. Patriarch Joachim of Moscow was also against the war with the Porte. At that time, an important religious and political issue for Ukraine-Little Russia was being resolved - Gideon was elected Metropolitan of Kyiv, he was approved by Joachim, now the consent of the Patriarch of Constantinople was required. This important event for the church could be disrupted in the event of a quarrel with Porta. However, all the arguments of Samoilovich, Joachim and other opponents of the alliance with the Poles, the Pope and the Austrians were swept aside.

True, the Poles continued to persist in refusing the "eternal peace" with Russia. At this time, however, things were going badly for the Holy League. Turkey quickly recovered from defeats, mobilized, attracted troops from Asian and African regions. The Turks temporarily took Cetinje, the residence of the Montenegrin bishop. Turkish troops defeated the Commonwealth. Polish troops suffered retreat, the Turks threatened Lvov. This forced Warsaw to accept the need for an alliance with Moscow. In addition, the position of Austria became more complicated. The French king Louis XIV decided to take advantage of the fact that Leopold I was bogged down in a war with Turkey and developed a stormy activity. Leopold, in response, makes an alliance with William of Orange and begins negotiations with other sovereigns to create an anti-French coalition. For the Holy Roman Empire there is a threat of war on two fronts. Austria, in order to compensate for the weakening of the front in the Balkans, stepped up diplomatic efforts against the Russian state. Austria is also stepping up pressure on the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Jan III Sobieski. The Pope, the Jesuits and the Venetians worked in the same direction. As a result, Warsaw was squeezed by common efforts.
"Eternal Peace"

At the beginning of 1686, a huge Polish embassy arrived in Moscow, almost a thousand people, headed by the Poznań governor Krzysztof Grzymultowski and the Lithuanian chancellor Marcian Ogiński. Russia was represented in the negotiations by Prince V.V. Golitsyn. The Poles initially again began to insist on their rights to Kyiv and Zaporozhye. But in the end they gave in.

An agreement with the Commonwealth was reached only in May. On May 16, 1686, the Eternal Peace was signed. Under its terms, Poland renounced its claims to the Left-Bank Ukraine, Smolensk and Chernigov-Seversk land with Chernigov and Starodub, Kyiv, Zaporozhye. The Poles received compensation for Kyiv in the amount of 146 thousand rubles. Northern Kiev region, Volhynia and Galicia remained in the Commonwealth. Southern Kiev region and Bratslav region with a number of cities (Kanev, Rzhishchev, Trakhtemirov, Cherkasy, Chigirin, etc.), i.e., lands heavily devastated during the war years, was to become a neutral territory between the Commonwealth and the Russian Kingdom. Russia broke off treaties with the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate, entered into an alliance with Poland and Austria. Moscow pledged through its diplomats to facilitate the entry into the Holy League - England, France, Spain, Holland, Denmark and Brandenburg. Russia pledged to organize campaigns against the Crimea.

"Eternal Peace" was promoted in Moscow as Russia's greatest diplomatic victory. Prince Golitsyn, who concluded this agreement, was showered with favors, received 3 thousand peasant households. On the one hand, there have been successes. Poland recognized a number of its territories for Russia. There was an opportunity to strengthen positions in the Black Sea region, and in the future in the Baltic states, relying on the support of Poland. In addition, the contract was personally beneficial to Sophia. He helped to establish her status as a sovereign queen. During the hype raised about the "eternal peace", Sophia appropriated the title of "All the Great and Other Russias of the Autocrat" to herself. And a successful war could further strengthen the position of Sophia and her group.

On the other hand, the Moscow government allowed itself to be drawn into someone else's game. Russia did not need a war with Turkey and the Crimean Khanate at that time. Western "partners" used Russia. Russia had to start a war with a strong enemy, and even pay a lot of money to Warsaw for their own lands. Although the Poles at that time did not have the strength to fight with Russia. In the future, the Commonwealth will only degrade. Russia could calmly look at the wars of the Western powers with Turkey and prepare for the return of the rest of the original Russian lands in the west.

By signing the "Eternal Peace" with the Commonwealth in 1686, Russia began a war with the Porte and the Crimean Khanate. However, the Crimean campaigns of 1687 and 1689 did not lead to success. Russia just wasted resources. It was not possible to secure the southern borders and expand possessions. Western "partners" benefited from the fruitless attempts of the Russian army to break into the Crimea. The Crimean campaigns allowed for some time to divert significant forces of the Turks and Crimean Tatars, which was beneficial to Russia's European allies.

Background. On the way to "Eternal Peace"

After the death of the childless Tsar Fyodor Alekseevich, the Miloslavsky boyars, led by Sophia, organized the Streltsy rebellion. As a result, on September 15, 1682, Princess Sophia, the daughter of Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich, became regent for the young brothers Ivan and Peter. The power of the brothers almost immediately became nominal. Ivan Alekseevich was sickly from childhood and incapable of governing the state. Peter was small, and Natalya and her son moved to Preobrazhenskoye in order to protect themselves from a possible blow.

Princess Sophia in historical popular science and fiction is often presented in the form of a peasant-like woman. Appearance, according to the French Jesuit de la Neuville, was ugly (although he himself did not see it). She came to power at the age of 25, and the portraits convey to us the image of a somewhat overweight, but pretty woman. Yes, and the future Tsar Peter described Sophia as a person who “could be considered both bodily and mentally perfect, if not for her boundless ambition and insatiable thirst for power.”

Sophia had several favorites. It was Prince Vasily Vasilyevich Golitsyn - he received the Ambassadorial, Discharge, Reitarsky and Foreign orders under his command, concentrating in his hands enormous power, control over foreign policy and the armed forces. He received the title of "Royal Great Seal and State Great Ambassadorial Affairs Saver, Neighbor Boyar and Governor of Novgorod" (actually the head of government). The leadership of the Kazan order (this state body carried out administrative, judicial and financial management of the territories, mainly in the south-east of the Russian state) was received by a cousin V.V. Golitsyna - B.A. Golitsyn. The Streltsy order was headed by Fyodor Shaklovity. A native of the Bryansk boyar children, who owed his rise only to Sophia, he was infinitely devoted to her (apparently, like Vasily Golitsyn, he was her lover). Sylvester Medvedev was exalted, becoming the tsarina's adviser on religious issues (Sophia was on cold terms with the patriarch). Shaklovity was the "faithful dog" of the queen, but almost all state administration was entrusted to Vasily Golitsyn.

Golitsyn is one of the controversial figures in Russian history. Some consider him the "forerunner" of Peter, almost a true reformer who conceived the whole complex of reforms carried out in the Peter's era. Other researchers dispute this view. The facts show that he was a “Westernizer” of that time, a politician of the “Gorbachev type”, who perceives praise from the West as the highest value. Golitsyn admired France, was a Francophile, even forced his son to wear a miniature of Louis XIV on his chest. His way of life and palace corresponded to the best Western models. The Moscow nobility of that time imitated the Western nobility in every possible way: the fashion for Polish outfits was preserved, perfume came into fashion, a craze for coats of arms began, it was considered the highest chic to acquire a foreign carriage, etc. Noble people and wealthy citizens, following the example of Golitsyn, began to build houses and palaces western type. Jesuits were admitted to Russia, Chancellor Golitsyn often held closed meetings with them. In Russia, Catholic worship was allowed - the first Catholic church was opened in the German Quarter. There is an opinion that Sylvester Medvedev and Golitsyn were supporters of the union of Orthodoxy with Catholicism.

Golitsyn began to send young men to study in Poland, mainly at the Krakow Jagiellonian University. They taught not the technical or military disciplines necessary for the development of the Russian state, but Latin, theology and jurisprudence. Such personnel could be useful in the transformation of Russia according to Western standards.

But Golitsyn's most significant achievements were in the field of diplomacy, in domestic politics the conservative wing was too strong, and the tsarina restrained the prince's reformist ardor. Golitsyn negotiated with the Danes, Dutch, Swedes, Germans, wanted to establish direct relations with France. At that time, almost the main events of European politics revolved around the war with the Ottoman Empire. In 1684, the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, King of Bohemia and Hungary Leopold I sent diplomats to Moscow, who began to appeal to the “brotherhood of Christian sovereigns and invited the Russian state to join the “Holy League”. This alliance consisted of the Holy Roman Empire, the Venetian Republic and the Commonwealth and opposed the Ottoman Empire in the Great Turkish War. Moscow received a similar proposal from Warsaw.


Meeting of Jan III Sobieski and Holy Roman Emperor Leopold I
after the battle of Vienna. Hood. A. Grotger. 1859
.

The war with the mighty Ottoman Empire at that time was not in the interests of Russia. Poland and Austria were not our allies. It was only in 1681 that the Bakhchisaray peace treaty was concluded with Istanbul, which established peace for a 20-year period. The Turks recognized the Left-bank Ukraine, Zaporozhye and Kyiv for Russia. Russia has significantly strengthened its positions in the south. The Turkish Sultan and the Crimean Khan pledged not to help the enemies of Russia. The Crimean horde pledged to stop raids on Russian lands. In addition, Turkey did not take advantage of the series of unrest in Russia, the struggle for power in Moscow. At that time, it was more profitable for Russia not to get involved in a direct battle with Turkey, but to wait for its weakening. Land for development was plentiful.

But the temptation to enter into an alliance with the Western powers turned out to be too great for Golitsyn. The great Western powers turned to him, called him as a friend. The Moscow government put forward only one condition for joining the "Holy Alliance", for Poland to sign the "eternal peace". But the Poles indignantly rejected this condition - they did not want to give up Smolensk, Kyiv, Novgorod-Seversky, Chernigov, Left-Bank Ukraine. Thus, the Polish side itself pushed Russia away from the Holy League. Negotiations continued throughout 1685. There were many opponents of joining this union in Russia. Many boyars opposed participation in the war with Turkey.

Against the union with Poland was the hetman of the Zaporozhian Army Ivan Samoylovich. Ukraine has lived only a few years without the annual raids of the Crimean Tatars behind the crowd. The hetman pointed to the treachery of the Poles and to the fact that in the event of a successful war with Turkey, Orthodox Christians freely professing their faith under the rule of the Turks would be placed under the authority of the Pope. In his opinion, Russia had to intercede for the Orthodox, who were subjected to persecution and desecration in the Polish regions, to take away the Russian ancestral lands from Poland - Podolia, Volhynia, Podlachie, Podgorie and all of Chervona Rus. The Patriarch of Moscow Joachim was also against the war with Turkey (he was in the camp of opponents of Princess Sophia). At that time, an important religious and political issue for Ukraine was being resolved - Gideon was elected Metropolitan of Kyiv, he was approved by Joachim, now the consent of the Patriarch of Constantinople was required. This event could be disrupted in the event of a quarrel with the Ottoman Empire. All the arguments of Samoylovich, Joachim and other opponents of the alliance with the Poles, the Pope and the Austrians were swept aside. True, the question remained with the Polish side, which stubbornly refused the "eternal peace" with Russia.

At this time, the situation on the fronts and the foreign policy situation became more complicated for the Holy League. The port quickly recovered from defeats, carried out mobilizations, attracted troops from Asian and African regions. The Turks took Cetinje, the residence of the Montenegrin bishop, though they were soon forced to retreat. Turkish troops struck at the most vulnerable link of the "Holy League" - Poland. Polish troops were defeated, the Turks threatened Lvov. This forced the Poles to take a different look at the need for an alliance with Russia. The foreign policy situation of the Holy Roman Empire became more complicated: the French king Louis XIV decided to take advantage of the fact that Leopold I was bogged down in a war with Turkey and developed a stormy activity. Leopold forms an alliance with William of Orange and begins negotiations with other sovereigns to create an anti-French coalition. For the Holy Roman Empire there is a threat of war on two fronts. Austria, in order to compensate for the weakening of forces in the Balkans, stepped up diplomatic efforts towards Russia and mediation between Moscow and Warsaw. Austria is also stepping up pressure on the King of Poland and the Grand Duke of Lithuania, Jan III Sobieski. The Pope, the Jesuits and the Venetians worked in the same direction. As a result, Warsaw was squeezed by common efforts.

"Eternal Peace"

At the beginning of 1686, a huge Polish embassy, ​​almost a thousand people, arrived in the capital of Russia for the conclusion, headed by the Poznań governor Krzysztof Grzymultowski and the Lithuanian chancellor Marcian Ogiński. Russia was represented in the negotiations by Prince V.V. Golitsyn. The Poles again began to insist on their rights to Kyiv and Zaporozhye. True, the fact that the negotiations dragged on played into the hands of Patriarch Joachim and Samoylovich. At the very last moment, they were able to obtain the consent of the Patriarch of Constantinople to the subordination of the Kyiv Metropolis to Moscow.

An agreement with Poland was reached only in May. On May 16, 1686, the Eternal Peace was signed. Under its terms, the Commonwealth renounced claims to the Left-Bank Ukraine, Smolensk and Chernigov-Seversk land with Chernigov and Starodub, Kyiv, Zaporozhye. The Poles received compensation for Kyiv in the amount of 146 thousand rubles. Northern Kiev region, Volhynia and Galicia remained in the Commonwealth. Southern Kiev region and Bratslav region with a number of cities (Kanev, Rzhishchev, Trakhtemirov, Cherkasy, Chigirin, etc.), i.e., lands heavily devastated during the war years, was to become a neutral territory between the Commonwealth and the Russian Kingdom. Russia broke off treaties with the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate, entered into an alliance with Poland and Austria. Moscow undertook, through its diplomats, to promote entry into the "Holy League" - England, France, Spain, Holland, Denmark and Brandenburg. Russia pledged to organize campaigns against the Crimean Khanate.

"Eternal Peace" was promoted in Moscow (and is considered as such in much of the historical literature) as Russia's greatest diplomatic victory. Prince Golitsyn, who concluded this agreement, was showered with favors, received 3 thousand peasant households. But if you think sensibly, it becomes clear that this agreement was a big geopolitical mistake. The Russian state was dragged into someone else's game. Russia did not need a war with Turkey and the Crimean Khanate at that time. Russia entered the war with a serious enemy and paid a large amount for the fact that the Polish side recognized for Russia those lands that had already been recaptured from Poland. The Poles could not return the land by military force. Constant wars with the Russian state, the Ottoman Empire and internal squabbles undermined the power of the Commonwealth. Poland was no longer a serious threat to Russia - in just a century (a short period in historical terms) it will be divided by neighboring great powers.

The agreement was beneficial personally to Sophia. He helped to establish her status as a sovereign queen. During the hype raised about the "eternal peace", Sophia appropriated the title of "All the Great and Other Russias of the Autocrat" to herself. On the front side of the coins, Ivan and Peter were still depicted, but without scepters. Sophia was minted on the reverse side - in the royal crown and with a scepter. The Polish artist paints her portrait without her brothers, but in a Monomakh's hat, with a scepter, orb and against the background of a sovereign eagle (all the prerogatives of the king). In addition, a successful military operation was supposed to rally the nobility around Sophia.

This day in history:

Eternal peace (in Polish historiography known as the World of Grzymultowski, Polish pokój Grzymułtowskiego) is a peace treaty on the division of the Hetmanate, concluded between the Russian Empire and the Commonwealth in Moscow on April 26 (May 6), 1686. The text of the treaty consisted of a preamble and 33 articles.

The truce ended the Russian-Polish war, which lasted from 1654 on the territory of modern Ukraine and Belarus.

The agreement confirmed the decrees of the Andrusovo truce of 1667, except for the following: Kyiv was forever recognized as belonging to the Russian kingdom with the payment of 146 thousand rubles in compensation to the Commonwealth, which also refused a joint protectorate over the Zaporozhian Sich.

From the side of the Commonwealth, the agreement was signed by the voivode Poznansky, diplomat Krzysztof Grzymultovsky, from the Russian side - by the chancellor and head of the Embassy order, Prince Vasily Golitsyn.

Russian copy of the treaty between Russia and the Commonwealth on Eternal Peace, 1686.

Agreement conditions

1. The Commonwealth recognized the Left-Bank Ukraine, Kyiv, Zaporozhye, Smolensk and Chernigov-Seversk land with Chernigov and Starodub as the Russian kingdom.

2. The Russian kingdom joined the countries waging war against Turkey.

3. The Commonwealth received 146,000 rubles in compensation for abandoning Kyiv.

4. Some border territories, areas of Nevel, Sebezh, Velizh and Posozhye were transferred to the Commonwealth.

3. Northern Kiev region, Volhynia and Galicia remained part of the Commonwealth.

4. Southern Kiev region and Bratslav region from the town of Stayok to the Tyasmin River with the cities of Rzhishchev, Trakhtemirov, Kanev, Cherkasy, Chigirin and others, that is, lands heavily devastated during the war years, was to become a neutral territory between the Russian kingdom and the Commonwealth.

5. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth undertook to grant freedom of religion to the Orthodox, and the Russian government promised to protect them.

The Russian kingdom annulled preliminary agreements with the Ottoman Empire and the Crimean Khanate and joined the anti-Turkish Holy League, and also pledged to organize a military campaign against the Crimean Khanate (Crimean campaigns in 1687 and 1689).

Although the terms of the Eternal Peace came into force immediately after the signing of the treaty, the Seim of the Commonwealth ratified it only in 1764.

Effects

The treaty assigned to the Russian kingdom the Smolensk region, the Left-Bank Ukraine with Kyiv, Zaporozhye and the Seversk land with Chernigov and Starodub. The conclusion of the "eternal peace" opened the possibility for the unification of states against the Tatar-Turkish aggression and became the basis of the Russian-Polish alliance in the Northern War of 1700-1721. Russia joined the anti-Turkish "Holy League" - the union of Austria, the Commonwealth and Venice.

FROM THE ANDRUSOV CEREACE TO "ETERNAL PEACE"

This [Andrusov] truce could at first glance be called very unreliable: Kyiv was ceded to Moscow for only two years, and meanwhile it was easy to see that it was very dear to Moscow, that Moscow would make every effort to keep it behind. But surprisingly, the war did not resume until the second half of the 18th century, and the Andrusovo truce passed into eternal peace with the preservation of all its conditions. In vain did the Poles console themselves with the thought that in the second half of the 17th century the same test was sent to their homeland as was sent to Moscow at the beginning of the century, and that Poland would come out of it just as happily as Moscow: for Poland, from 1654, a long , almost a century and a half of agony, due to internal weakening, disintegration; in 1667 the great struggle between Russia and Poland ends. Since then, Russia's influence on Poland has been gradually increasing without any struggle, due only to the gradual strengthening of Russia and the even internal weakening of Poland; The Andrusov truce was a complete calm, a perfect finish, according to an old expression. Russia finished with Poland, calmed down at her expense, ceased to be afraid of her and turned her attention in another direction, took up the solution of those questions on which the continuation of her historical existence depended, questions of transformations, of acquiring new means for the continuation of historical life. Thus, the Andrusovo truce also serves as one of the boundaries between ancient and new Russia.

CONCLUSION OF "PERMANENT PEACE"

At the beginning of 1686, noble royal ambassadors, the governor of Poznan Grimultovsky and the chancellor of Lithuania, Prince Oginsky, arrived in Moscow. Seven weeks prince you. You. Golitsyn and his comrades argued with Grimultovsky and Oginsky; the ambassadors, not agreeing to the proposals of the boyars, had already declared the negotiations interrupted, bowed to the tsars, prepared to leave and resumed the negotiations again, "not wanting, as they said, to leave such a great, glorious, profitable business and lose their labors to the tuna." Finally, on April 21, all disputes ceased and an eternal peace was concluded: Poland ceded Kyiv forever to Russia, the great sovereigns pledged to break the peace with the Sultan of Tur and the Crimean Khan, immediately send their troops to the Crimean crossings to protect Poland from Tatar attacks, order the Don Cossacks to repair military craft on the Black Sea, and in the next 1687 to send all his troops to the Crimea. Both powers pledged not to conclude a separate peace with the Sultan. In addition, it was decided that Russia would pay Poland 146,000 rubles as a reward for Kyiv; to the places on the western coast, which remained behind Russia together with Kyiv, to Tripoli, Staiki and Vasilkov, five versts of land were added; Chigirin and other devastated cities down the Dnieper, which had departed along the last peace from Russia to Turkey, should not be reopened. Orthodox in the Polish regions are not subjected to any oppression by Catholics and Uniates; Catholics in Russia can only worship in their homes.

Soloviev S.M. History of Russia since ancient times. M., 1962. Prince. 14. Chap. 1. http://magister.msk.ru/library/history/solov/solv14p1.htm

"ETERNAL PEACE" AND RELATIONS WITH POLAND AND LITHUANIA

But the final connection in the XVI century. Lithuania and Poland set against Moscow and Poland. Moscow had to yield to their combined forces: Ivan's struggle against Stefan Batory was unsuccessful. Even worse for Moscow was the time of the Moscow unrest at the beginning of the 17th century, when the Poles owned Moscow itself. But when they were ousted from there and the Muscovite state recovered from the turmoil, it was in the middle of the 17th century. (since 1654) begins the old struggle for the Russian lands subordinated to Poland; Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich accepts Little Russia as a subject, wages an unusually difficult war for it and ends with a brilliant victory. Weakened Poland, even after Tsar Alexei, continues to cede to Moscow: by the peace of 1686, she gives Moscow forever what she temporarily ceded to Tsar Alexei Mikhailovich. The relations created by this peace of 1686 were inherited by Peter; under him, the political predominance of Russia over Poland is clear, but the historical task - the liberation of Russian lands from Poland - was not completed either before him or under him. It was handed down to the 18th century.