KIEVAN RUS

kēˈĕfən, medieval state of the Eastern Slavs. It was the earliest predecessor of modern Ukraine and Russia. Flourishing from the 10th to the 13th cent., it included nearly all of present-day Ukraine and Belarus and part of NW European Russia, extending as far N as Novgorod and Vladimir. According to the Russian Primary Chronicle, a medieval history, the Varangian Rurik established himself at Novgorod c.862 and founded a dynasty. His successor, Oleg or Oleh (d. c.912), shifted his attention to the south, seized Kiev (c.879), and established the new Kievan state. The Varangians were also known as Rus or Rhos; it is possible that this name was early extended to the Slavs of the Kievan state, which became known as Kievan Rus. Other theories trace the name Rus to a Slavic origin. Oleg united the Eastern Slavs and freed them from the suzerainty of the Khazars. His successors were Igor or Ihor (reigned 912–45) and Igor's widow, St. Olga or Olha, who was regent until about 962. Under Olga's son, Sviatoslav or Svyatoslav (d. 972), the Khazars were crushed, and Kievan power was extended to the lower Volga and N Caucasus. Christianity was introduced by Vladimir I or Volodymyr I (reigned 980–1015), who adopted (c.989) Greek Orthodoxy from the Byzantines. The reign (1019–54) of Vladimir's son, Yaroslav the Wise, represented the political and cultural apex of Kievan Rus. After his death the state was divided into principalities ruled by his sons; this soon led to civil strife. A last effort for unity was made by Vladimir II or Volodymyr II (reigned 1113–25), but the perpetual princely strife and the devastating raids of the nomadic Cumans soon ended the supremacy of Kiev. In the middle of the 12th cent. a number of local centers of power developed: Halych in the west, Novgorod in the north, Vladimir-Suzdal (see Vladimir) in the northwest, and Kiev in the south. In 1169, Kiev was sacked and pillaged by the armies of Andrei Bogolubsky of Suzdal, and the final blow to the Kievan state came with the Mongol invasion (1237–40). The economy of the Kievan state was based on agriculture and on extensive trade with Byzantium, Asia, and Scandinavia. Culture, as well as religion, was drawn from Byzantium; Church Slavonic was the literary and liturgical language of the state. According to some scholars the history of the Kievan state is the common heritage of modern Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarussians, although their existence as separate peoples has been traced as far back as the 12th cent. Ukrainian scholars consider Kievan Rus to be central to the history of the Ukraine.

See G. Vernadsky, Kievan Russia (2d ed. 1973); J. L. Evans, The Kievan Russian Principality (1981).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Kievan Rus
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books on: Kievan Rus  - 381 results

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...culture, and Sermons and Rhetoric in Kievan Rus 1991 and with Jonathan Shepard...but the same churchman working in Rus becomes Konstantin. The missionaries...and the Ioann who was head of the Kievan Church both be turned into John...
B. GREKOV KIEV RUS FOREIGN LANGUAGES PUBLISHING HOUSE MOSCOW...II. THE STATE OF ANCIENT RUS IN WORLD HISTORY 29 III. ANCIENT RUS AGRICULTURE 41...
...place of minor importance in Kievan Rus. This view was buttressed...the dynastic hierarchy of Kievan Rus. MARTIN D I MNIK is Professor...within the boundaries of the Kievan land (P. P Tolochko, Drevnyaya Rus?, Ocherki sotsialno-politicheskoy...
...West. HOW DID KIEVAN RUSSIANS MAKE A LIVING? Kiev Rus lasted from the 800s...artistic expression in Kievan Rus. Well-educated monks...Grekov B. Kiev Rus . Moscow: 1959...Noonan Thomas. "Kievan Russia." In Modern...
...The Medieval Kievan Rus Period 800-1345 A.D. 554...581 Kievan Rus before the Time of Volodymyr the Great 581 The Rise of Kievan Rus; Oleh the Seer and the Formation...
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journal articles on: Kievan Rus  - 21 results

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...and intellectual development in Kievan Rus is inseparable from the history of...linguistic environment in part I, the Kievan Rus of Franklins description is a world...taking histoire des mentalites for Kievan Rus as far as it can go. His claims for...
...culture since the Christianization of Kievan Rus in 988. Historical developments in...contemporary Ukraine. (1) The early Kievan church established over a millennia...Patriarch of Constantinople. The Kievan Metropolitanate attained greater...
...Christianity the state religion of Kievan Rus, and his descendent Vladimir Monomakh...so-called Norman theory of the origins of Kievan Rus. (7) Not only do Western scholars...importations. Thus, the pagan gods of old Rus are sometimes viewed as nothing more...
...histories that discuss the Mongols, Kievan Rus, or the various countries of East...the northern and eastern regions of Kievan Rus, such as Riazan and Suzdal, were...principalities of southern and southwestern Kievan Rus collapsed under the weight of successive...
...historical path from prehistory to Kievan Rus to the Russian Empire. Riasanovsky regards Kievan Rus to be a glorious beginning of Russian...with embedded rituals and symbols of Kievan Rus. After the demise of Kiev, Muscovite...
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magazine articles on: Kievan Rus  - 11 results

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...single-handedly converted Kievan Slavic peoples to Christianity...territories, also known as Rus, which later became Ukraine...its roots in the days of Kievan Rus, the cultural and religious...of the Slavs. Eventually Kievan Rus expanded to include Novgorod...
...Russian Orthodox Christianity. In 988 the principalities of Kievan Rus (the predecessor of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus) accepted...country: the invasion of Mongol hordes. Sweeping into Kievan Rus on small, swift horses, firing arrows of bone that pierced...
...Russian Orthodox Christianity. In 988 the principalities of Kievan Rus (the predecessor of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus) accepted...country: the invasion of Mongol hordes. Sweeping into Kievan Rus on small, swift horses, firing arrows of bone that pierced...
...attention to the remains of the ancient Kievan Rus, a rich and powerful kingdom whose...stronghold of Tustan built by the Rus atop stone outcroppings as a defense...in Kiev. Many of the other great Kievan churches were demolished in the 1930s...
...culture-inspiring role of Orthodoxy. When the Kievan state was shattered by the Mongol...the 15th century and the center of Rus (todays three nations of Russia, Ukraine...example and teacher. Beginning with the Kievan Rus national and its baptism in 988, all...
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newspaper articles on: Kievan Rus  - 1 result

 
 
...from the firm of Carl Faberge, famous for the jeweled Easter eggs created for Russian royalty. But "Russian Enamels: Kievan Rus to Faberge," the exhibit that opened at the Walters last week, has a much more ambitious agenda than providing visitors...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Kievan Rus  - 32 results

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KIEVAN RUS ke ef n, medieval state of the Eastern...the Kievan state, which became known as Kievan Rus. Other theories trace the name Rus to...represented the political and cultural apex of Kievan Rus. After his death the state was divided into...
...leg, Rus. olek or Oleh olekh , d. c.912, founder of Kievan Rus . Succeeding his kinsman Rurik as leader of the Varangians...911, making trade with the empire a major factor in the Kievan economy and opening the path for Greek Christian cultural...
...regarded as the founder of the princely dynasty of Kievan Rus . Rurik and his two brothers, at the head of an armed...the local Slavs. Ruriks successors founded the powerful Kievan state, which lasted until the 13th cent. The house of...
...Ukraine. It was founded in the 9th cent. and supposedly refounded in 988 by the Grand Duke Vladimir I (Volodymyr I) of Kievan Rus . It became an Eastern Orthodox bishopric and the capital of the grand duchy of Volodymyr or Lodomeria. The settlement...
...duke of Kiev e gor, Russ. e g r or Ihor e kh r, d. 945, duke of Kiev (912 45), successor of Oleg as ruler of Kievan Rus . According to the Russian Primary Chronicle, a medieval history, Igor was the son of Rurik , founder of the Russian...
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