Crisis of the late 16th century in Russia
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Russia suffered from an economic and social crisis in the second half of the 16th century which led to famines, depopulation and the abandonment of agricultural lands. The economic crisis overlapped with the oprichnina and happened at the time when Russia waged the Livonian War. The crisis is considered to be one of the precursors of the Time of Troubles.[1][2]
The crisis started with the poor harvest of 1567. The taxes had risen significantly in the previous decades as the state waged expensive wars against the Tatars in the east and against Poland and Sweden in the west. The population growth in the previous century led to overpopulation and peasants having insufficient food reserves.[citation needed] Famine ensued with grain prices increasing 8-10 times and remaining high after another poor harvest in 1568. The famine continued in 1570 when a pestilence hit Russia too.[3] In spite of the efforts to contain outbreaks the epidemic spread in Central and Northern Russia.[4] Many localities were depopulated and there were reports of cannibalism.[5] The more dense urban population especially suffered and some towns lost nearly all their inhabitants. Kolomna had only 12 tax-paying households in 1578 while in Murom most of the households and shops were deserted.[6]
The sack of Novgorod by Ivan IV's oprichniki contributed to the crisis in the north-west. As part of his attack Ivan burned the fields, laying waste roughly 90 percent of the arable land surrounding Novgorod. Coupled with the crop failures of the years before, this would create a massive food shortage (and cause supply problems for Russia in the Livonian war).[7] Both nobles and common people were put to death and the frequent changes of land ownership impacted the economy negatively. A contemporary chronicler from Pskov wrote "The Tsar instituted oprichnina and from thence the great desolation of the Russian land."[8]
The crisis weakened the state considerably. The Crimean Tatars attacked Russia in 1571 burning down Moscow, devastating large areas of the country and carrying 100,000 prisoners into slavery.[9] In the 1570s the earlier gains made by Russia in Livonia were lost and some additional territory was lost to Sweden.[10]
The contemporaries called the crisis porukha (поруха) which could be translated as damage, loss or calamity.[2] The peasants of the Joseph-Volokolamsk Monastery explained the drop in land under cultivation by a combination of the pestilence, Tatar raids, bad harvests and heavy taxation.[11]
