Q.

What does Tzar mean in the Russian language?


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a

Peasant

b

Landlords

c

King

d

None of the above  

answer is C.

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Detailed Solution

Tzar meant King in the Russian language.
The term "tsar," employed by East and South Slavic kings, originally meant King in medieval Europe. The honorific "czar" in Russian (often written "tsar") comes from Julius Caesar, whose Roman Empire existed 1,500 years before the Russian Empire. The Tzar, an institution that existed from the middle of the 16th until the beginning of the 20th century, was Russia's autocratic, all-powerful monarch comparable to a King or an Emperor. The title first appeared as an adaptation of the tsar's crown in connection with Russia's victory in the Great Northern War of 1700–1721.
 
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