MOSCOW, GRAND DUCHY OF

state existing in W central Russia from the late 14th to mid-16th cent., with the city of Moscow as its nucleus. Its formation and eventual ascendancy over other Russian principalities and over the Tatars of the Golden Horde (see Golden Horde, Empire of the) came about gradually and resulted particularly from its central location, its importance as a trade artery, its dynastic continuity, its circumspect loyalty to Tatar overlords, and its prestige as a religious center. After the decline of Kiev in the mid-12th cent., Russian territory broke up into a number of separate political units, among which the principality of Vladimir-Suzdal (see Vladimir) was the most important. The rulers of Vladimir were the only Russian princes who bore the title grand duke, and they were regarded as suzerains of the other princes. According to tradition, Moscow was founded on a strategic site on the Moskva River as a military outpost of Vladimir-Suzdal; by the mid-12th cent., when its existence is first mentioned in Russian chronicles, it had become a walled town. The first known prince of Moscow was Daniel (d.1303), son of Grand Duke Alexander Nevsky. Daniel received Moscow as a separate appanage. His son, Yuri (1303–25), launched the struggle for Moscow's predominance in Russia, competing for leadership with the prince of Tver for both the title of grand duke and the allegiance of the less powerful Russian princes. Yuri was temporarily appointed grand duke of Vladimir by the khan of the Empire of the Golden Horde. His younger brother, Ivan I (Ivan Kalita; 1328–41), was not only granted the title of grand duke (1328) but was given the right to collect Tatar tributes from neighboring principalities. Moreover, during Ivan's reign Moscow became the seat of the Russian Orthodox Church. The adjacent areas were subdued or acquired, and Moscow's importance continued to increase, particularly under Ivan I's grandson, Dmitri Donskoi (1359–89), who was probably the first to bear the title grand duke of Moscow. Dmitri's successors, above all Ivan III (1462–1505) and Vasily III (1505–33), laid the basis of Muscovite absolutism, built the Great Russian state, and threw off the Tatar yoke. By the mid-16th cent., therefore, the unification of the Great Russian lands had been completed under the princely dynasty. The Muscovite rulers now bore the title grand duke of Moscow and of all Russia, and the history of the grand duchy of Moscow became that of Russia.

See J. L. I. Fennell, The Emergence of Moscow, 1304–1359 (1968); S. Khromov, History of Moscow (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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books on: Moscow Grand Duchy Of  - 1824 results

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...Omnia GDL Grand Duchy of Lithuania...print, Moscow: Iazyki russkoi...major part of the Lithuanian...from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania...in the grand duchy and Poland...sired to take Moscow. The Russian annals tell of Vytautas...
...and Khotin were at about the same distance from Moscow, within a radius of 1,500 kilometers. Reaching those three key places...winter, were already apparent. It would become a grand duchy in 1581, a status it would retain until 1917. In...
...to baffle statesmen for over eight centuries. On the death of Wladyslaw Herman in 1102, his sons continued their joint rule...1 Subsequently succeeded as chief city by Moscow. community began to participate -- not only magnates like the...
...Lands Around Moscow Begun. Battle of Kulikovo...The Grand Duchy of Lithuania...cathedrals in Moscow, the Church of the Redeemer...The Grand Duchy of Lithuania...unite around Moscow and the Lithuanian...lands, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania...
...Lithuania on historical maps: Grand Duchy of Lithuania Moscow Russian: Moskva Muscovy...Ukraine was called the Grand Duchy of Rus . In a set of instructions...Ukraine from Moscovia--the Grand Duchy of Moscow. Thus, for example, in a...
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journal articles on: Moscow Grand Duchy Of  - 10 results

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...the fifteenth century the Grand Duchy of Lithuania was one of the...were taken centrally in Moscow. The central planners established...marketing areas were made in Moscow. Therefore, areas such as...are below the standards of the global market, many...
...Giles Fletchers embassy to Moscow, Tsar Ivan IV the Terrible...in Ivans reign, the House of Riurik which had ruled Russia...northern Poland. The Tsars and Grand Princes of Russia, were...The Russian Empire and Grand Duchy of Muscovy: A 17th Century...
...After the emergence of a common Russian threat, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland created a joint entity...century. Polands armies invaded first Smolensk and later Moscow in 1611. A Russian patriot, Kuzman Minin, organized a...
...became obvious that the regime in Moscow was no longer quite as willing to...factor that led to the reestablishment of an independent Lithuania regards a...between the Teutonic Knights and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. (15.) Cited in Alfred...
...but the jury still is out on whether Moscow can achieve robust sustained growth...the Russians failed? MUSCOVY Some of the blame for Russias catastrophic...profit maximising. From the rise of the Grand Duchy of Muscovy under Ivan the Great, and...
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magazine articles on: Moscow Grand Duchy Of  - 8 results

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...appreciated by Moscow. A romantic wing of the nationalists...language of the Grand Duchy (called Old Belarusian...living in the Grand Duchy translated the...Official status of that language...relations of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
...before they find themselves the praetorian guard of the Grand Duchy of Muscovy--and all those missiles are still in place. Nor...imprudent to wobble on, say, NATO; you never knew whether the Moscow Mafia would react dangerously. Currently, however, they...
...chronicling the rise and fall of the kingdom of Strathclyde, Andorra, Sicily, Sardinia, Provence, Burgundy, Galicia, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and that spectacular example of a once-mighty state that disappeared in a puff of utterly unanticipated smoke...
...German barons and tsarist rule. Not so in Lithuania. Its identity is shaped by a folk memory of superpower status. The Grand Duchy of Lithuania, the last pagan state in Europe until 1387, once stretched to the shores of the Black Sea. It was larger...
...recently united country. From the old duchy of Milan he recalled the elongated necks...Modiglianis 1915 portrait of Picasso (Moscow private collection), once more in...expression in her eye. Her decolletage and grand tenue suggest that she had been invited...
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newspaper articles on: Moscow Grand Duchy Of  - 1 result

 
 
...unfortunate victim on the receiving end of his punches. He narrowly missed a medal at the Moscow Olympics, before turning pro. He...1970s and 1980s and was captain of the British boxing team which went to the Moscow Olympics. As a junior he lost just...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Moscow Grand Duchy Of  - 24 results

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MOSCOW, GRAND DUCHY OF state existing in W central Russia from the late 14th to mid...title grand duke of Moscow and of all Russia, and the history of the grand duchy of Moscow became that of Russia. See J. L. I. Fennell, The Emergence of...
...1271) the seat of the grand dukes of Vladimir-Suzdal, who later assumed the title of grand dukes of Moscow (see Moscow, grand duchy of ). During the rule of Dmitri Donskoi the first stone walls of the Kremlin were built (1367). Moscow, or Muscovy...
...contributed to the predominance of Muscovite Russia (see Moscow, grand duchy of ). Under the Empire of the Golden Horde, the Russian...internal administration. However, they were tributaries of the khan, who confirmed princely succession and exacted...
MUSCOVY see Moscow, grand duchy of . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...princes of the grand duchy of Vladimir, although...reigned 1328 41), Moscow took precedence...1380, the grand duchy of Vladimir was bequeathed...began to be called grand dukes of Moscow or Muscovy (see Moscow, grand duchy of ). Consolidation...
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