Prikaz


In Muscovy and in Russia from the 15th to the 18th centuries, a prikaz was an administrative, judicial, territorial, or executive office functioning on behalf of palace, civil, military, or church authorities. The term usually suggests the functionality of a modern "ministry", "office" or "department".
Most of the prikazes were subordinated to the Boyar Duma. Some of them were subordinated to the taynyi prikaz or pervyi prikaz, which answered directly to the tsar. The patriarch of Moscow and All Russia had his own prikazes.
There was a large number of specialized prikazes. The set of prikazes varied over time.

List of Russian prikazes

Originally, prikazes were created by private orders given by the tsar to a certain person. In some cases new orders bore the name of this person.
From 1512 on 'Prikaz' was starting to be used as a name of constant offices.

Classification

The classification of the various prikazes is a very difficult task. In fact, each major historian tries to build their own system of classification. Major variants include prikazes of a territory, of a class of population, or of an area of affairs. Another method of classification is to rank prikazes by subordination.

Abolition

The prikazes were abolished by Peter the Great and replaced, beginning in 1717, with administrative organs known as collegiate.
This process took a rather long time; the Siberian Prikaz, for example, was restored in 1730 and existed till 1755. At the beginning of the 18th century Peter the Great even established some new prikazes. The system was only fully eliminated by Catherine the Great in 1775.