A History of Russia (Classic Reprint)

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Excerpt from A History of Russia

N ovosiltz, Vorotin, Odoiev, and others and their example was followed by two of Vsevolod''s stock, the Prince of Tchernigov and the Prince of Novgorod Sieverski (respectively a son of Ivan Andreivitch of Mozhaisk and a grandson of Shemiaka).1 Now, when the said Ivan Andreivitch and Shemiaka had been worsted in their struggles with Vassilii the Dark, they had, in each case, ?ed to Lithuania, where they had acquired extensive possessions on the Desna, the Seim, the Sosh, and the Dnieper, as well as the cities of Tchernigov and Novgorod Sieverski. That is to say, they had never been anything but the bitterest of foes to Vassilii. Yet no sooner was the call sounded for a stand to be made for Orthodoxy than, forgetting their hereditary enmity, the son Of the one and the grandson of the other became subject-allies of Vassilii''s son himself l - clear evidence that, in proportion as the Muscovite union of princes broadened, it became a union constituting a military hegemony Of'' Moscow over all the other allied princes of Rus. Such were the new phenomena prominent in Moscow''s absorption of Rus from the middle of the fifteenth century onwards. First the local communities began openly to turn to Moscow, either of their own accord, or at at? Instance of their respective governments; which caused the Muscovite unification of the country to acquire a different character and a faster rate of progress. That is to say, it ceased to be a matter of seizure or of private negotiation, and became ia''nalz''oual, a religious movement. The briefest possible enumeration of Moscow''s territorial acquisitions during the times of Ivan III. And his son Vassilii will suffice to show us how greatly the political con solidation of Rus by Moscow then became accelerated. The middle of the fifteenth century was no sooner passed than principalities and free commonwealths vied with one another in transferring themselves and their provinces to Muscovite allegiance. In 1463 the Princes of Yaroslavl,. Both Suzerain and appanage, swore fealty to Ivan ititand, accepting Muscovite service, resigned their independence. Next, in the seventies oft - hé same century, there took place the conquest Of Novgorod the Great, as also of its extensive territories in Northern Rus. Next, in 1472 the Prmdpaiw Perm (where Russian colonisation 1'' had begun as early as the fourteenth century, in the time of St. Stephen of Perm) made final submission to the Muscovite ruler. Next, in 14741 the Princes of. Rostov sold the remaining half of their territory to 1 See vol. I. P. 310.

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Details

Publisher - Forgotten Books

Language - English

Hardback

Contributors

Author

V. O. Kliuchevski


Published Date -

ISBN - 9780332970202

Dimensions - 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm

Page Count - 332

Paperback

Contributors

Author

V. O. Kliuchevski


Published Date -

ISBN - 9781334080135

Dimensions - 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.8 cm

Page Count - 334

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