Rus' chronicle: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Type of medieval Slavic literature}} |
{{short description|Type of medieval Slavic literature}} |
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{{More citations needed|date=May 2023}} |
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{{Infobox Medieval text |
{{Infobox Medieval text |
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| name = Rusʹ chronicle |
| name = Rusʹ chronicle |
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| alternative title(s) = {{ |
| alternative title(s) = {{langx|orv|лѣтопись}} |
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| author(s) = |
| author(s) = Primarily [[Clergy#Eastern Orthodoxy|clergy]] |
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| language = [[Old Church Slavonic]] and [[Old East Slavic]] |
| language = [[Old Church Slavonic]] and [[Old East Slavic]] |
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| date = 11–18th centuries |
| date = 11–18th centuries |
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| image = File:Radzivill chronicle 121.jpg |
| image = File:Radzivill chronicle 121.jpg |
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| width = 200px |
| width = 200px |
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| caption = |
| caption = Illustration from the [[Illuminated manuscript|illuminated]] 15th-century ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle]]'' |
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| dedicated to = |
| dedicated to = |
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'''Rus' chronicle'''<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunt |first1=Horace G. |title=What the Rusʹ Primary Chronicle Tells Us about the Origin of the Slavs and of Slavic Writing |journal=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |date=1995 |volume=19 |pages=335–357 |jstor=41037009 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41037009 |issn=0363-5570}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZTw8AAAAIAAJ|publisher=Royal Historical Society|year=1914|title=The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016–1471}}</ref><ref name="Chronicles, Lithuanian">{{cite encyclopedia | editor-first=Simas |editor-last=Sužiedėlis | encyclopedia=[[Encyclopedia Lituanica]] | title=Chronicles, Lithuanian | year=1970–1978 | publisher=Juozas Kapočius | volume=I | location=Boston, Massachusetts | oclc=95559 | pages=519–521}}</ref> |
The '''Rus' chronicle''',<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunt |first1=Horace G. |title=What the Rusʹ Primary Chronicle Tells Us about the Origin of the Slavs and of Slavic Writing |journal=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |date=1995 |volume=19 |pages=335–357 |jstor=41037009 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41037009 |issn=0363-5570}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZTw8AAAAIAAJ|publisher=Royal Historical Society|year=1914|title=The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016–1471}}</ref><ref name="Chronicles, Lithuanian">{{cite encyclopedia | editor-first=Simas |editor-last=Sužiedėlis | encyclopedia=[[Encyclopedia Lituanica]] | title=Chronicles, Lithuanian | year=1970–1978 | publisher=Juozas Kapočius | volume=I | location=Boston, Massachusetts | oclc=95559 | pages=519–521}}</ref> '''Russian chronicle'''<ref name="The Russian Primary Chronicle">{{cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Russian-Primary-Chronicle|title=The Russian Primary Chronicle|website=Britannica}}</ref><ref name="The Mediaeval Academy of America">{{cite book|editor1-last=Cross|editor1-first=Samuel Hazzard |editor2-last=Sherbowitz-Wetzor |editor2-first=Olgerd P.| url=https://archive.org/details/TheRussianPrimaryChronicle|title=The Russian Primary Chronicle, Laurentian Text |publisher=The Mediaeval Academy of America |location=Cambridge, MA |year=1953}}</ref>{{Rp|51}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunt |first1=Horace G. |title=On Interpreting the Russian Primary Chronicle: The Year 1037 |journal=The Slavic and East European Journal |date=1988 |volume=32 |issue=2 |pages=251–264 |doi=10.2307/308891|jstor=308891 }}</ref> or '''Rus' letopis''' ({{langx|orv|лѣтопись|translit=lětopisʹ}}) was the primary Rus' historical literature. Chronicles were composed from the 11th to the 18th centuries, generally written in [[Old East Slavic]] (and, later, [[Ruthenian language|Ruthenian]] and [[History of the Russian language#The Moscow period (15th–17th centuries)|Muscovite Russian]]), about [[Kievan Rus']] and subsequent [[Names of Rus', Russia and Ruthenia|Rus']] principalities and history.<ref name="Likhachov1986">{{Cite book|language=ru|author=[[Dmitry Likhachov|D.S.Likhachov]] |author2=N. Ponyrko |title=Izbornik: The Stories Of Ancient Russia |publisher=Художественная литература|location=Moscow|url=https://litmy.ru/knigi/belletristika/44578-izbornik-povesti-drevney-rusi.html|date=1986|page= 410|isbn= 3-515-07560-7|ref=Likhachov}}</ref><ref name="Shakhmatov"/> They were one of the leading genres of [[Old East Slavic literature|Old Rus' literature]] in medieval and early modern Eastern and Central Europe.<ref name=autogenerated1>Lurye, Yakov. Chronicles // Literature of Old Rusʹ. Biographical and Bibliographical Dictionary / ed. by Oleg Tvorogov. - Moscow: Prosvescheniye ("Enlightenment"), 1996. ({{langx|ru|[http://interpretive.ru/dictionary/1311/word/letopisi Лурье Я.С. Летописи] // Литература Древней Руси. Биобиблиографический словарь / под ред. О.В. Творогова. - М.: Просвещение, 1996}}).</ref> |
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The |
The chronicle was distributed in [[Belarus]], the [[Czech lands]], [[Latvia]], [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]], [[Russia]], and [[Ukraine]].<ref name="Polenov">{{Cite book|language=|author=Polenov S. V. |title=The letopises of the Belarusian-Lithuanian / of Polenov S. V. // Las Tunas |
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|trans-title=|publisher=|location=Moscow|url=https://bigenc.ru/domestic_history/text/2142617|date=2010|page= 350|isbn= 978-5-85270-350-7}}</ref> Chronicles were the main |
|trans-title=|publisher=|location=Moscow|url=https://bigenc.ru/domestic_history/text/2142617|date=2010|page= 350|isbn= 978-5-85270-350-7}}</ref> Chronicles were the main historical narrative until the mid-16th century (the reign of [[Ivan the Terrible]]), when they were superseded by chronographs.<ref name=autogenerated1 /> |
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== Terminology == |
== Terminology == |
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The |
The Old East Slavic лѣтопись (lě́topisʹ) has given rise to a number of Slavic-language derivatives ({{langx|be|летапіс|translit=ljétapis}}; {{langx|cs|letopis}}; {{langx|pl|latopis}}; {{langx|ru|летопись|translit=létopisʹ}}; {{Langx|sh|lȅtopīs/ljȅtopīs / ље̏топӣс, litopīs / литопӣс}}; {{langx|uk|літо́пис|translit=litópys}}), and was translated into [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]] as ''metraštis''. It is translated into English as "chronicle".<ref name="The Russian Primary Chronicle"/><ref name="The Mediaeval Academy of America"/>{{Rp|51}}<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunt |first1=Horace G. |title=On Interpreting the Russian Primary Chronicle: The Year 1037 |journal=The Slavic and East European Journal |date=1988 |volume=32 |issue=2 |pages=251–264 |doi=10.2307/308891|jstor=308891 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lunt |first1=Horace G. |title=What the Rus' Primary Chronicle Tells Us about the Origin of the Slavs and of Slavic Writing |journal=Harvard Ukrainian Studies |date=1995 |volume=19 |pages=335–357 |jstor=41037009 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41037009 |issn=0363-5570}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZTw8AAAAIAAJ|publisher=Royal Historical Society|year=1914|title=The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016–1471}}</ref><ref name="Chronicles, Lithuanian"/>{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} The record of an event usually begins with the words "Въ лѣто ..." (''Vŭ lě́to ...'', "In the year..."; from them, the terms ''litopys'', ''letopis'' and ''latopis'' were derived.<ref>[[Mikhail Tikhomirov]], "Letopis". ''[[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]''. Мoscow: Soviet Encyclopedia (1969—1978).</ref>{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} The chronicles contain historical documents, oral traditions (often of a [[Mysticism|mystical nature]]), excerpts from previous chronicles, and text by the chronicler.<ref name="Likhachov1986"/> |
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Most of the letopises are author's works, which describe the genealogy and biography of the Old Rus’ian [[knyaz]]es, the life of the people of Old Rus, and interpret events and signs from an [[Eastern Orthodox Church|E. Orthodox]] and [[eschatological]] point of view (see “{{Section link||Influence on the genre of Visions}}”).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} It is distinguished from otheral common genres such as "Word", "Life", and [[Kormchaia]].{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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Letopises, unlike [[chronicle]]s and [[annals]], contain historical documents, oral traditions (often of a [[Mysticism|mystical nature]]), and excerpts from previous chronicles combined with the text of the chronicler himself.<ref name="Likhachov1986"/> The letopis is more of a work of fiction, although it is based on ''[[svod]]'' (annual record).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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== Origin == |
== Origin == |
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The |
The construction of the oldest Russian chronicle generally accepted by modern scientists was developed by [[Alexey Shakhmatov]]. In Shakhmatov's view, the origin of the Russian chronicle was compiled {{circa|1039}} (Mikhail Priselkov dated it to 1037) in the Kiev [[Metropolis (religious jurisdiction)|metropolis]]. According to scholarly consensus, the chronicles were originally a complete work and not divided into years.<ref name="Shakhmatov"/> |
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According to most scholars, the letopises were not originally divided into years, but were a complete prose work.<ref name="Shakhmatov"/> It is believed that around 1093–1095, on the basis of the "Oldest svod" and a number of other sources, the Abbot of the Kiev-Pechersk monastery compiled the so-called "''Initial svod''" (the supposed original title is "Vremennik" ).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} In turn, on the basis of the "Initial vault" at the beginning of the 12th century, two of the oldest works that have come down to us are created: the [[Novgorod First Chronicle]] and the [[Tale of Bygone Years]], supplemented by extracts from old Russian written documents, folk legends and materials of the Kiev princely archive ([[Rus'–Byzantine Treaty (disambiguation)|Russian-Byzantine treaties]]).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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Presumably, the original (not preserved) edition of the "Tale of Bygone Years" was created around 1113 by the monk of the Kiev-Pechersk Monastery [[Nestor the Chronicler|Nestor]] (authorship is disputed). In 1116, this chronicle was revised by the abbot of the Kiev [[Vydubychi Monastery]], [[Sylvester of Kiev|Sylvester]], and its Second edition was created. This second edition (or Sylvester's edition) is preserved as part of the [[Laurentian Codex|Laurentian letopis]]. In 1118, the third edition was created by an unknown author on behalf of the Novgorod [[knyaz]] [[Mstislav I of Kiev|Mstislav Vladimirovich]] (It was preserved as part of the [[Hypatian Codex|Hypatian letopis]]). In later letopises, the "Initial svod" and the "Tale of Bygone Years" were often used as a source.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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[[Dmitry Likhachov]], following Nikolay Nikolsky, deduced the beginning of the |
The ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' was written {{circa|1113}}. Although its authorship is disputed, [[Nestor the Chronicler]] has traditionally been credited. In 1116, the chronicle was revised by [[Vydubychi Monastery]] abbot [[Sylvester of Kiev|Sylvester]]. This edition is preserved as part of the [[Laurentian Codex|Laurentian letopis]]. In 1118, its third edition was written by an unknown author on behalf of Novgorod ''[[knyaz]]'' [[Mstislav I of Kiev]]. It was preserved as part of the [[Hypatian Codex]]. [[Dmitry Likhachov]], following Nikolay Nikolsky, deduced the beginning of the Rus' chronicle from West Slavic [[Great Moravia|Moravian]] legends.<ref>[[Dmitry Likhachev]]. "Russian letopises and their cultural and historical significance" M.-L., Publishing House of the [[USSR Academy of Sciences]]. 1947. 499 p. 5 vols.</ref> |
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Attention, especially in the northern chronicles, was paid to the Old Rus' ''knyazi''; despite the clerical composition of most of the chronicles, many texts depict them as chosen by pagan gods. The [[Rurikids#Family tree (from Rurik to Vladimir I)|Rurikids]] were emphasized.<ref name="Zamaleev">{{Cite book|language=ru|author=[[:ru:Замалеев, Александр Фазлаевич|Alexander Zamaleev]] |title=History of Russian culture |publisher=Official Publishing House of Saint Petersburg University.|location=St. Petersburg|url=|date=2005|pages= 71–72|isbn= 5-288-03632-2|ref=Zamaleev}}</ref> |
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Folk legends and stories were |
Folk legends and stories were sources. Historical distortions were not permitted; according to Shakhmatov, any mystical motives or phenomena in a chronicle was because the author believed in their truth or significance.<ref name="Shakhmatov"/> |
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During the 1850s and 1860s it was thought that the Rus' chronicle originated as [[annals]] and evolved into a [[narrative]], a view supported by Michael Sukhomlinov and [[Izmail Sreznevsky]]. This theory has been revived by Alexey Gippius and Alexey Tolochko), who believe that the chronicle was written as ''svods'' (annals) until the ''Primary Chronicle''. The annals were brief, factual, and lacked complex narrative structure. Over time their accuracy increased, dates appeared, the volume of information expanded, and narrative additions were made.<ref>{{Cite book|language=Russian|author= |
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|title=Letopises |
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==History== |
==History== |
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Rus' chronicles |
The Rus' chronicles began to be systematically prepared during the mid-11th century. There were two centers of chronicle preparation in this early period: [[Kiev]] (the capital of early Rus') and [[Veliky Novgorod|Novgorod]]. The ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'', at the beginning of the 12th century, was a combination of Kievan and Novgorodian chronicles (including the [[Novgorod First Chronicle]] and survives in the [[Laurentian Codex|Laurentian]] and [[Hypatian Codex|Hypatian]] codices. Chronicles of the 12th- and 13th-century Kievan Rus' [[Principality|principalities]] survive in the ''Hypatian Codex'',<ref name=autogenerated1 /><ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /> which includes the ''[[Kievan Chronicle]]'' (covering 1118 to 1200) and the ''[[Galician–Volhynian Chronicle]]'' (covering [[Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia|Galicia and Volhynia]] from 1201 to 1292).<ref name=autogenerated5>[http://www.molitvoslov.by/2014/letopis-ipatevskaja-slovar-knizhnikov.html Лихачева О.П. Летопись Ипатьевская] // Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987. — Вып. 1 (XI – первая половина XIV в.). — С. 236; [http://interpretive.ru/dictionary/1311/word/letopis-ipatevskaja Лихачева О.П. Летопись Ипатьевская] // Литература Древней Руси. Биобиблиографический словарь / под ред. О.В. Творогова. - М.: Просвещение, 1996</ref> Late 12th- and early 13th-century chronicles of [[Rostov, Yaroslavl Oblast|Rostov]], [[Pereslavl-Zalessky|Pereyaslavl]] and [[Vladimir-Suzdal]] survive in the Laurentian Codex and the [[Radziwiłł Chronicle]].<ref name=autogenerated1 /><ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /> |
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The late-13th- and early-14th-century ''Hypatian Codex'' survives in 15th-to-18th-century сopies.<ref name=autogenerated5 /> A 1377 copy of the 14th-century Laurentian Codex survives.<ref>[http://www.molitvoslov.by/2014/letopis-ipatevskaja-slovar-knizhnikov.html Лурье Я.С. Летопись Лаврентьевская] // Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987. — Вып. 1 (XI – первая половина XIV в.).</ref> |
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The 1375 [[Tver]]ian annals are part of the Rogozhskiy Chronicle and the 16th-century Tverian Collection.<ref name=autogenerated1 /><ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /> A chronicle related to [[Cyprian, Metropolitan of Moscow]] covered up to 1408 and survived as the ''[[Trinity Chronicle]]'' until the [[Fire of Moscow (1812)|1812 Fire of Moscow]]. It was reconstructed by Mikhail Prisyolkov.<ref>Приселков М.Д. Троицкая летопись: Реконструкция текста. – 2-е изд. – СПб.: Наука, 2002. – 512, [2] с.</ref> A chronicle made in Tver {{circa|1412}} contained revisions similar to the late-14th–early-15th-century ''Trinity Chronicle''. The 1430s [[Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod]], compiled at the office of the Moscow Metropolitan, may have combined the [[Sofia First Chronicle|Sofia First]] and [[Novgorod Fourth Chronicle]]s.<ref name=autogenerated1 /><ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /> |
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The first known [[Grand Duchy of Moscow]] chronicles appeared during the mid-15th century. A 1470s compilation included the first part of the [[Vasili Yermolin|Yermolin]] Chronicle. The [[Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery]] chronicle contained the second part of the Yermolin Chronicle. The [[Sofia Second Chronicle]] is thought to have derived from the [[Lvov Chronicle]]. The [[Joasaphus, Metropolitan of Moscow|Ioasaf]] Chronicle, covering 1437–1520, was made at the end of the 1520s at the office of the Moscow Metropolitan and was a source for the ''[[Nikon Chronicle]]''. The multi-volume [[Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible]] was compiled. Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century chronicles, such as the late-16th-to-18th-century [[Siberian Chronicles]], were local, provincial texts.<ref name=autogenerated1 /><ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /><ref>{{in lang|ru}} [http://www.magister.msk.ru/library/history/solov/solv06pd.htm] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200220211055/http://www.magister.msk.ru/library/history/solov/solv06pd.htm |date=2020-02-20 }} [[Sergey Solovyov (historian)|Sergei Soloviev]] about chronicle authenticity.</ref><ref>[http://interpretive.ru/dictionary/1147/word/sibirskie-letopisi Сергеев В.И. Сибирские летописи] // Жуков Е.М. Советская историческая энциклопедия: В 16 т. - М.: Государственное научное издательство «Советская энциклопедия», 1961-1976.</ref> |
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Fourteenth-to-sixteenth-century Belarusian-Lithuanian chronicles such as the Suprasl, Bykhovets, and Barkulabovo chronicles continued the tradition of Rus' chronicles.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75–76}}<ref>[http://www.molitvoslov.by/2014/letopisi-belorussko-litovskie-zapadnorusskie.html Лурье Я.С. Летописи белорусско-литовские (западнорусские)] // Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987-.</ref><ref>Марченко М. І., Українська історіографія (З давніх часів до сер. XIX ст.), К., 1959; Українські письменники. Біо-бібліографіч. словник, т. 1, К., 1960.</ref> A group of 17th- and early-18th-century Ukrainian chronicles have survived, including the Hustynia, Lviv, Mezhyhiria, and Ostrih chronicles, the Chroniclers of Volhynia and Ukraine collection, the Eyewitness Chronicle, and the Chronicles of {{ill|Hryhorii Hrabianka|uk|Григорій Граб'янка|}} and [[Samiilo Velychko]].{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} These chronicles describe the rebellions, society, policies and international relations of the [[Cossack Hetmanate]] and the [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]] and their wars with the [[Crimean Khanate]] and [[Ottoman Empire]].{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
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The oldest Polish chronicle written in Latin was ''[[Gesta principum Polonorum]]'', at the beginning of the 12th century.<ref>J DRZEJEWICZ, WACŁAW. The Polish Review, vol. 12, no. 1, 1967, pp. 107–10. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/25776700. Accessed 1 Feb. 2023.</ref> [[Maciej Stryjkowski]] wrote the ''Chronicle of Poland, Lithuania, Samogitia and all of Ruthenia'' (1582), generally considered the first printed history of the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]].<ref name="Osipowicz">{{cite web | author=Czesława Osipowicz | title=Polacy - twórcy na Litwie (Poles - Creating in Lithuania) | publisher=Wspólnota Polska | work=Świat [[Polish diaspora|Polonii]] | url=http://www.wspolnota-polska.org.pl/index.php?id=o_IIIfor11 | access-date=2006-06-28 |language=pl}}</ref> |
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== <span class="anchor" id="Purpose of creation"></span>Purpose == |
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Development of Rus' chronicles were [[Lithuanian Chronicles]] of the 15–16th centuries<ref>[http://www.molitvoslov.by/2014/letopisi-belorussko-litovskie-zapadnorusskie.html Лурье Я.С. Летописи белорусско-литовские (западнорусские)] // Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987-.</ref> and Ukrainian Chronicles of the 17–18th centuries.<ref>Марченко М. І., Українська історіографія (З давніх часів до сер. XIX ст.), К., 1959; Українські письменники. Біо-бібліографіч. словник, т. 1, К., 1960.</ref> |
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⚫ | After the 12th and 13th centuries, Rus' chronicles were usually produced by monasteries or at the courts of princes and bishops.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} Later editors were increasingly concerned with compiling and revising existing writings.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75–76}} |
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⚫ | Textual comparison indicates a pronounced political orientation and abrupt changes.<ref name=Himon>Timothy Gimon [http://www.opentextnn.ru/history/istochnik/istXIII-XIX/index.html@id=1640#_ftn2 What was written in the Russian Letopis?] // «ФИПП» magazine. М., 1998. № 1 (2), pp. 8—16.</ref> Shakhmatov and his colleagues sought to establish the identity and views of their authors and to place a chronicle in its contemporary political struggle.<ref name="Shakhmatov">[[Alexey Shakhmatov]] All-Russian letopis svods of the XIV and XV centuries // Журнал Министерства народного просвещения. 1900. № 9, pp. 90—176; № 11, pp. 135—200; 1901. № 11, pp. 52—80; Search for the oldest Russian letopis vaults. SPb., 1908.</ref> [[Dmitry Likhachov|D. S. Likhachev]], V. G. Mirzoev, and A. F. Milonov wrote about the educational and didactic purposes of the old Russian chronicles.<ref>[[Dmitry Likhachov]] Russian letopises and their cultural and historical significance. М. ; L., 1947, pp. 71, 97.</ref><ref>''Vladimir Mirzoev'' Social function of history: According to the "Primary letopis" // Questions of historiography and methodology of history. Rostov-on-Don, 1976, pp. 8, 16—17.</ref><ref>Andrey Kylunov. On the question of the moralism of the old Russian letopis // Russian social thought of the middle ages: Historical and philosophical essays. Kiev (1988), p. 141.</ref> |
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== Purpose of creation == |
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⚫ | According to [[Igor Danilevsky]], the chronicles had an [[Eschatology|eschatological]] purpose. Since the second half of the 11th century, they were "books of life" which would appear at the [[last judgment]].<ref>[[Igor Danilevsky]] The idea and title of the Primary Letopis // National history. 1995. No. 5, pp. 101—110; Он же. «Добру и злу внимая равнодушно»...? (Нравственные императивы древнерусского летописца // Альфа и омега. M., 1995. No.3 (6), pp. 157—158. He is "Listening to good and evil indifferently"...? (Moral imperatives of the old Russian chronicler) // Alpha and Omega. (in Russian)</ref> According to Timothy Himon, Danilevsky's arguments are indirect. Himon suggests that the chronicles had several goals, including the recording of sacred and unusual events and reinforcing power; the chronicle is considered a tool of political power.{{sfn|Himon|1998|pp=8-16}} |
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⚫ | According to [[Igor Danilevsky]], the |
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Gimon suggests that the letopises had several goals at the same time: the recording of sacred and unusual events, the appeal of power, and the eschatological purpose of the letopis. The written word enjoyed greater authority than the spoken word in connection with ideas about the sacredness of writing. For this reason, strong political corporations sought to acquire their own letopises in order to ensure their own and their members' future, both in earthly life and at the Last Judgment. The letopis is thus considered one of the functions of political power.{{sfn|Himon|1998|pp=8-16}} |
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==Сharacteristics== |
==Сharacteristics== |
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The chroniclers |
The chroniclers were primarily clergy. Rus' chronicles were composed in monasteries, at the courts of princes, the [[tsar]]s of Moscow and the kings of Galicia-Volhynia, and in the offices of [[metropolitan bishop]]s. The chronicles (often contradicting each other) typically consisted of collections of short factual entries for the preceding year and speeches and dialogues by princes. The Rus' chronicles contain narratives about the settlement of the Eastern Slavs and neighbouring peoples, how [[Kievan Rus']] was founded and developed, and its diplomatic relations, society, culture, and religion.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} The chronicler would sometimes provide an extended, embellished narrative on the most significant events of Rus' history.<ref name=autogenerated1 /> |
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[[Aleksey Shakhmatov]] was the |
[[Aleksey Shakhmatov]] was the leading expert in the [[textual criticism]] of Rus' chronicles. Shakhmatov considered the main part of the chronicle texts {{transliteration|ru|svods}} (collections of records from different sources), with every new chronicle a collection of previous chronicles and newly-added historical records.<ref name=autogenerated2>[[Aleksey Shakhmatov]]. Investigation on the Oldest Kievan Rusʹ chronicle svods. - Saint Petersburg: Printing-House of M.A. Aleksandrov, 1908. — XX, 686 p. — Reprint from Chronicle of Work of [[Archaeographic Commission|Imperial Archaeographic Commission]]. — Vol. 20. ({{langx|ru|[https://archive.org/details/razyskaniiaodre01shakgoog Шахматов А.А. Разыскания о древнейших русских летописных сводах]. — СПб.: Типография М.А. Александрова, 1908. — XX, 686 с. — Оттиск из кн.: Летописи занятий Императорской Археографической Комиссии. — Т. 20}}).</ref><ref name=autogenerated3>Aleksey Shakhmatov. Review of Rusʹ chronicle svods of 14th—16th Century. Moscow / ed. by A.S. Orlov, [[Boris Grekov]]; [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Academy of Sciences of USSR]], Institute of Literature. — Moscow, [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]]: [[Nauka (publisher)|Publisher of Academy of Sciences of USSR]], 1938. — 372 p. ({{langx|ru|Шахматов А.А. Обозрение русских летописных сводов XIV—XVI вв. / отв. ред.: А.С. Орлов, акад. Б.Д. Греков; АН СССР, Институт литературы. – М.; Л.: Издательство АН СССР, 1938. — 372 с.}}).</ref> |
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Many of the chronicles have become viewed as annals produced in state or church offices. The hypothetical Novgorod Archbishop Chronicle is believed to have been prepared at the office of the [[Diocese of Novgorod]] from the 12th to the 14th centuries, and was the basis of the 15th-century [[Novgorod First Chronicle]].<ref name=autogenerated4>[http://annals.xlegio.ru/rus/small/nis1npl.htm Гиппиус А.А. К истории сложения текста Новгородской первой летописи] // Новгородский исторический сборник. — СПб., 1997. — Вып. 6 (16) / Рос. акад. наук, Институт рос. истории, С.-Петербургский филиал; отв. ред. [[Valentin Yanin|В.Л. Янин]]. — C. 3—72; Гиппиус А.А. К характеристике новгородского владычного летописания XII–XIV вв. // Великий Новгород в истории средневековой Европы: К 70-летию В.Л. Янина. – М.: Русские словари, 1999. — С. 345–364; Гимон Т.В. События XI — начала XII в. в новгородских летописях и перечнях // Древнейшие государства Восточной Европы: 2010 год: Предпосылки и пути образования Древнерусского государства / отв. ред. серии Е.А. Мельникова. Институт всеобщей истории РАН. – М.: Рус. Фонд Содействия Образ. и Науке, 2012. — С. 584–706.</ref> |
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==Sources== |
==Sources== |
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Sources for the oldest chronicles include [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] and [[South Slavs|South Slavic]] texts on [[sacred history]] and other subjects, the |
Sources for the oldest chronicles include [[Byzantine Empire|Byzantine]] and [[South Slavs|South Slavic]] texts on [[sacred history]] and other subjects, the chronicle of [[George Hamartolos]] on the [[Generations of Noah]] in the ''Primary Chronicle'',<ref>[[Vladimir Petrukhin|Petrukhin, Vladimir]]. Rusʹ in the 9-10th centuries. From Varangians Invitation to the [[Christianization of Kievan Rusʹ|Сhoice of Faith]] / 2nd edition, corrected and supplemented. — Moscow: Forum; Neolit, 2014. — 464 p. {{langx|ru|Петрухин В.Я. Русь в IX—X веках. От призвания варягов до выбора веры / Издание 2-е, испр. и доп. — М.: Форум; Неолит, 2014. — 464 с.}}).</ref> legends, legal documents (such as the Rus'–Byzantine Treaties in the ''Primary Chronicle'' and a short version of ''[[Russkaya Pravda]]'' in the Novgorod First Chronicle), and historical records.<ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /> |
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==Copies== |
==Copies== |
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Rus' chronicles survive in |
Rus' chronicles survive in codices. Some chronicles have several versions, but others are known from only one copy. Every chronicle was a collection of materials from earlier chronicles. Individual chronicles were revised, shortened or expanded with entries on the events of the last year (or decade), and dozens of such collections may exist.<ref name=autogenerated1 /> |
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==Genealogy== |
==<span class="anchor" id="Genealogy"></span>Timeline== |
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⚫ | [[File:Rus' Chronicles Stemma 01.png|thumb|upright=1.2|alt=A line graph|Chronological graph of the major Rus' chronicles<ref>''Yakov Lurie'' The history of Russia in the chronicle and perception of the New time// Ancient Russia and New Russia: (favorites). SPb. : Dmitry Bulanin (publishing house), 1997.</ref><ref>The dictionary of scribes and booklore of Ancient Rus / [[Russian Academy of Sciences]], [[Pushkin House]] ; ed. [[Dmitry Likhachev]]. L. : [[Nauka (publisher)|Nauka]], 1987—2017.</ref>]] |
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{{Further|Textual criticism of the Primary Chronicle}} |
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⚫ | The early-12th-century ''Primary Chronicle'', describing the early history of Kievan Rus', is the oldest surviving Rus' chronicle. Aleksey Shakhmatov noted that a number of entries about 11th-century Novgorod are present in the 15th-century Novgorod First Chronicle but absent from the ''Primary Chronicle''. This led Shakhmatov to theorize that the beginning of the Novgorod First Chronicle includes text older than that in the ''Primary Chronicle''. He called it the "Primary ''Svod''", and dated it to the end of the 11th century as a basis for the ''Primary Chronicle''. If two or more chronicles coincide up to a particular year, one chronicle is copied from another (rare) or they had a common source. Shakhmatov developed a timeline of the old Rus' chronicles, connecting most of them and demonstrating that the extant 14th-to-17th-century chronicles date back to the Primary ''Svod'', earlier, hypothetical 11th-century and late-10th-century historical records. His method and theories became a mainstay of Rus' chronicle studies.<ref name=autogenerated2 /><ref name=autogenerated3 /><ref name=autogenerated4 /><ref>Бобров А. Г. Новгородские летописи XV века. — СПб. : Дмитрий Буланин, 2000. — 287 с.</ref> |
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⚫ | [[File:Rus' Chronicles Stemma 01.png|thumb| |
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⚫ | The '' |
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== Textual criticism and content == |
== <span class="anchor" id="Textual criticism and content"></span>Textual criticism == |
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{{Further|Textual criticism of the Primary Chronicle}} |
{{Further|Textual criticism of the Primary Chronicle}} |
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An estimated 5,000 ''svods'' exist.<ref>''Victor Zibhorov'' [https://docplayer.ru/51525863-Studencheskaya-biblioteka-v-k-ziborov-uchebnoe-posobie-hrestomatiya.html Russian letopises of the XI-XVIII centuries] (in Russian). — SPb.: Faculty of Philology of St. Petersburg state University, 2002.</ref> Most have not been preserved as originals; only copies and partial revisions created between the 13th and 19th centuries, including the oldest 11th- and 12th-century chronicles, are known.<ref>{{Cite book|language=Russian|author=[[Mikhail Tikhomirov]] |
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Most of the letopises have not been preserved as originals; only their copies and partial reworkings (the so-called ''spisok'') created in the 13th-19th centuries are known. Only these reworkings were preserved, including the oldest chronicles of the 11th-12th centuries.<ref>{{Cite book|language=Russian|author=[[Mikhail Tikhomirov]] |
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|title=Letopis // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]. |
|title=Letopis // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]. |
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|trans-title= |
|trans-title= |
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|publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia|location=Moscow|url=|date=1978|page= |isbn= }}</ref> |
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|publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia|location=Moscow|url=|date=1978|page= |isbn= }}</ref> All revised texts are classified by type, (editions), and type. Many parts of the letopis narrative are known as separate works, and the text of the letopis often traces connections from different sources. All these features suggest that the surviving letopises are collections of various materials, many of the original sources of which have not reached our time. This idea, first expressed by [[Pavel Stroyev]], now forms the General opinion. It is now recognized that most of the surviving letopises are collections of previous texts.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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⚫ | Many of the oldest chronicles have not survived. Each principality had a court chronicler to describe its history and defend its views. During the 15th century, chronicles such as the [[:ru:Псковские летописи|Pskov Letopises]] and western Russian chronicles were hostile to the [[Principality of Moscow]].<ref>[[:ru:Сахаров, Анатолий Михайлович (историк)|Anatoly Sakharov]]. Historical knowledge / [[:ru:Очерки русской культуры|Essays on Russian culture of the XVI century]]. Part two. Moscow, Moscow University Press, 1976. p. 140.</ref> The travel story ''[[A Journey Beyond the Three Seas]]'' was incorporated into the 16th-century ''[[Lvov Chronicle (16th century)|Lvov Chronicle]]'' and the [[Sofia Second Chronicle]]. |
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The oldest surviving lists (manuscripts) of the letopises are the parchment "The letopisets soon" by patriarch Nikephoros with Rostov news (the last quarter of the XIII century), Synodal list of the [[Novgorod Chronicle|Novgorod first letopis]] of the elder izvod (second half of the XIII century, second quarter of the XIV century), the [[Laurentian Codex|Laurentian letopis]] (list of 1377) and the paper [[Hypatian Codex|Hypatian letopis]] (1420s). Earlier letopis vaults are reconstructed by scientists based on the study of preserved written monuments.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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== <span class="anchor" id="Influence on the genre of Visions"></span>Influence on dream visions == |
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Each Letopis or letopising svod is considered an independent whole literary work, which has its own structure, intent and ideological orientation.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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{{main|Dream vision#Visions in Old Russian literature}} |
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Nikolai Prokofiev and Rosalia Shor noted an occasional dream-vision motif in old Russian chronicles.<ref>Nikolai Prokofiev. Vision as a genre in Old Russian literature // Scientific Notes of the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute named after V. I. Lenin. Moscow, 1964. - Vol. 231: Questions of the style of fiction. - p. 47</ref> In her article, "The Genre of Visions in Ancient Russian Literature", Alla Soboleva notes the chronicles' unusual worldview.<ref>Alla Borisovna Soboleva. [https://poetica.pro/files/redaktor_pdf/1482757395.pdf THE GENRE OF VISIONS IN ANCIENT RUSSIAN LITERATURE] (article). 2016, p. 161-163</ref> An illustration {{circa|1495}} in the Slavic manuscript of [[Cosmas Indicopleustes]]' sixth-century ''[[Christian Topography]]'' depicts the sun going underground at sunset and, according to Yegor Redin, was incorporated into the Old Russian chronicles.<ref>Piotrovskaya E. K. To the study of the Old Russian version of the" Christian Topography " of Kozma Indicoplov / / Byzantine vremennik. - M., 1991. - Vol. 51. - pp. 106-111</ref> |
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Historian Igor Froyanov cites a scene in the [[Novgorod First Chronicle]] and the ''Primary Chronicle'' where [[volkhv]]s (wizards) talk about the creation of humanity: |
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⚫ | Many of the |
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⚫ | {{blockquote|[[Yan Vyshatich]] asked, "How do you think man came to be?" The volkhvs answered, "God bathed in the bath and sweated, wiped himself with a rag and threw it from heaven to the earth; and the devil created man, and God put his soul into him. Therefore, when a person dies, the body goes to the earth, and the soul goes to God".<ref>Novgorod First Chronicle, p. 172</ref>}} |
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⚫ | Two wizards reportedly appeared in Novgorod in 1071 and began to sow unrest, saying that the Dnieper would soon flow backwards and the land would move.<ref>Igor Froyanov. [http://annales.info/rus/small/nis12_fr.htm#_ftn14 About the events of 1227-1230 in Novgorod] // Ancient Russia</ref> Most chronicles have digressions which predict the future, describe strange phenomena, and discuss their meaning from a [[mystical]] point of view.<ref>Nikolai Prokofiev. [https://rusneb.ru/catalog/000202_000006_1692498/ Vision as a genre in ancient Russian literature]. // Scientific notes of the Moscow state pedagogical Institute named after V. I. Lenin. - M., 1964. - Vol. 231: Questions of the style of fiction. - Pp. 37-38</ref> |
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As a rule, the letopises tell Russian history from its beginning, sometimes relying on [[Slavic paganism|pagan ideas]] about the creation of the world. New Letopises were often created as collections of previous letopis monuments and various materials (historical tales, lives, Epistles, etc.) and included records of contemporary events. Most Russian letopises contain documents (international agreements, private and public acts), independent literary works ("stories", "words", lives of saints and other [[hagiographic]] texts, legends) or their individual fragments, records of [[folklore]] origin. |
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== <span class="anchor" id="Study of sources"></span>Historiography == |
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Literary works were often used as historical sources. Many works of old Russian literature have been preserved in the letopis texts: "''The teachings of Vladimir Monomakh''", "''the Legend of the battle of Mamaev''", "''[[A Journey Beyond the Three Seas|Walking across the three seas]]''" by [[Afanasy Nikitin]], etc.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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⚫ | Most scholars view the chronicles as historical sources as well as works of art. [[Vasily Klyuchevsky]] used them as a historical source along with the [[Hagiography|lives of the saints]].<ref>See: [[Vasily Klyuchevsky]]. [http://www.odinblago.ru/drevnerussk_zhitia_istochnik/ Old Russian lives of saints as a historical source]. Moscow. 1871</ref> |
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=== <span class="anchor" id="The initial period"></span>Early period === |
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Study of the history of Old Russian chronicles was begun by [[Vasily Tatishchev]] and [[Mikhail Shcherbatov]], whose work impacted the emergence of [[source criticism]] as a science. Using Tatishchev and Stroev's method, Mikhail Pogodin discovered how the chronicles were constructed. Mikhail Sukhomlinov's 1856 ''On the Ancient Russian Chronicle as a Literary Monument'' attempted to establish the literary sources of the initial chronicle. Bestuzhev-Ryumin's 1868 ''On the Composition of Russian Chronicles Until the End of the 14th Century'' deconstructed chronicle text into annual records and legends. |
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A new stage in the study of Russian chronicles was begun by [[Alexey Shakhmatov]] (1864-1920). His comparative textual method compared lists and analyzed text. Shakhmatov sought to learn about the circumstances of the creation of each chronicle through chronology, printing and language errors, and [[dialectic]]. |
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== Influence on the genre of Visions == |
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{{main|Dream visions}} |
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In many Old Russian letopises, as was noticed by Nikolai Prokofiev and Rosalia Shor, there is a motif of "[[Dream visions|visions]]", which is atypical for this historical genre.<ref>Nikolai Prokofiev. Vision as a genre in Old Russian literature // Scientific Notes of the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute named after V. I. Lenin. Moscow, 1964. - Vol. 231: Questions of the style of fiction. - p. 47</ref> |
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=== <span class="anchor" id="The Soviet period"></span><span class="anchor" id="The modern period"></span>Modern period === |
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Alla Soboleva in her work "The genre of visions in ancient Russian literature" draws attention to the idea of the letopisetses about the creation of the world and their unusual worldview in general.<ref>Alla Borisovna Soboleva. [https://poetica.pro/files/redaktor_pdf/1482757395.pdf THE GENRE OF VISIONS IN ANCIENT RUSSIAN LITERATURE] (article). 2016, p. 161-163</ref> Great attention is drawn to the illustration of the Slavic manuscripts of the "Christian topography" of [[Cosmas Indicopleustes]]. Unlike the [[Christian Topography|original]], the Old Russian editions are full-fledged reworkings, in which there are also rather strange illustrations that are not related to the content.<br /> In the Uvarov and archival editions (created in [[Novgorod]] around 1495), in one Thumbnail (conventionally called "the movement of the sun"), the artist depicted his view of the structure of the world: according to his idea, the sun goes underground at sunset. In the center of the miniature is a "world mountain", the meaning of which is not clear. The Uvarov editorial office is the oldest; it is named in honor of [[Aleksey Uvarov]], who opened it. According to Yegor Redin, from the later editions of the Christian Topography, the thumbnail also got into the Old Russian letopises.<ref>Piotrovskaya E. K. To the study of the Old Russian version of the" Christian Topography " of Kozma Indicoplov / / Byzantine vremennik. - M., 1991. - Vol. 51. - pp. 106-111</ref> |
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Historian Igor Froyanov cites as an example a scene from the [[Novgorod Chronicle|Novgorod first letopis]] and the [[Tale of Bygone Years]], where the [[Volkhv]]s (Magi) talk about the creation of man. According to legend, under the year 1071, two Magi appeared in Novgorod and began to sow turmoil, claiming that soon the Dnieper will flow backwards and the land will move from place to place.<ref>Igor Froyanov. [http://annales.info/rus/small/nis12_fr.htm#_ftn14 About the events of 1227-1230 in Novgorod] // Ancient Russia</ref> |
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⚫ | {{blockquote|[[Yan Vyshatich]] asked |
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== Study of sources == |
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Most scholars (both Russian and foreign) recognize that the letopises are valuable not only as works of art, but also as detailed historical sources. 18th-century philologist [[Vasily Tatishchev]] was one of the first to include the letopises in one of the sources for the study of the [[Old East Slavic]] and [[Church Slavonic]] languages, thanks to which later it was possible to distinguish the morphological and syntactic features of the Old East Slavic language (since the language of Rus' letopises is heterogeneous and the manner of presentation of the northern letopisetses differs from the southern and eastern ones).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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=== The initial period === |
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The study of the history of Old Russian letopises is one of the most difficult sections of [[Source criticism|source studies]] and [[philology]]. The study of Old Russian letopises was initiated by [[Vasily Tatishchev]] and [[Mikhail Shcherbatov]]. Later, their works had a huge impact on the world study of ancient documents, and on the emergence of [[Source criticism|source studies]] as a science. Using the method of Tatishchev and Stroev, Mikhail Pogodin discovered a large number of facts about the letopis construction. Mikhail Sukhomlinov ("On the ancient Russian Chronicle as a literary monument", 1856) made an attempt to establish the literary sources of the initial svod. Bestuzhev-Ryumin ("On the composition of Russian Chronicles until the end of the XIV century", 1868) was the first to experience the decomposition of the letopis text into annual records and legends. In general, general preliminary observations were made, the scale of the old Russian letopis and the complexity of its analysis were established.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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A new stage in the study of Russian chronicles was opened by [[Alexey Shakhmatov]] (1864-1920). His comparative textual method consisted in comparing various lists and in-depth analysis of the text. The scientist sought to find out the circumstances of the creation of each letopis monument and svod, took into account various chronological indications, typos, errors of language and [[dialectism]]s. Aleksey Shakhmatov first built the genealogy of almost all the letopis lists, the history of old Russian letopises of the XI—XVI centuries, and at the same time — the picture of the development of Russian social consciousness ("all-Russian letopises of the XIV and XV centuries", 1901; "a Review of Russian letopises of the XIV—XVI centuries", 1938 — Feature all the most significant Russian letopises).{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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=== The Soviet period === |
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Starting with Shakhmatov, the main analysis of the text of the chronicles recognizes the comparison of two or more chronicles throughout their length, and not fragmentary observations. The method of Shakhmatov was developed by Mikhail Priselkov, who placed more emphasis on the historical aspect ("History of Russian Chronicles of the XI—XV centuries", 1940). |
Starting with Shakhmatov, the main analysis of the text of the chronicles recognizes the comparison of two or more chronicles throughout their length, and not fragmentary observations. The method of Shakhmatov was developed by Mikhail Priselkov, who placed more emphasis on the historical aspect ("History of Russian Chronicles of the XI—XV centuries", 1940). |
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Shakhmatov's genealogy was developed and revised by his followers, among whom the greatest contribution to the study of Russian chronicles was made by Nikolai Lavrov, Arseny Nasonov, Lev Cherepnin, [[Dmitry Likhachev]], Sergey Bakhrushin, Alexander Andreev, [[Mikhail Tikhomirov]], Nikolai Nikolsky, Vasily Istrin, etc. Shakhmatov's methodology formed the basis of modern [[textual criticism|textology]].<ref>[[Alexey Shakhmatov]]. Letopises // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]], Moscow: Sovetskaya enciklopediya, 1969-1978.</ref> |
Shakhmatov's genealogy was developed and revised by his followers, among whom the greatest contribution to the study of Russian chronicles was made by Nikolai Lavrov, Arseny Nasonov, Lev Cherepnin, [[Dmitry Likhachev]], Sergey Bakhrushin, Alexander Andreev, [[Mikhail Tikhomirov]], Nikolai Nikolsky, Vasily Istrin, etc. Shakhmatov's methodology formed the basis of modern [[textual criticism|textology]].<ref>[[Alexey Shakhmatov]]. Letopises // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]], Moscow: Sovetskaya enciklopediya, 1969-1978.</ref> |
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In Soviet times, there was an intensification of the study of letopises in connection with the resumption of the activities of the [[Archaeographic Commission]] and the publication of the "Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles" on the initiative of Mikhail Tikhomirov.{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} |
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=== The modern period === |
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The study of letopis texts has become widespread in modern Russia and other countries. Among the researchers of the second half of the XX century, the greatest contribution to the study of old Russian letopises was made by [[Mikhail Tikhomirov|I. A. Tikhomirov]], [[Dmitry Likhachov|D. S. Likhachev]], Ya. S. Lurie, V. I. Koretsky, V. I. Buganov, etc.<ref>Viktor Ziborov. [https://docplayer.ru/51525863-Studencheskaya-biblioteka-v-k-ziborov-uchebnoe-posobie-hrestomatiya.html Russian letopis of the XI-XVIII centuries] (in Russian). - St. Petersburg: Philological Faculty of St. Petersburg State University, 2002.</ref> |
The study of letopis texts has become widespread in modern Russia and other countries. Among the researchers of the second half of the XX century, the greatest contribution to the study of old Russian letopises was made by [[Mikhail Tikhomirov|I. A. Tikhomirov]], [[Dmitry Likhachov|D. S. Likhachev]], Ya. S. Lurie, V. I. Koretsky, V. I. Buganov, etc.<ref>Viktor Ziborov. [https://docplayer.ru/51525863-Studencheskaya-biblioteka-v-k-ziborov-uchebnoe-posobie-hrestomatiya.html Russian letopis of the XI-XVIII centuries] (in Russian). - St. Petersburg: Philological Faculty of St. Petersburg State University, 2002.</ref> |
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The study and publication of the Belarusian-Lithuanian letopises were carried out by scientists from [[Poland]] (I. Danilovich, S. Smolka, A. Prohaska, S. Ptashitsky, Ya. Yakubovsky, E. Okhmansky), [[Russia]] ([[Mikhail Tikhomirov|I. A. Tikhomirov]], [[Alexey Shakhmatov|A. A. Shakhmatov]], M. D. Priselkov, V. T. Pashuto, B. N. Florya), [[Ukraine]] (M. S. Grushevsky, F. Sushitsky), [[Belarus]] (V. A. Chemeritsky, N. N. Ulashchik), [[Lithuania]] (M. Yuchas, R. Yasas).<ref name="Polenov" /> |
The study and publication of the Belarusian-Lithuanian letopises were carried out by scientists from [[Poland]] (I. Danilovich, S. Smolka, A. Prohaska, S. Ptashitsky, Ya. Yakubovsky, E. Okhmansky), [[Russia]] ([[Mikhail Tikhomirov|I. A. Tikhomirov]], [[Alexey Shakhmatov|A. A. Shakhmatov]], M. D. Priselkov, V. T. Pashuto, B. N. Florya), [[Ukraine]] (M. S. Grushevsky, F. Sushitsky), [[Belarus]] (V. A. Chemeritsky, N. N. Ulashchik), [[Lithuania]] (M. Yuchas, R. Yasas).<ref name="Polenov" /> |
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== List of Rus' chronicles == |
== <span class="anchor" id="List of Rus' chronicles"></span>List of chronicles == |
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This list alphabetically sorts Rus' chronicles (that is, texts with the same [[narrative]] that may have been found in multiple manuscripts, in multiple codices) according to their English Wikipedia article titles. |
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===Medieval chronicles=== |
===Medieval chronicles=== |
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* ''[[Academic Chronicle]]'' (''Moscow Academic Chronicle''; continues the ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle]]'' from 1206 up to the year 1418/9, with the text covering 1207–1237 being identical to that found in the ''[[Sofia First Chronicle]]'') |
* ''[[Academic Chronicle]]'' (''Moscow Academic Chronicle''; continues the ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle]]'' from 1206 up to the year 1418/9, with the text covering 1207–1237 being identical to that found in the ''[[Sofia First Chronicle]]''){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
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* ''[[Chronicler of Pereyaslavl-Suzdal]]'' (LPS; {{circa}} 1470){{sfn|Timberlake|2000|p=239}} |
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* ''{{ill|Ermolin Chronicle|ru|Ермолинская летопись}}'' (compilation, {{circa}} 1490) |
* ''{{ill|Ermolin Chronicle|ru|Ермолинская летопись}}'' (compilation, {{circa}} 1490){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
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* ''[[Galician–Volhynian Chronicle]]'' (continuation of the ''[[Kievan Chronicle]]'', covering the years 1200–1292,{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} written in the 13th century.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}}) |
* ''[[Galician–Volhynian Chronicle]]'' (continuation of the ''[[Kievan Chronicle]]'', covering the years 1200–1292,{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} written in the 13th century.{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}}) |
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* ''[[Ioachim Chronicle]]'' (17th-century compilation); authenticity disputed. |
* ''[[Ioachim Chronicle]]'' (17th-century compilation); [[Tatishchev information|authenticity disputed]].{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible]]'' or ''Tsar Book'' ({{circa}} 1570) |
* ''[[Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible]]'' or ''Tsar Book'' ({{circa}} 1570){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Kazan Chronicle]]'' or ''Kazan History'' (written {{circa}} 1560–1565, first printed in 1790) |
* ''[[Kazan Chronicle]]'' or ''Kazan History'' (written {{circa}} 1560–1565, first printed in 1790){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''{{ill| |
* ''{{ill|Kholmogordskaya Chronicle|ru|Холмогорская летопись}}'' (mid-16th century){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Kievan Chronicle]]'' (''Kiev/Kyiv/Kyivan Chronicle'', "KC"; commissioned by [[Rurik Rostislavich]] as a continuation of the ''Primary Chronicle''{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}}) |
* ''[[Kievan Chronicle]]'' (''Kiev/Kyiv/Kyivan Chronicle'', "KC"; commissioned by [[Rurik Rostislavich]] as a continuation of the ''Primary Chronicle''{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}}) |
||
* [[Lvov Chronicle (16th century)|''Lvov Chronicle'' ("LL"; 16th century)]], not to be confused with the 17th-century ''[[Lviv Chronicle]]'' |
* [[Lvov Chronicle (16th century)|''Lvov Chronicle'' ("LL"; 16th century)]], not to be confused with the 17th-century ''[[Lviv Chronicle]]''{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Nikon Chronicle]]'' (mid-16th-century compilation) |
* ''[[Nikon Chronicle]]'' (mid-16th-century compilation){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Novgorod First Chronicle]]'' (NPL;{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=255}} one of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, contains information older than the ''Primary Chronicle'', and sometimes differs from it{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=255}}) |
* ''[[Novgorod First Chronicle]]'' (NPL;{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=255}} one of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, contains information older than the ''Primary Chronicle'', and sometimes differs from it{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=255}}) |
||
* ''[[Novgorod Fourth Chronicle]]'' ("N4";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} 15th century; hypothetical source: [[Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod]]{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}}) |
* ''[[Novgorod Fourth Chronicle]]'' ("N4";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} 15th century; hypothetical source: [[Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod]]{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}}) |
||
* ''[[Novgorod Second Chronicle]]'' ("N2"; 16th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
* ''[[Novgorod Second Chronicle]]'' ("N2"; 16th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
||
* ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' (PVL,{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} ''Tale of Bygone Years''; covering the years 852–1110s. One of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, found in many manuscripts and codices including the ''[[Laurentian Codex]]'',{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} ''[[Hypatian Codex]]'',{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}}{{sfn|Ostrowski|2018|p=36}} ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle|Königsberg Manuscript (of the Radziwiłł Chronicle)]]'', and others) |
* ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' (PVL,{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} ''Tale of Bygone Years''; covering the years 852–1110s. One of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, found in many manuscripts and codices including the ''[[Laurentian Codex]]'',{{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75}} ''[[Hypatian Codex]]'',{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}}{{sfn|Ostrowski|2018|p=36}} ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle|Königsberg Manuscript (of the Radziwiłł Chronicle)]]'', and others) |
||
* '' |
* ''[[Pskov Chronicles]]'' (15th–17th century): ''First'', ''Second'' and ''Third''.{{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle]]'' (continuation of the ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' up to the year 1206) |
* ''[[Radziwiłł Chronicle]]'' (continuation of the ''[[Primary Chronicle]]'' up to the year 1206){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''{{ill|Rogozh Chronicle|ru|Рогожский летописец}}'' ({{circa}} 1450{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}}) |
* ''{{ill|Rogozh Chronicle|ru|Рогожский летописец}}'' ({{circa}} 1450{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}}) |
||
* ''[[Simeon Chronicle]]'' ("Sim.";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} written {{circa}} 1490s, earliest extant manuscript 16th century{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}}) |
* ''[[Simeon Chronicle]]'' ("Sim.";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} written {{circa}} 1490s, earliest extant manuscript 16th century{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}}) |
||
* ''[[Sofia First Chronicle]]'' ("S1";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} last quarter of the 15th century;{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}} covering the years 852–1418, with sporadic additions up to 1471. Hypothetical source: [[Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod]]{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}}) |
* ''[[Sofia First Chronicle]]'' ("S1";{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} last quarter of the 15th century;{{sfn|Halperin|2001|p=256}} covering the years 852–1418, with sporadic additions up to 1471. Hypothetical source: [[Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod]]{{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}}) |
||
* ''[[Sofia Second Chronicle]]'' (16th century) |
* ''[[Sofia Second Chronicle]]'' (16th century){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Suzdalian Chronicle]]'' (14th century; preserved in Lav., Rad., Aka, and LPS) |
* ''[[Suzdalian Chronicle]]'' (14th century; preserved in Lav., Rad., Aka, and LPS){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Trinity Chronicle]]'' ("TL"; early 15th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
* ''[[Trinity Chronicle]]'' ("TL"; early 15th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
||
* ''[[Tver Chronicle]]'' ("Tver"; 16th century, includes material from {{circa}} 1400){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} |
* ''[[Tver Chronicle]]'' ("Tver"; 16th century, includes material from {{circa}} 1400){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=257}} |
||
* ''{{ill|Typographic Chronicle|ru|Типографская летопись}}'' ({{circa}} 1500) |
* ''{{ill|Typographic Chronicle|ru|Типографская летопись}}'' ({{circa}} 1500){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
||
* ''[[Vladimir Chronicler]]'' (''Vladimirskiy letopisets''; "Vlad."; 16th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
* ''[[Vladimir Chronicler]]'' (''Vladimirskiy letopisets''; "Vlad."; 16th century){{sfn|Dimnik|2004|p=256}} |
||
* ''{{ill|Volyn Short Chronicle|uk|Волинський короткий літопис}}'' ({{circa}} 1500, covering the years 852–1500){{citation needed|date=May 2024}} |
|||
=== Lithuanian Chronicles === |
=== Lithuanian Chronicles === |
||
The (Belarusian-)[[Lithuanian Chronicles]] are a 14th–16th-century grouping of chronicles written in the [[Ruthenian language]] for the purpose of Lithuanian patriotism.<ref name=tar>{{cite encyclopedia | editor-first=Jonas|editor-last=Zinkus | encyclopedia=Tarybų Lietuvos enciklopedija | title=Lietuvos metraščiai | year=1986 | publisher=Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija | volume=2 | location=Vilnius | pages=584–585 |language=lt |oclc=20017802|display-editors=etal}}</ref> |
The (Belarusian-)[[Lithuanian Chronicles]] are a 14th–16th-century grouping of chronicles written in the [[Ruthenian language]] for the purpose of Lithuanian patriotism.<ref name=tar>{{cite encyclopedia | editor-first=Jonas|editor-last=Zinkus | encyclopedia=Tarybų Lietuvos enciklopedija | title=Lietuvos metraščiai | year=1986 | publisher=Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija | volume=2 | location=Vilnius | pages=584–585 |language=lt |oclc=20017802|display-editors=etal}}</ref> |
||
* ''[[Bychowiec Chronicle]]'' (''Bykhovets Chronicle''){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75–76}}<ref name=Jonynas>{{cite encyclopedia |first=Ignas |last=Jonynas |title=Bychovco kronika |url=http://www.epaveldas.lt/recordText/LNB/C1B0003447730/I.Jonynas_Bychovco_kronika.pdf?exId=327366&seqNr=5 |encyclopedia=Lietuviškoji enciklopedija |language=lt |location=Kaunas |publisher=Spaudos fondas |year=1934 |volume=3 |oclc=1012854}}</ref><ref name=Gudmantas>{{cite journal|first= Kęstutis |last=Gudmantas |title=Lietuvos metraščio Vavelio nuorašas (fragmentas) |journal=Senoji Lietuvos literatūra |year=2012 |volume=34 |pages=122, 126 |issn=1822-3656 |language=lt |url=http://www.llti.lt/failai/SLL34_internetui_6.pdf}}</ref> |
* ''[[Bychowiec Chronicle]]'' (''Bykhovets Chronicle''){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=75–76}}<ref name=Jonynas>{{cite encyclopedia |first=Ignas |last=Jonynas |title=Bychovco kronika |url=http://www.epaveldas.lt/recordText/LNB/C1B0003447730/I.Jonynas_Bychovco_kronika.pdf?exId=327366&seqNr=5 |encyclopedia=Lietuviškoji enciklopedija |language=lt |location=Kaunas |publisher=Spaudos fondas |year=1934 |volume=3 |oclc=1012854}}</ref><ref name=Gudmantas>{{cite journal|first= Kęstutis |last=Gudmantas |title=Lietuvos metraščio Vavelio nuorašas (fragmentas) |journal=Senoji Lietuvos literatūra |year=2012 |volume=34 |pages=122, 126 |issn=1822-3656 |language=lt |url=http://www.llti.lt/failai/SLL34_internetui_6.pdf}}</ref> |
||
* ''{{ill|Chronicle of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Ruthenia and Samogitia|uk|Хроніка Великого князівства Литовського, Руського і Жемайтського}}'' (1520s) |
|||
=== Ukrainian Chronicles === |
=== Ukrainian Chronicles === |
||
Line 195: | Line 162: | ||
* ''[[Hustyn Chronicle]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
* ''[[Hustyn Chronicle]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
||
* ''[[Lviv Chronicle]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
* ''[[Lviv Chronicle]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
||
* '' |
* ''[[Mezhyhirya Chronicle]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
||
* ''[[Ostroh Chronicler]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
* ''[[Ostroh Chronicler]]'' (17th century){{sfn|Katchanovski|Kohut|Nesebio|Yurkevich|2013|p=76}} |
||
Line 213: | Line 180: | ||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
{{Commons}} |
{{Commons}} |
||
⚫ | |||
* [[Nestor the Chronicler]] |
|||
* [[Kormchaia]] |
|||
* ''[[Merilo Pravednoye]]'' |
* ''[[Merilo Pravednoye]]'' |
||
⚫ | |||
* ''[[De moribus tartarorum, lituanorum et moscorum]]'' |
* ''[[De moribus tartarorum, lituanorum et moscorum]]'' |
||
* [[Freising manuscripts]] |
* [[Freising manuscripts]] |
||
* ''[[The legend of Sloven and Rus]]' and the city of Slovensk'', a 17th-century Muscovite chronicle legend |
|||
== References == |
== References == |
||
Line 233: | Line 199: | ||
* Priselkov Приселков М.Д. История русского летописания XI—XV вв. — Л., 1940. |
* Priselkov Приселков М.Д. История русского летописания XI—XV вв. — Л., 1940. |
||
* Priselkov Приселков М.Д. Троицкая летопись: Реконструкция текста. – 2-е изд. – СПб.: Наука, 2002. – 512, [2] с. |
* Priselkov Приселков М.Д. Троицкая летопись: Реконструкция текста. – 2-е изд. – СПб.: Наука, 2002. – 512, [2] с. |
||
* [[Aleksey Shakhmatov]]. Investigation on the Oldest Rus' Chronicle Svods. — Saint Petersburg: Printing-House of M.A. Aleksandrov, 1908. — XX, 686 p. — Reprint from Chronicle of Work of [[Archaeographic Commission|Imperial Archaeographic Commission]]. — Vol. 20. ({{ |
* [[Aleksey Shakhmatov]]. Investigation on the Oldest Rus' Chronicle Svods. — Saint Petersburg: Printing-House of M.A. Aleksandrov, 1908. — XX, 686 p. — Reprint from Chronicle of Work of [[Archaeographic Commission|Imperial Archaeographic Commission]]. — Vol. 20. ({{langx|ru|[https://archive.org/details/razyskaniiaodre01shakgoog Шахматов А.А. Разыскания о древнейших русских летописных сводах]. – СПб.: Типография М.А. Александрова, 1908. — XX, 686 с. — Оттиск из кн.: Летописи занятий Императорской Археографической Комиссии. — Т. 20}}). |
||
* Aleksey Shakhmatov. Review of Rus' Chronicle Svods of 14th—16th Century. Moscow / ed. by A.S. Orlov, [[Boris Grekov]]; [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Academy of Sciences of USSR]], Institute of Literature. — Moscow, [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]]: [[Nauka (publisher)|Publisher of Academy of Sciences of USSR]], 1938. — 372 p. ({{ |
* Aleksey Shakhmatov. Review of Rus' Chronicle Svods of 14th—16th Century. Moscow / ed. by A.S. Orlov, [[Boris Grekov]]; [[Russian Academy of Sciences|Academy of Sciences of USSR]], Institute of Literature. — Moscow, [[Saint Petersburg|Leningrad]]: [[Nauka (publisher)|Publisher of Academy of Sciences of USSR]], 1938. — 372 p. ({{langx|ru|Шахматов А.А. Обозрение русских летописных сводов XIV—XVI вв. / отв. ред.: А.С. Орлов, акад. Б.Д. Греков; АН СССР, Институт литературы. – М.; Л.: Издательство АН СССР, 1938. — 372 с.}}). |
||
* Suhomlinov Сухомлинов М.И. О древней русской летописи как памятнике литературном. — СПб., 1856. |
* Suhomlinov Сухомлинов М.И. О древней русской летописи как памятнике литературном. — СПб., 1856. |
||
* Дмитриева Р.П. Библиография русского летописания. — М.; Л., 1962 |
* Дмитриева Р.П. Библиография русского летописания. — М.; Л., 1962 |
||
Line 243: | Line 209: | ||
* [http://www.molitvoslov.by/biblioteka/spravochnaya-literatura/slovar-knizhnikov-i-knizhnosti-drevney-rusi Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси] / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987. — Вып. 1 (XI – первая половина XIV в.). — С. 234—251; Л.: Наука, 1989. — Вып. 2, ч. 2. — С. 17—18, 20—69. |
* [http://www.molitvoslov.by/biblioteka/spravochnaya-literatura/slovar-knizhnikov-i-knizhnosti-drevney-rusi Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси] / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. [[Dmitry Likhachov|Д.С. Лихачев]]. — Л.: Наука, 1987. — Вып. 1 (XI – первая половина XIV в.). — С. 234—251; Л.: Наука, 1989. — Вып. 2, ч. 2. — С. 17—18, 20—69. |
||
* Лурье Я.С. Две истории Руси XV века. — СПб., 1994. |
* Лурье Я.С. Две истории Руси XV века. — СПб., 1994. |
||
* Literature of Old Rusʹ. Biographical and Bibliographical Dictionary / ed. by Oleg Tvorogov. - Moscow: Prosvescheniye ("Enlightenment"), 1996. ({{ |
* Literature of Old Rusʹ. Biographical and Bibliographical Dictionary / ed. by Oleg Tvorogov. - Moscow: Prosvescheniye ("Enlightenment"), 1996. ({{langx|ru|[http://interpretive.ru/dictionary/1311/word/letopisi Лурье Я.С. Летописи] // Литература Древней Руси. Биобиблиографический словарь / под ред. О.В. Творогова. - М.: Просвещение, 1996}}). |
||
* Бобров А.Г. Новгородские летописи XV века. — СПб.: Дмитрий Буланин, 2000. — 287 с. |
* Бобров А.Г. Новгородские летописи XV века. — СПб.: Дмитрий Буланин, 2000. — 287 с. |
||
* [http://annals.xlegio.ru/rus/small/nis1npl.htm Гиппиус А.А. К истории сложения текста Новгородской первой летописи] // Новгородский исторический сборник. — СПб., 1997. — Вып. 6 (16) / Рос. акад. наук, Институт рос. истории, С.-Петербургский филиал; отв. ред. [[Valentin Yanin|В.Л. Янин]]. — C. 3–72. |
* [http://annals.xlegio.ru/rus/small/nis1npl.htm Гиппиус А.А. К истории сложения текста Новгородской первой летописи] // Новгородский исторический сборник. — СПб., 1997. — Вып. 6 (16) / Рос. акад. наук, Институт рос. истории, С.-Петербургский филиал; отв. ред. [[Valentin Yanin|В.Л. Янин]]. — C. 3–72. |
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* {{Cite book |author=[[Mikhail Tikhomirov]] |title=Letopis // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]. |publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia|location=Moscow|url=|date=1978|page= |isbn= }} |
* {{Cite book |author=[[Mikhail Tikhomirov]] |title=Letopis // [[Great Soviet Encyclopedia]]. |publisher=Soviet Encyclopedia|location=Moscow|url=|date=1978|page= |isbn= }} |
||
* {{Cite book |author=[[Aleksey Shakhmatov]] |title=Review of Russian letopising svods of the XIV-XVI centuries. |publisher=АН СССР|location=Moscow|url=|date=1938|page= |isbn= }} |
* {{Cite book |author=[[Aleksey Shakhmatov]] |title=Review of Russian letopising svods of the XIV-XVI centuries. |publisher=АН СССР|location=Moscow|url=|date=1938|page= |isbn= }} |
||
* {{Cite book |last1=Katchanovski |first1=Ivan |
* {{Cite book |last1=Katchanovski |first1=Ivan |last2=Kohut |first2=Zenon E. |authorlink2=Zenon Kohut |last3=Nesebio |first3=Bohdan Y. |last4=Yurkevich |first4=Myroslav |date=2013 |title=Historical Dictionary of Ukraine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-h6r57lDC4QC |location=[[Lanham, Maryland]]; [[Toronto]]; [[Plymouth]] |publisher=Scarecrow Press |pages=75–76 |chapter=Chronicles |isbn=9780810878471 |access-date=28 January 2023}} |
||
* {{Cite book|language=ru |last=Likhachov |first=Dmitry S. |authorlink=Dmitry Likhachov |title= Russian letopises and their cultural and historical significance |publisher=АН СССР |location=Moscow |url=https://www.lihachev.ru/lihachev/bibliografiya/1950/rus_let_1947/ |date=1947|page=410|isbn= |ref=Likhachov}} |
* {{Cite book|language=ru |last=Likhachov |first=Dmitry S. |authorlink=Dmitry Likhachov |title= Russian letopises and their cultural and historical significance |publisher=АН СССР |location=Moscow |url=https://www.lihachev.ru/lihachev/bibliografiya/1950/rus_let_1947/ |date=1947|page=410|isbn= |ref=Likhachov}} |
||
* {{Cite journal |last1=Timberlake |first1=Alan |date=2000 |title=Who Wrote the Laurentian Chronicle (1177–1203)? |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24003133 |journal=Zeitschrift für Slavische Philologie |publisher=Universitätsverlag WINTER |volume=59 |issue=2 |pages=237–265|jstor=24003133 }} |
|||
{{refend}} |
{{refend}} |
||
==Some editions== |
==<span class="anchor" id="Some editions"></span>Selected editions== |
||
* ''[[Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles]]'': {{ |
* ''[[Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles]]'': {{langx|ru|Полное собрание русских летописей}}. — СПб.; М, 1843; М., 1989. — Т. 1—38. |
||
* Новгородская первая летопись старшего и младшего изводов. — М.; Л., 1950. |
* Новгородская первая летопись старшего и младшего изводов. — М.; Л., 1950. |
||
* Псковские летописи.— М.; Л., 1941—1955. — Вып. 1—2. |
* Псковские летописи.— М.; Л., 1941—1955. — Вып. 1—2. |
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[[Category:Novgorod Republic]] |
[[Category:Novgorod Republic]] |
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[[Category:Cyrillic manuscripts]] |
[[Category:Cyrillic manuscripts]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Historiography of Russia]] |
Latest revision as of 00:58, 10 October 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (May 2023) |
Rusʹ chronicle | |
---|---|
Old East Slavic: лѣтопись | |
Author(s) | Primarily clergy |
Language | Old Church Slavonic and Old East Slavic |
Date | 11–18th centuries |
Genre | History |
The Rus' chronicle,[1][2][3] Russian chronicle[4][5]: 51 [6] or Rus' letopis (Old East Slavic: лѣтопись, romanized: lětopisʹ) was the primary Rus' historical literature. Chronicles were composed from the 11th to the 18th centuries, generally written in Old East Slavic (and, later, Ruthenian and Muscovite Russian), about Kievan Rus' and subsequent Rus' principalities and history.[7][8] They were one of the leading genres of Old Rus' literature in medieval and early modern Eastern and Central Europe.[9]
The chronicle was distributed in Belarus, the Czech lands, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Russia, and Ukraine.[10] Chronicles were the main historical narrative until the mid-16th century (the reign of Ivan the Terrible), when they were superseded by chronographs.[9]
Terminology
[edit]The Old East Slavic лѣтопись (lě́topisʹ) has given rise to a number of Slavic-language derivatives (Belarusian: летапіс, romanized: ljétapis; Czech: letopis; Polish: latopis; Russian: летопись, romanized: létopisʹ; Serbo-Croatian: lȅtopīs/ljȅtopīs / ље̏топӣс, litopīs / литопӣс; Ukrainian: літо́пис, romanized: litópys), and was translated into Lithuanian as metraštis. It is translated into English as "chronicle".[4][5]: 51 [11][12][13][3][14] The record of an event usually begins with the words "Въ лѣто ..." (Vŭ lě́to ..., "In the year..."; from them, the terms litopys, letopis and latopis were derived.[15][14] The chronicles contain historical documents, oral traditions (often of a mystical nature), excerpts from previous chronicles, and text by the chronicler.[7]
Origin
[edit]The construction of the oldest Russian chronicle generally accepted by modern scientists was developed by Alexey Shakhmatov. In Shakhmatov's view, the origin of the Russian chronicle was compiled c. 1039 (Mikhail Priselkov dated it to 1037) in the Kiev metropolis. According to scholarly consensus, the chronicles were originally a complete work and not divided into years.[8]
The Primary Chronicle was written c. 1113. Although its authorship is disputed, Nestor the Chronicler has traditionally been credited. In 1116, the chronicle was revised by Vydubychi Monastery abbot Sylvester. This edition is preserved as part of the Laurentian letopis. In 1118, its third edition was written by an unknown author on behalf of Novgorod knyaz Mstislav I of Kiev. It was preserved as part of the Hypatian Codex. Dmitry Likhachov, following Nikolay Nikolsky, deduced the beginning of the Rus' chronicle from West Slavic Moravian legends.[16]
Attention, especially in the northern chronicles, was paid to the Old Rus' knyazi; despite the clerical composition of most of the chronicles, many texts depict them as chosen by pagan gods. The Rurikids were emphasized.[17]
Folk legends and stories were sources. Historical distortions were not permitted; according to Shakhmatov, any mystical motives or phenomena in a chronicle was because the author believed in their truth or significance.[8]
During the 1850s and 1860s it was thought that the Rus' chronicle originated as annals and evolved into a narrative, a view supported by Michael Sukhomlinov and Izmail Sreznevsky. This theory has been revived by Alexey Gippius and Alexey Tolochko), who believe that the chronicle was written as svods (annals) until the Primary Chronicle. The annals were brief, factual, and lacked complex narrative structure. Over time their accuracy increased, dates appeared, the volume of information expanded, and narrative additions were made.[18]
History
[edit]The Rus' chronicles began to be systematically prepared during the mid-11th century. There were two centers of chronicle preparation in this early period: Kiev (the capital of early Rus') and Novgorod. The Primary Chronicle, at the beginning of the 12th century, was a combination of Kievan and Novgorodian chronicles (including the Novgorod First Chronicle and survives in the Laurentian and Hypatian codices. Chronicles of the 12th- and 13th-century Kievan Rus' principalities survive in the Hypatian Codex,[9][19][20] which includes the Kievan Chronicle (covering 1118 to 1200) and the Galician–Volhynian Chronicle (covering Galicia and Volhynia from 1201 to 1292).[21] Late 12th- and early 13th-century chronicles of Rostov, Pereyaslavl and Vladimir-Suzdal survive in the Laurentian Codex and the Radziwiłł Chronicle.[9][19][20]
The late-13th- and early-14th-century Hypatian Codex survives in 15th-to-18th-century сopies.[21] A 1377 copy of the 14th-century Laurentian Codex survives.[22]
The 1375 Tverian annals are part of the Rogozhskiy Chronicle and the 16th-century Tverian Collection.[9][19][20] A chronicle related to Cyprian, Metropolitan of Moscow covered up to 1408 and survived as the Trinity Chronicle until the 1812 Fire of Moscow. It was reconstructed by Mikhail Prisyolkov.[23] A chronicle made in Tver c. 1412 contained revisions similar to the late-14th–early-15th-century Trinity Chronicle. The 1430s Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod, compiled at the office of the Moscow Metropolitan, may have combined the Sofia First and Novgorod Fourth Chronicles.[9][19][20]
The first known Grand Duchy of Moscow chronicles appeared during the mid-15th century. A 1470s compilation included the first part of the Yermolin Chronicle. The Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery chronicle contained the second part of the Yermolin Chronicle. The Sofia Second Chronicle is thought to have derived from the Lvov Chronicle. The Ioasaf Chronicle, covering 1437–1520, was made at the end of the 1520s at the office of the Moscow Metropolitan and was a source for the Nikon Chronicle. The multi-volume Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible was compiled. Seventeenth- and eighteenth-century chronicles, such as the late-16th-to-18th-century Siberian Chronicles, were local, provincial texts.[9][19][20][24][25]
Fourteenth-to-sixteenth-century Belarusian-Lithuanian chronicles such as the Suprasl, Bykhovets, and Barkulabovo chronicles continued the tradition of Rus' chronicles.[26][27][28] A group of 17th- and early-18th-century Ukrainian chronicles have survived, including the Hustynia, Lviv, Mezhyhiria, and Ostrih chronicles, the Chroniclers of Volhynia and Ukraine collection, the Eyewitness Chronicle, and the Chronicles of Hryhorii Hrabianka and Samiilo Velychko.[29] These chronicles describe the rebellions, society, policies and international relations of the Cossack Hetmanate and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth and their wars with the Crimean Khanate and Ottoman Empire.[29]
The oldest Polish chronicle written in Latin was Gesta principum Polonorum, at the beginning of the 12th century.[30] Maciej Stryjkowski wrote the Chronicle of Poland, Lithuania, Samogitia and all of Ruthenia (1582), generally considered the first printed history of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.[31]
Purpose
[edit]After the 12th and 13th centuries, Rus' chronicles were usually produced by monasteries or at the courts of princes and bishops.[14] Later editors were increasingly concerned with compiling and revising existing writings.[26]
Textual comparison indicates a pronounced political orientation and abrupt changes.[32] Shakhmatov and his colleagues sought to establish the identity and views of their authors and to place a chronicle in its contemporary political struggle.[8] D. S. Likhachev, V. G. Mirzoev, and A. F. Milonov wrote about the educational and didactic purposes of the old Russian chronicles.[33][34][35]
According to Igor Danilevsky, the chronicles had an eschatological purpose. Since the second half of the 11th century, they were "books of life" which would appear at the last judgment.[36] According to Timothy Himon, Danilevsky's arguments are indirect. Himon suggests that the chronicles had several goals, including the recording of sacred and unusual events and reinforcing power; the chronicle is considered a tool of political power.[37]
Сharacteristics
[edit]The chroniclers were primarily clergy. Rus' chronicles were composed in monasteries, at the courts of princes, the tsars of Moscow and the kings of Galicia-Volhynia, and in the offices of metropolitan bishops. The chronicles (often contradicting each other) typically consisted of collections of short factual entries for the preceding year and speeches and dialogues by princes. The Rus' chronicles contain narratives about the settlement of the Eastern Slavs and neighbouring peoples, how Kievan Rus' was founded and developed, and its diplomatic relations, society, culture, and religion.[14] The chronicler would sometimes provide an extended, embellished narrative on the most significant events of Rus' history.[9]
Aleksey Shakhmatov was the leading expert in the textual criticism of Rus' chronicles. Shakhmatov considered the main part of the chronicle texts svods (collections of records from different sources), with every new chronicle a collection of previous chronicles and newly-added historical records.[19][20]
Many of the chronicles have become viewed as annals produced in state or church offices. The hypothetical Novgorod Archbishop Chronicle is believed to have been prepared at the office of the Diocese of Novgorod from the 12th to the 14th centuries, and was the basis of the 15th-century Novgorod First Chronicle.[38]
Sources
[edit]Sources for the oldest chronicles include Byzantine and South Slavic texts on sacred history and other subjects, the chronicle of George Hamartolos on the Generations of Noah in the Primary Chronicle,[39] legends, legal documents (such as the Rus'–Byzantine Treaties in the Primary Chronicle and a short version of Russkaya Pravda in the Novgorod First Chronicle), and historical records.[19][20]
Copies
[edit]Rus' chronicles survive in codices. Some chronicles have several versions, but others are known from only one copy. Every chronicle was a collection of materials from earlier chronicles. Individual chronicles were revised, shortened or expanded with entries on the events of the last year (or decade), and dozens of such collections may exist.[9]
Timeline
[edit]The early-12th-century Primary Chronicle, describing the early history of Kievan Rus', is the oldest surviving Rus' chronicle. Aleksey Shakhmatov noted that a number of entries about 11th-century Novgorod are present in the 15th-century Novgorod First Chronicle but absent from the Primary Chronicle. This led Shakhmatov to theorize that the beginning of the Novgorod First Chronicle includes text older than that in the Primary Chronicle. He called it the "Primary Svod", and dated it to the end of the 11th century as a basis for the Primary Chronicle. If two or more chronicles coincide up to a particular year, one chronicle is copied from another (rare) or they had a common source. Shakhmatov developed a timeline of the old Rus' chronicles, connecting most of them and demonstrating that the extant 14th-to-17th-century chronicles date back to the Primary Svod, earlier, hypothetical 11th-century and late-10th-century historical records. His method and theories became a mainstay of Rus' chronicle studies.[19][20][38][42]
Textual criticism
[edit]An estimated 5,000 svods exist.[43] Most have not been preserved as originals; only copies and partial revisions created between the 13th and 19th centuries, including the oldest 11th- and 12th-century chronicles, are known.[44]
Many of the oldest chronicles have not survived. Each principality had a court chronicler to describe its history and defend its views. During the 15th century, chronicles such as the Pskov Letopises and western Russian chronicles were hostile to the Principality of Moscow.[45] The travel story A Journey Beyond the Three Seas was incorporated into the 16th-century Lvov Chronicle and the Sofia Second Chronicle.
Influence on dream visions
[edit]Nikolai Prokofiev and Rosalia Shor noted an occasional dream-vision motif in old Russian chronicles.[46] In her article, "The Genre of Visions in Ancient Russian Literature", Alla Soboleva notes the chronicles' unusual worldview.[47] An illustration c. 1495 in the Slavic manuscript of Cosmas Indicopleustes' sixth-century Christian Topography depicts the sun going underground at sunset and, according to Yegor Redin, was incorporated into the Old Russian chronicles.[48]
Historian Igor Froyanov cites a scene in the Novgorod First Chronicle and the Primary Chronicle where volkhvs (wizards) talk about the creation of humanity:
Yan Vyshatich asked, "How do you think man came to be?" The volkhvs answered, "God bathed in the bath and sweated, wiped himself with a rag and threw it from heaven to the earth; and the devil created man, and God put his soul into him. Therefore, when a person dies, the body goes to the earth, and the soul goes to God".[49]
Two wizards reportedly appeared in Novgorod in 1071 and began to sow unrest, saying that the Dnieper would soon flow backwards and the land would move.[50] Most chronicles have digressions which predict the future, describe strange phenomena, and discuss their meaning from a mystical point of view.[51]
Historiography
[edit]Most scholars view the chronicles as historical sources as well as works of art. Vasily Klyuchevsky used them as a historical source along with the lives of the saints.[52]
Early period
[edit]Study of the history of Old Russian chronicles was begun by Vasily Tatishchev and Mikhail Shcherbatov, whose work impacted the emergence of source criticism as a science. Using Tatishchev and Stroev's method, Mikhail Pogodin discovered how the chronicles were constructed. Mikhail Sukhomlinov's 1856 On the Ancient Russian Chronicle as a Literary Monument attempted to establish the literary sources of the initial chronicle. Bestuzhev-Ryumin's 1868 On the Composition of Russian Chronicles Until the End of the 14th Century deconstructed chronicle text into annual records and legends.
A new stage in the study of Russian chronicles was begun by Alexey Shakhmatov (1864-1920). His comparative textual method compared lists and analyzed text. Shakhmatov sought to learn about the circumstances of the creation of each chronicle through chronology, printing and language errors, and dialectic.
Modern period
[edit]Starting with Shakhmatov, the main analysis of the text of the chronicles recognizes the comparison of two or more chronicles throughout their length, and not fragmentary observations. The method of Shakhmatov was developed by Mikhail Priselkov, who placed more emphasis on the historical aspect ("History of Russian Chronicles of the XI—XV centuries", 1940).
Shakhmatov's genealogy was developed and revised by his followers, among whom the greatest contribution to the study of Russian chronicles was made by Nikolai Lavrov, Arseny Nasonov, Lev Cherepnin, Dmitry Likhachev, Sergey Bakhrushin, Alexander Andreev, Mikhail Tikhomirov, Nikolai Nikolsky, Vasily Istrin, etc. Shakhmatov's methodology formed the basis of modern textology.[53]
The study of letopis texts has become widespread in modern Russia and other countries. Among the researchers of the second half of the XX century, the greatest contribution to the study of old Russian letopises was made by I. A. Tikhomirov, D. S. Likhachev, Ya. S. Lurie, V. I. Koretsky, V. I. Buganov, etc.[54]
The study and publication of the Belarusian-Lithuanian letopises were carried out by scientists from Poland (I. Danilovich, S. Smolka, A. Prohaska, S. Ptashitsky, Ya. Yakubovsky, E. Okhmansky), Russia (I. A. Tikhomirov, A. A. Shakhmatov, M. D. Priselkov, V. T. Pashuto, B. N. Florya), Ukraine (M. S. Grushevsky, F. Sushitsky), Belarus (V. A. Chemeritsky, N. N. Ulashchik), Lithuania (M. Yuchas, R. Yasas).[10]
List of chronicles
[edit]Medieval chronicles
[edit]- Academic Chronicle (Moscow Academic Chronicle; continues the Radziwiłł Chronicle from 1206 up to the year 1418/9, with the text covering 1207–1237 being identical to that found in the Sofia First Chronicle)[citation needed]
- Chronicler of Pereyaslavl-Suzdal (LPS; c. 1470)[55]
- Ermolin Chronicle (compilation, c. 1490)[citation needed]
- Galician–Volhynian Chronicle (continuation of the Kievan Chronicle, covering the years 1200–1292,[56] written in the 13th century.[14])
- Ioachim Chronicle (17th-century compilation); authenticity disputed.[citation needed]
- Illustrated Chronicle of Ivan the Terrible or Tsar Book (c. 1570)[citation needed]
- Kazan Chronicle or Kazan History (written c. 1560–1565, first printed in 1790)[citation needed]
- Kholmogordskaya Chronicle (mid-16th century)[citation needed]
- Kievan Chronicle (Kiev/Kyiv/Kyivan Chronicle, "KC"; commissioned by Rurik Rostislavich as a continuation of the Primary Chronicle[56])
- Lvov Chronicle ("LL"; 16th century), not to be confused with the 17th-century Lviv Chronicle[citation needed]
- Nikon Chronicle (mid-16th-century compilation)[citation needed]
- Novgorod First Chronicle (NPL;[57] one of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, contains information older than the Primary Chronicle, and sometimes differs from it[57])
- Novgorod Fourth Chronicle ("N4";[58] 15th century; hypothetical source: Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod[58])
- Novgorod Second Chronicle ("N2"; 16th century)[58]
- Primary Chronicle (PVL,[56] Tale of Bygone Years; covering the years 852–1110s. One of the oldest and most important Rus' chronicles, found in many manuscripts and codices including the Laurentian Codex,[14] Hypatian Codex,[56][59] Königsberg Manuscript (of the Radziwiłł Chronicle), and others)
- Pskov Chronicles (15th–17th century): First, Second and Third.[citation needed]
- Radziwiłł Chronicle (continuation of the Primary Chronicle up to the year 1206)[citation needed]
- Rogozh Chronicle (c. 1450[60])
- Simeon Chronicle ("Sim.";[58] written c. 1490s, earliest extant manuscript 16th century[60])
- Sofia First Chronicle ("S1";[58] last quarter of the 15th century;[60] covering the years 852–1418, with sporadic additions up to 1471. Hypothetical source: Novgorodsko-Sofiysky Svod[58])
- Sofia Second Chronicle (16th century)[citation needed]
- Suzdalian Chronicle (14th century; preserved in Lav., Rad., Aka, and LPS)[citation needed]
- Trinity Chronicle ("TL"; early 15th century)[58]
- Tver Chronicle ("Tver"; 16th century, includes material from c. 1400)[56]
- Typographic Chronicle (c. 1500)[citation needed]
- Vladimir Chronicler (Vladimirskiy letopisets; "Vlad."; 16th century)[58]
- Volyn Short Chronicle (c. 1500, covering the years 852–1500)[citation needed]
Lithuanian Chronicles
[edit]The (Belarusian-)Lithuanian Chronicles are a 14th–16th-century grouping of chronicles written in the Ruthenian language for the purpose of Lithuanian patriotism.[61]
- Bychowiec Chronicle (Bykhovets Chronicle)[26][62][63]
- Chronicle of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Ruthenia and Samogitia (1520s)
Ukrainian Chronicles
[edit]The Ukrainian Chronicles are a 17th–18th-century grouping of chronicles written in Late Ruthenian (early modern Ukrainian).
- Chroniclers of Volyn and Ukraine (17th-century collection of twelve chronicles)[29]
- Hustyn Chronicle (17th century)[29]
- Lviv Chronicle (17th century)[29]
- Mezhyhirya Chronicle (17th century)[29]
- Ostroh Chronicler (17th century)[29]
Cossack Chronicles
[edit]The Cossack Chronicles are a 17th–18th-century subgroup of the early modern Ukrainian Chronicles.
- Chronicle of Hrabyanka by Hryhoriy Hrabyanka[29]
- Chronicle of Samiilo Velychko by Samiilo Velychko[29]
- Eyewitness Chronicle[29]
Siberian Chronicles
[edit]The Siberian Chronicles were written from the end of the 16th century to the 18th century:
See also
[edit]- Kórmchaia Book
- Merilo Pravednoye
- De moribus tartarorum, lituanorum et moscorum
- Freising manuscripts
- The legend of Sloven and Rus' and the city of Slovensk, a 17th-century Muscovite chronicle legend
References
[edit]- ^ Lunt, Horace G. (1995). "What the Rusʹ Primary Chronicle Tells Us about the Origin of the Slavs and of Slavic Writing". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. 19: 335–357. ISSN 0363-5570. JSTOR 41037009.
- ^ The Chronicle of Novgorod, 1016–1471. Royal Historical Society. 1914.
- ^ a b Sužiedėlis, Simas, ed. (1970–1978). "Chronicles, Lithuanian". Encyclopedia Lituanica. Vol. I. Boston, Massachusetts: Juozas Kapočius. pp. 519–521. OCLC 95559.
- ^ a b "The Russian Primary Chronicle". Britannica.
- ^ a b Cross, Samuel Hazzard; Sherbowitz-Wetzor, Olgerd P., eds. (1953). The Russian Primary Chronicle, Laurentian Text. Cambridge, MA: The Mediaeval Academy of America.
- ^ Lunt, Horace G. (1988). "On Interpreting the Russian Primary Chronicle: The Year 1037". The Slavic and East European Journal. 32 (2): 251–264. doi:10.2307/308891. JSTOR 308891.
- ^ a b D.S.Likhachov; N. Ponyrko (1986). Izbornik: The Stories Of Ancient Russia (in Russian). Moscow: Художественная литература. p. 410. ISBN 3-515-07560-7.
- ^ a b c d Alexey Shakhmatov All-Russian letopis svods of the XIV and XV centuries // Журнал Министерства народного просвещения. 1900. № 9, pp. 90—176; № 11, pp. 135—200; 1901. № 11, pp. 52—80; Search for the oldest Russian letopis vaults. SPb., 1908.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Lurye, Yakov. Chronicles // Literature of Old Rusʹ. Biographical and Bibliographical Dictionary / ed. by Oleg Tvorogov. - Moscow: Prosvescheniye ("Enlightenment"), 1996. (Russian: Лурье Я.С. Летописи // Литература Древней Руси. Биобиблиографический словарь / под ред. О.В. Творогова. - М.: Просвещение, 1996).
- ^ a b Polenov S. V. (2010). The letopises of the Belarusian-Lithuanian / of Polenov S. V. // Las Tunas. Moscow. p. 350. ISBN 978-5-85270-350-7.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Lunt, Horace G. (1988). "On Interpreting the Russian Primary Chronicle: The Year 1037". The Slavic and East European Journal. 32 (2): 251–264. doi:10.2307/308891. JSTOR 308891.
- ^ Lunt, Horace G. (1995). "What the Rus' Primary Chronicle Tells Us about the Origin of the Slavs and of Slavic Writing". Harvard Ukrainian Studies. 19: 335–357. ISSN 0363-5570. JSTOR 41037009.
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- ^ Лурье Я.С. Летопись Лаврентьевская // Словарь книжников и книжности Древней Руси / АН СССР. ИРЛИ; Отв. ред. Д.С. Лихачев. — Л.: Наука, 1987. — Вып. 1 (XI – первая половина XIV в.).
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- ^ Victor Zibhorov Russian letopises of the XI-XVIII centuries (in Russian). — SPb.: Faculty of Philology of St. Petersburg state University, 2002.
- ^ Mikhail Tikhomirov (1978). Letopis // Great Soviet Encyclopedia (in Russian). Moscow: Soviet Encyclopedia.
- ^ Anatoly Sakharov. Historical knowledge / Essays on Russian culture of the XVI century. Part two. Moscow, Moscow University Press, 1976. p. 140.
- ^ Nikolai Prokofiev. Vision as a genre in Old Russian literature // Scientific Notes of the Moscow State Pedagogical Institute named after V. I. Lenin. Moscow, 1964. - Vol. 231: Questions of the style of fiction. - p. 47
- ^ Alla Borisovna Soboleva. THE GENRE OF VISIONS IN ANCIENT RUSSIAN LITERATURE (article). 2016, p. 161-163
- ^ Piotrovskaya E. K. To the study of the Old Russian version of the" Christian Topography " of Kozma Indicoplov / / Byzantine vremennik. - M., 1991. - Vol. 51. - pp. 106-111
- ^ Novgorod First Chronicle, p. 172
- ^ Igor Froyanov. About the events of 1227-1230 in Novgorod // Ancient Russia
- ^ Nikolai Prokofiev. Vision as a genre in ancient Russian literature. // Scientific notes of the Moscow state pedagogical Institute named after V. I. Lenin. - M., 1964. - Vol. 231: Questions of the style of fiction. - Pp. 37-38
- ^ See: Vasily Klyuchevsky. Old Russian lives of saints as a historical source. Moscow. 1871
- ^ Alexey Shakhmatov. Letopises // Great Soviet Encyclopedia, Moscow: Sovetskaya enciklopediya, 1969-1978.
- ^ Viktor Ziborov. Russian letopis of the XI-XVIII centuries (in Russian). - St. Petersburg: Philological Faculty of St. Petersburg State University, 2002.
- ^ Timberlake 2000, p. 239.
- ^ a b c d e Dimnik 2004, p. 257.
- ^ a b Dimnik 2004, p. 255.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Dimnik 2004, p. 256.
- ^ Ostrowski 2018, p. 36.
- ^ a b c Halperin 2001, p. 256.
- ^ Zinkus, Jonas; et al., eds. (1986). "Lietuvos metraščiai". Tarybų Lietuvos enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. 2. Vilnius: Vyriausioji enciklopedijų redakcija. pp. 584–585. OCLC 20017802.
- ^ Jonynas, Ignas (1934). "Bychovco kronika" (PDF). Lietuviškoji enciklopedija (in Lithuanian). Vol. 3. Kaunas: Spaudos fondas. OCLC 1012854.
- ^ Gudmantas, Kęstutis (2012). "Lietuvos metraščio Vavelio nuorašas (fragmentas)" (PDF). Senoji Lietuvos literatūra (in Lithuanian). 34: 122, 126. ISSN 1822-3656.
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Selected editions
[edit]- Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles: Russian: Полное собрание русских летописей. — СПб.; М, 1843; М., 1989. — Т. 1—38.
- Новгородская первая летопись старшего и младшего изводов. — М.; Л., 1950.
- Псковские летописи.— М.; Л., 1941—1955. — Вып. 1—2.
- Рассказы русских летописей XII—XIV вв. / Перевод и пояснения Т.Н. Михельсон. — М., 1968; 2-е изд. — М., 1973.
- Рассказы русских летописей XV—XVII вв. / Перевод и пояснения Т.Н. Михельсон — М., 1976,
- Севернорусский летописный свод 1472 года / Подг. текста и комм Я.С. Лурье; Перевод В.В. Колесова // Памятники литературы Древней Руси: Вторая половина XV века. — М., 1982. — С. 410—443, 638—655.
- The Rus' Primary Chronicle, Laurentian Text. Translated and edited by Samuel Hazzard Cross and Olgerd P. Sherbowitz-Wetzor. Cambridge, MA: The Mediaeval Academy of America, 1953.
- Excerpts of Primary Chronicle, including founding of Novgorod by Rus', Attacks on Byzantines, and Conversion of Vladimir. Also mentions several Slavic tribes by name.
- A collation of Primary Chronicle by Donald Ostrowski in Cyrillic is available at https://web.archive.org/web/20050309022812/http://hudce7.harvard.edu/~ostrowski/pvl/ together with an erudite and lengthy introduction in English. This is an interlinear collation including the five main manuscript witnesses, as well as a new paradosis, or reconstruction of the original.
- The Chronicle of Novgorod 1016-1471. Intr. C. Raymond Beazley, A. A. Shakhmatov (London, 1914).
- Savignac, David (trans). The Pskov 3rd Chronicle.