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“Shagi / Steps” the Journal of the SASH

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2023 :Vol. 9, N 1Vol. 9, N 2
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SHAGI/STEPS 7(3)

   pdf

Otchich i dedich (‘paternal and ancestral successor’) in the title of Russian monarchs

B. A. Uspenskij
National Research University Higher School of Economics (Russia, Moscow)

DOI: 10.22394/2412-9410-2021-7-3-238-286

Keywords: title, crest, tsar, grand prince, co-ruler, continuity of power, succession to the throne, coronation, genealogy, Rurikids

Abstract: The article dwells on the terms otchich i dedich (îò÷è÷ü è äѣäè÷ü) in the royal style and titles of Muscovite grand princes and tsars. This collocation of West Russian origin was adopted in the administrative language of Muscovy in the mid-14th century. In West Rus’ the phrase otchich i dedich had the same meaning as a whole as each of its components separately. Both otchich and dedich meant a hereditary lord or ruler: these words complemented, rather than ñontrasted with, each other. The pleonastic collocation otchich i dedich had the same meaning; two words of the same meaning created an amplification effect. In Muscovy, within the context of infighting for the grand-princely throne, this collocation has proven to be related to the hereditary transfer of power according to the principle of primogeniture. In these circumstances the phrase otchich i dedich means a legitimate linear heir that inherited the power from his father who, in turn, had inherited the power from his grandfather, etc.; a collateral heir is a dedich but not an otchich. After the power of the tsars was established and infighting became obsolete, the phrase otchich i dedich became connected to the struggle for recognizing the Muscovite grand prince in his capacity as the tsar and thus was not longer a factor in internal politics, but became a factor in foreign policy. By using this phrase, Russian tsars assert that they have inherited their title of tsar from their ancestors. This, in turn, opens a wide field for genealogical mythology.

To cite this article: Uspenskij, B. A. (2021). Otchich i dedich (‘paternal and ancestral successor’) in the title of Russian monarchs. Shagi/Steps, 7(3), 238–286. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.22394/2412-9410-2021-7-3-238-286.