The Double Standard: Livonian Chronicles and Muscovite Barbarity during the Livonian War (1558–1582)
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
This article analyzes the image of Ivan IV (Ivan the Terrible) and Muscovites in the chronicles
written by Livonian Germans during the Livonian War: Johannes Renner’s Livonian History, Balthasar
Russow’s Chronicle, and Salomon Henning’s Chronicle of Courland and Livonia. Although these authors
came from different backgrounds, supported different policies, and disagreed with each other in many ways,
they all presented Ivan IV and Muscovites in extremely negative terms, focusing on the atrocities committed
by the despot and tyrant Ivan IV and the barbaric Muscovites, consistent with the sixteenth-century Muscovite
Discourse of German pamphlets identified by Cornelia Soldat, a stereotype copied directly from the
fifteenth-century discourse about the Ottoman Turks. However, in addition each chronicler presents fewer
and less graphic incidents in which Livonians committed atrocities and equally rare instances in which Ivan
IV and Muscovites acted virtuously or honorably. Such positive portrayals of Ivan and Muscovites, were inconsistent
with that Muscovite Discourse. This constitutes the first level of the Livonian chroniclers’ double
standard in describing Ivan IV and Muscovites. The second level of the double standard of the chronicles
consists in not letting episodes of “good” behavior by Ivan or Muscovites influence their identity as barbarians,
and not letting episodes of “bad” behavior by Livonians or other peoples influence their identity as
civilized. Warfare between Livonians and Muscovites was a contest between civilization and barbarism, between
good and evil. Evidence of Livonian vice or Muscovite virtue by definition could not overturn the
essentialist stereotypes, propagated without qualification in the anti-Muscovite pamphlets, underneath the
chroniclers’ perception of Ivan and the Russians. This essentialist argument finessed behavioral ambiguities
and permitted the chroniclers to present in their narratives examples of virtuous behavior by Ivan and the
Muscovites without sacrificing their prejudices. The bias of the Livonian chroniclers was more complicated
than has been appreciated, but its two levels permitted the chroniclers to include in their narratives a modest
number of episodes which show Ivan and the Russians in a favorable light. Just as these episodes do not
make the numerous atrocity stories from the chronicles deriving from the same anti-Muscovite discourse
that informed the pamphlets any more credible, they do not transform the chroniclers from biased partisans
into unbiased objective observers.