Fyodor Rtishchev
{{Short description|Russian noble (1625–1673)}}
File:1000 Rtishev.jpg monument (in the background, between two clerics)]]
Feodor Mikhailovich Rtishchev ({{langx|ru|Фёдор Миха́йлович Рти́щев}}; April 16, 1625,Rtishchev in the Great Soviet Encyclopedia Chekalinsky uyezd – July 1, 1673, Moscow) was a boyar and an intimate friend of Alexis I of Russia who was renowned for his piety and alms-deeds.[http://biografija.ru/show_bio.aspx?id=112988 Rtishchev in the Russian Biographical Dictionary] He was the founder of the so-called Andreevsky School. It was the first educational institution in Russia, founded as a court circle during the reign of Alexei Mikhailovich.
As Rtischev eschewed publicity, the true extent of his influence on the Tsar's policies has been disputed by historians.{{citation needed|date=June 2015}} It is thought that it was Rtischev who instigated the revision of service-books which led to the Great Schism of the Russian Orthodox Church. Some scholars also hold him responsible for the eventual downfall of Patriarch Nikon.{{citation needed|date=June 2015}}
During the great famine in Vologda (1650), Rtischev sold much of his property, including clothes and house utensils, in order to raise funds for the famine-stricken city. He took care for all the wounded in the Russo-Polish wars, notwithstanding their nationality, and established several alms-houses in Moscow.
Remembered as the earliest patron of Russian education, Rtischev founded one of the first schools in Moscow, where he invited Epiphanius Slavinetsky to instruct the students in Greek language. Rtischev's school is considered as an institution that preceded the establishment of the Slavic Greek Latin Academy in Moscow and, thus, gave impetus to the emergence of higher education in Russia
It is known that Rtischev survived several assassination attempts, and wrote a treatise on falconry.[http://biografija.ru/show_bio.aspx?id=112989 Brockhaus and Efron Dictionary] His biography was written by Vasily Klyuchevsky.
Fyodor was a relative of Ustinia Bogdanovna Rtishcheva and her daughter Eudoxia Lopukhina. Eudoxia was chosen by Natalia Naryshkina as the first Tsarina for her son Peter I of Russia due to her relation to Fyodor.{{citation needed|date=June 2015}}
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Category:17th-century Russian nobility
Category:Russian philanthropists