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- Tsar - Wikipedia
Tsar and its variants were the official titles in the First Bulgarian Empire (681–1018), Second Bulgarian Empire (1185–1396), the Kingdom of Bulgaria (1908–1946), the Serbian Empire (1346–1371), and the Tsardom of Russia (1547–1721) The first monarch to adopt the title of tsar was Simeon I of Bulgaria [6]
- Tsar | Russian Empire, Autocracy, Monarchy | Britannica
Tsar, title associated primarily with rulers of Russia The term tsar, a form of the ancient Roman imperial title caesar, generated a series of derivatives in Russian: tsaritsa, a tsar’s wife, or tsarina; tsarevich, his son; tsarevna, his daughter; and tsesarevich, his eldest son and heir apparent
- Tsar - World History Encyclopedia
The title tsar was initially used for the khans of the Golden Horde and the emperors of the Byzantine Empire Tsar was used to distinguish between the pagan Roman emperors of the past and the Christian emperors of modern times The female equivalent of tsar is tsarina (also called tsaritsa)
- The 10 Most Important Russian Czars and Empresses - ThoughtCo
The Russian honorific "czar"—sometimes spelled "tsar"—derives from none other than Julius Caesar, who predated the Russian Empire by 1,500 years Equivalent to a king or an emperor, the czar was the autocratic, all-powerful ruler of Russia, an institution that lasted from the mid-16th to the early 20th centuries
- Why Russians called their monarch tsar - Russia Beyond
The word tsar is derived from the Latin title for Roman emperors - Caesar It appears in Old East Slavonic in the 11th century Russians called the Byzantine Emperor ‘tsar’
- Tsar: The Origin and History of a Title for Russian Rulers . . . - Brewminate
Tsar (also czar) is a Slavic term derived from the Latin caesar Ivan III (Ivan the Great) (r 1462-1505) was the first Russian ruler to begin using the title of tsar during his reign instead of the title Grand Prince of Moscow
- The Russian Tsars: How Royalty Shaped the Course of Russian History
As the Romanov dynasty progressed, each tsar contributed to the centralization of authority and the expansion of the empire Peter the Great, one of the most notable Romanov rulers, was instrumental in modernizing Russia
- Definition: Tsar - New World Encyclopedia
(emperor of Russia): Officially, emperors after 1721 were styled imperator (импера́тор (imperátor)) rather than tsar (царь (carʹ)), but the latter term is still commonly applied to them
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