Maria Temryukovna

{{Short description|Tsaritsa of Russia from 1561 to 1569}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}}

{{family name hatnote|Temryukovna||lang=Eastern Slavic}}

{{Infobox royalty

| consort = yes

| name = Maria Temryukovna

| image =

| image_size = 190px

| caption =

| succession = Tsaritsa consort of all Russia

| reign = 21 August 1561 – 1 September 1569

| coronation =

| predecessor = Anastasia Romanovna

| successor = Marfa Sobakina

| spouse = Ivan IV of Russia

| issue = Tsarevich Vasili Ivanovich

| dynasty = Rurik (by marriage)

| father = Temryuk of Kabardia

| mother =

| birth_date = {{circa|1545}}

| birth_place = Kabardia

| death_date = 1 September 1569

| death_place = Alexandrov, Russia

| burial_date =

| burial_place = Ascension Convent, Kolomenskoye
Archangel Cathedral, Kremlin (1929)

}}

Maria Temryukovna (born Kucheney;{{sfn|De Madariaga|2006|p=147}} {{langx|ru|Мари́я Темрю́ковна}}; {{langx|kbd|Гуэщэней Идар Темрыкъуэ и пхъу}}; {{circa|1545}} – 1 September 1569) was the tsaritsa of all Russia from 1561 until her death as the second wife of Ivan the Terrible.{{sfn|De Madariaga|2006|p=147}}

Life

File:Maria Temryukovna's ring.jpg

The daughter of Temryuk of Kabardia, Maria (originally named Qochenay bint Teymour (Кученей) before her baptism) was presented to Ivan in Moscow after the death of his first wife Anastasia Romanovna. Russian folklore tells of how Ivan's first wife, before dying, warned him not to take a pagan as a wife. Ivan was so smitten by Maria's beauty, that he decided to marry her immediately. On 21 August 1561,{{sfn|Perrie|Pavlov|2014|p=97}} they married, four days before Ivan's 31st birthday. The marriage took place after the marriage negotiations between Ivan and Catherine Jagiellon stranded.

Ivan soon came to regret the decision to marry her, on account of his new wife being viewed as illiterate and vindictive. She never fully integrated to the Muscovite way of life, and was considered a poor stepmother to Ivan's two sons Ivan and Feodor. She gave birth to a son named Vasili, named after her father-in-law on 21 March 1563, though he died on 3 May that same year. Maria was generally hated by her subjects, who believed her to be manipulative and witch-like in her behaviour. Some sources claim it was she who first incited her husband to form the oprichniki.{{sfn|De Madariaga|2006|pp=156-157}}

She died on 1 September 1569 at the age of 25. It was rumored that she had been poisoned by her own husband, but there is no historical evidence to such rumours. The Tsar also never admitted as such, and had many people tortured on suspicion of assassinating the Tsaritsa.

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • Troyat, Henri Ivan le Terrible. Flammarion, Paris, 1982
  • {{cite book |last1=De Madariaga |first1=Isabel |title=Ivan the Terrible: first Tsar of Russia |date=2006 |publisher=Yale University Press |location=New Haven London |isbn=9780300119732 |edition=First printed in paperback}}
  • {{cite book |last1=Perrie |first1=Maureen |last2=Pavlov |first2=Andrei |title=Ivan the Terrible |date=10 July 2014 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-89468-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mooABAAAQBAJ |language=en}}

{{S-start}}

{{S-roy|ru}}

|-

{{S-vac|last=Anastasia Romanovna }}

{{S-ttl|title=Tsaritsa of all Russia|years=1561–1569}}

{{S-vac|next=Marfa Sobakina}}

|-

{{End}}

{{Russian royal consorts|state=collapsed}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Maria Temryukovna}}

Category:1540s births

Category:1569 deaths

Category:Kabardino-Balkaria

Category:Circassian people of Russia

Category:People from Circassia

Category:Circassian nobility

Category:Converts to Eastern Orthodoxy from Sunni Islam

Category:Russian former Sunni Muslims

Category:Burials at Ascension Convent

Category:Wives of Ivan the Terrible

Category:Circassian women