Vasilisa Melentyeva


Vasilisa Melentyeva was the legendary sixth wife of Ivan the Terrible. The marriage may have been celebrated in 1575 or she was simply a concubine. Modern scholars now consider her to be a 19th-century fraud.

Life

According to the legend, before her marriage to Ivan, Vasilisa is on record to have been a widow of a dyak, Melentiy Ivanov, serving in the Livonian War. Though the Tsar considered her beautiful and sweet natured, a few months after their marriage, he discovered her having an affair with a prince named Devletev. Ivan forced Vasilisa to watch her lover be impaled, and as further punishment, confined her to life in a cloister.
Of all the eight wives of Ivan the Terrible, only Maria Dolgorukaya and Vasilisa Melentyeva do not have graves or any mentions in official court documents.
There is no evidence of her existence in the medieval sources except two minor mentions: the first, cited by Karamzin, simply listed her name "as concubine" with Ivan's other spouses. The more extensive second mention, is believed to be the work of Alexander Sulakadzev, a notorious forger of the early 19th century.
Alexander Ostrovsky wrote a play about her in 1867: ":ru:Василиса Мелентьева |Василиса Мелентьева".