Ivan Semenovich Peresvetov (born 16th century, Russia) was an early Russian progressive social critic.
Peresvetov was born to a family of the lower nobility in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and served in the Polish Lithuanian army during the 1520s and 1530s. He arrived in Russia in 1538 or 1539.
In 1549 he presented his Two Books (Dve Knigi) to Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible. These works were ostensibly an account of the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople by Sultan Mehmed II but actually provided a covert, allegorical denunciation of the privileges still enjoyed by the boyars. Peresvetov’s support of the demands of the military class over that of the boyars presumably found favor with Ivan IV, who had to overcome boyar direction of the government to establish himself as the first tsar. Peresvetov advocated strong, autocratic rule coupled with a well-organized army and administration. His advocacy of promotion based on merit and military service was too radical for his time, however, as was his call for the abolition of all indenture.
Peresvetov wrote in an energetic folk Russian that contrasted sharply with the Church Slavonic style of the period.