Tsar (usually written thus with a titlo) or цар, цaрь; also Czar or
Tzar in
Latin alphabet languages) is a title used to designate certain
European Slavic monarchs or supreme rulers. As a system of government in the
Tsardom of Russia and
Russian Empire, it is known as
Tsarist autocracy, or
Tsarism. The term is derived from the
Latin word
Caesar, which was intended to mean "
Emperor" in the European medieval sense of the term—a ruler with the same rank as a
Roman emperor, with-holding it by the approval of another emperor or a supreme ecclesiastical official (the
Pope or the
Ecumenical Patriarch)—but was usually considered by western
Europeans to be equivalent to king, or to be somewhat in between a royal and imperial rank.
Occasionally, the word could be used to designate other, secular, supreme rulers. In
Asia and
Russia the imperial connotations of the term were blurred with time, due to the medieval translations of the
Bible, and, by the
19th century, it had come to be viewed as an equivalent of
King
The title Tsar is derived from the Latin title for the
Roman emperors, Caesar. In comparison to the corresponding Latin word "imperator", the
Byzantine Greek term basileus was used differently depending on whether it was in a contemporary political context or in a historical or
Biblical context
. In the history of the
Greek language, basileus had originally meant something like "potentate", it had gradually approached the meaning of "king" in the
Hellenistic Period, and it came to designate "emperor" after the inception in the
Roman Empire. As a consequence,
Byzantine sources continued to call the Biblical and ancient kings "basileus", even when that word had come to mean "emperor" when referring to contemporary monarchs (while it was never applied to
Western European kings, whose title was transliterated from Latin "rex" as ῥήξ, or to other monarchs, for whom designations such as ἄρχων "leader", "chieftain" were used.)
As the
Greek "basileus" was consistently rendered as "tsar" in Slavonic translations of Greek texts, the dual meaning was transferred into
Church Slavonic. Thus, "tsar" was not only used as an equivalent of Latin "imperator" (in reference to the rulers of the
Byzantine Empire, the
Holy Roman Empire and to native rulers) but was also used to refer to Biblical rulers and ancient kings.
From this ambiguity, the development has moved in different directions in the different
Slavic languages. Thus, the
Bulgarian language and
Russian language no longer use tsar as an equivalent of the term emperor/imperator as it exists in the
West European (Latin) tradition.
Currently, the term tsar refers to native sovereigns, ancient and Biblical rulers, as well as monarchs in fairy tales and the like. The title of king (
Russian korol' ,
Bulgarian kral) is sometimes perceived as alien and is by some Russian-speakers reserved for (
West) European royalty (and, by extension, for those modern monarchs outside of
Europe whose titles are translated as king in
English, roi in
French etc
.). Foreign monarchs of imperial status, both inside and outside of Europe, ancient as well as modern, are generally called imperator (император), rather than tsar.
In contrast, the
Serbian, (along with the closely related
Croatian language and
Bosnian language) and
Ukrainian language translates "emperor" (Latin imperator) as tsar (car, цар) and not as imperator, whereas the equivalent of king (kralj, краљ, король) is used to designate monarchs of non-imperial status, Serbian as well as foreign ancient rulers - just like Latin "rex". Biblical rulers in Serbian are called цар and in
Croatian kralj
.
In the West Slavic languages and
Slovene language, the use of the terms is identical to the one in English
and German: a king is designated with one term (
Czech král,
Slovak kráľ,
Polish król,
Slovene kralj), an emperor is designated with another, derived from Caesar as in
German (Czech císař, Slovak cisár, Polish cesarz, Slovene cesar;
Croat cesar and Montenegrin ćesar fall into disuse in the last century), while the exotic term "tsar" (Czech, Slovene and Polish car, Slovak cár) is reserved for the Bulgarian and
Russian rulers.
- published: 17 Mar 2016
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