double throne of Peter I and Ivan V

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The double throne of Peter I and Ivan V is an ornate late 17th-century Russian royal seat designed for the joint rule of the co-tsar brothers, symbolizing their shared authority during a unique period of dual monarchy.

All labels observed (2)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf ceremonial furniture
royal regalia
throne
associatedWith House of Romanov
Russian Orthodox monarchy
regency of Sophia Alekseyevna
category 17th-century furniture
Russian royal thrones
connectedTo Streltsy uprisings
surface form: Streltsy uprising of 1682
country Tsardom of Russia
culture Russian
decorativeTechnique carving
gilding
painting
depicts imperial and religious symbols
designedFor joint rule of Peter I and Ivan V
era reign of Tsar Feodor III’s successors
hasPart armrests
decorative finials
high backrest
ornate carvings
step or platform
two adjacent seats
heritageStatus museum object
historicalContext Tsardom of Russia
surface form: Muscovite Tsardom

transition to Russian Empire
inception 1680s
languageOfInscription Church Slavonic
materialUsed precious metals
textiles
wood
politicalFunction legitimization of joint tsarist power
representation of co-rule
purpose coronation ceremonies
state ceremonies
significance material evidence of Russian dual monarchy
rare example of a double royal throne
style Russian Baroque architecture
surface form: Russian Baroque
symbolizes dual monarchy in Russia
shared authority of co-tsars
timePeriod late 17th century
usedBy Ivan V of Russia
Peter the Great
surface form: Peter I of Russia
usedIn Moscow Kremlin
royal court rituals

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Armoury Chamber notableObject double throne of Peter I and Ivan V
Imperial regalia of Russia hasPart double throne of Peter I and Ivan V
this entity surface form: throne of the Russian monarch