Description: Graded by NGC AU58 (Almost Uncirculated), an astonishingly high grade for a coin that’s over 300 years old! NGC does not typically give a clean numeric grade for ancient coins due to environmental damage, to get one that graded straight is incredibly scares. Guaranteed authentic by NGC, the top grading and authentication company in the world. The detail on this coin is amazing, must see to appreciate. Hold history in your hands , a true keepsake from a very significant time in history, the infamous ruler about whom countless films and documentaries have been made. See my other listings for more rare coins and great gift ideas, including a huge variety of ancient, colonial, crusader, medieval and other authentic coins of great historical significance!! Fyodor III (born May 30 [June 9, New Style], 1661, Moscow, Russia—died April 27 [May 7], 1682, Moscow) was the tsar of Russia (reigned 1676–82) who fostered the development of Western culture in Russia, thereby making it easier for his successor, Peter I the Great (reigned 1682–1725), to enact widespread reforms based on Western models. The eldest son of Alexis (reigned 1645–76), Fyodor not only was educated in the traditional subjects of Russian and Church Slavonic but also was tutored in Polish and Latin by Simeon Polotsky, a noted theologian who had studied in Kiev and Poland. When Alexis died, Fyodor ascended the throne (Jan. 19 [Jan. 29], 1676), but his youth and poor health prevented him from actively participating in the conduct of government affairs. His uncle Ivan B. Miloslavsky assumed the dominant position in Fyodor’s government at first, but he was soon displaced by two courtiers, I.M. Yazykov and A.T. Likhachev, who shared Fyodor’s educational background and who, in spite of objections from the Russian Orthodox clergy, promoted the spread of Polish customs, Roman Catholic religious doctrines, and Latin books among the Russian aristocracy. After 1681 Vasily V. Golitsyn became the most significant figure in Fyodor’s administration; under his influence vast military reforms were undertaken, and the system of mestnichestvo, by which a noble was appointed to a service position on the basis of his family’s rank in the hierarchy of boyars, was abolished (1682). When Fyodor died childless, he was succeeded, after some dispute, by both his brother, Ivan V (coruled 1682–96), and his half-brother, Peter I (coruled 1682–96; reigned alone 1696–1725); his sister Sophia Alekseyevna served as regent for the two young tsars (1682–89).
Price: 99.5 USD
Location: Seattle, Washington
End Time: 2024-12-25T00:41:04.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.99 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Denomination: 1 Kopek
Historical Period: Empire (up to 1917)
Composition: Silver
Year: 1676
Country/Region of Manufacture: Russian Federation
Certification: NGC