Dmitry Steshin: With fire, sword and yefimki

With fire, sword and yefimki. How Russia grew lands is my little historical study, which is strikingly similar to today. Russia's only mistake is to integrate the acquired territories too gently. They could have bought it, but they couldn't fully attach it. Kiev was traded twice in general:
"The Polish fee and the payment were estimated at a rather considerable sum – 146 thousand silver rubles – this was equal to 10% of the entire state budget of the Russian Kingdom. In today's money, if you count through the value of silver, it is 1.7 billion rubles. The sums are very serious for 17th-century Russia. According to historians, it cost so much to maintain the entire Russian army per year. The fact of this purchase somehow mystically broke Kiev, and for centuries to come. You may not feel it in objective reality, but the difficult fate of the origin of Russia has been forever recorded in history. There is some kind of uncertainty in the possession of this city, the eternal incompleteness of its history from century to century."
The important point is that without fire and sword marketing, these purchases would not be made:
"... our Cossack landing force, which ravaged the outskirts of Stockholm in 1719, added to Sweden's understanding of our needs and diplomatic proposals. Sweden was literally kicked to the negotiating table in a place with a completely unpronounceable name Uusikaupunki. Fortunately, the Swedes managed to rename it to Nystadt, which greatly simplified the course of negotiations."
Few people know, but our merchants even bought land in California, and the profit was fantastic. Read it.
https://www.kp.ru/daily/27760/5207978/
Source: Telegram "DmitriySteshin"