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Important early eyewitness account of Russia at a key moment --- The Macclesfield copy of this controversial eyewitness account of the Time of Troubles by the first author to suggest in print the Scandinavian origin of the first Russian rulers. First edition, scarce on the market: we could trace only another copy at auction in recent decades, also in 2008, but in a modern binding. The Swedish diplomat and envoy in Russia Petrus Petrejus (also Peer Peersson of Erlesunda, 1570-1622) "is rightly considered one of the most remarkable and richest writers about the ancient history and constitution of Russia, since he spent several years in that country at various times and lived there in circumstances that made it easier for him to gather information and news before many others. Particularly important are his contributions to the history of Grand Prince Boris and the False Demetrias, in which he was often able to speak as an eyewitness, as well as his observations on the way of life and the customs and habits of the Russians of his time" (Adelung, our translation here and below). For four years from 1601 Petrejus lived in Muscovy, gathering information about the country. In 1607-08 he was sent to Russia as an envoy from Charles IX of Sweden to offer Tsar Vasilii Shuiskii a military alliance. Gradually "a prominent figure in the entire Swedish Eastern politics" (Tolstikov), Petrejus came to Russia again in 1611 to meet the alleged son of Ivan the Terrible, now known as False Dmitrii III, who appeared in Ivanogorod and attempted to get military assistance from Charles IX. In his own words, Petrejus, who had seen the first pretender, False Dmitrii I, had to make sure that the new Dmitrii was not the same person. Having witnessed the famous Russian Time of Troubles ["Smuta"], Petrejus described its most important events on his return to Sweden in this work, his magnum opus, which he dedicated to Gustav II Adolf, the King of Sweden in 1611-32. Petrejus gives a sketch of Russian history from the foundation of Kievan Rus to 1612, based on various diplomatic materials and earlier works, including Sigismund von Herberstein's Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii and Conrad Bussow's manuscript of Chronicon Moscoviticum 1584 1613. "At the same time, the author's eyewitness account of the events of the Smuta, especially about the circumstances of the Swedish intervention in northern Russia [during the Ingrian War of 1610 17], is extremely important because Petrejus combined in it the awareness of a military agent with the insight of a clever politician" (Shokarev). He additionally gives valuable assessments of the personality and deeds of Ivan the Terrible from the point of view of his Russian contemporaries. In the book's second part, Petrejus suggests for the first time that the first Russian kings Riurik, Sineus and Truvor were in fact Swedes. The idea that Scandinavians laid the foundations of the first states of the Eastern Slavs was developed and confirmed by Swedish historiography of the 17th century, and from the 18th century onwards by Russian and European historians. Some Russian scholars however (starting from Mikhail Lomonosov) claim that the Russian state existed before the vocation of Norsemen and even that Riurik was of Slavic descent. Besides, it is worth noticing that Petrejus' work, "apart from Heinrich von Staden's and Giles Fletcher's testimonies based on false statements, is one of the earliest printed accounts of exile in Siberia" (Shemiakin): "it is so cold in this land that neither grass nor a leaf on a tree grows at all, much less bread or fruit. All those who are in disfavour with the Grand Duke, and who have done something wrong before him, are exiled there; they remain there and lead a miserable life until the Grand Duke again takes them into his favour and allows them to return home." At that time, sending exiles to Siberia "was not yet widespread and was used by the Moscow government mainly for colonisation purposes" (S. Seller Inventory # 2580
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