Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Wedding planning company - Dimitri I's wedding storm
Dimitri I's wedding storm
Lzhedmitrii tried to liberate Russian serfs, but for fear of opposition from big noble and many feudal lords, he failed to issue decrees to liberate serfs and abolish serfdom (it was two and a half centuries after Alexander II officially issued decrees to abolish serfdom). However, it is stipulated that serfdom cannot be hereditary and serfs can be exempted from corvee in times of famine. Lzhedmitrii also ordered that everyone can do business freely, and at the same time lifted the entry and exit restrictions. All this was too sudden for Russia, and the radical changes that were rushed forward attracted big noble's opposition. They thought that the new czar was too young, inexperienced and frivolous. Lzhedmitrii's personal lifestyle has also attracted many ministers' dissatisfaction. For example, the tsar is too peaceful and treats ordinary people without the shelf of the tsar; Leading pagans to visit the Russian Orthodox Church, not believing in folk superstitions, not observing the various prohibitions of the Orthodox Church, not praying before eating, listening to music while eating, etc. 1606 On May 2nd, Lzhedmitrii's fiancee Marina Mnishek, accompanied by nearly 2,000 Polish princes and ministers, came to Moscow to marry the pseudo-Dimitri. The pseudo-Dimitri met Marina Minischek on his way to Poland. She is the daughter of a local supervisor. In order to welcome 2,000 Polish princes and ministers, the pseudo-Dimitri ordered the Russian big noble and wealthy businessmen's mansions near the Kremlin to be vacated for guests to live in.

On May 8th, Lzhedmitrii and Marina got married, and they got married in the church on the same day according to the Orthodox tradition. At the wedding, it was found that Marina was not an Orthodox Christian, and the wedding day was Friday or the eve of the Orthodox holiday, which was against the canon. So the wedding and the arrival of Polish nobles made Moscow complain. Big noble people were already quite dissatisfied with the fake Dimitri, which made things worse. The pseudo-Dimitri announced that the marriage period from May 9 to 14 was a national holiday. The Polish aristocrats began to revel, and after getting drunk, they ran wild in Moscow, which was very unreasonable for Russian big noble. Besides, the banquet was actually held in the quiet Kremlin church, where Polish music was played and they drank all night. The drunken Polish aristocrats were full of praise for Russia. Finally, big noble secretly joined forces and decided to launch a riot against the Polish aristocrats. Vasily Joysky decided to use this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to achieve his political goals.