EUH 4584 – Medieval Russia

Week 1 (August 24-26): Introduction

 Week 2 (August 29-September 2): Sources

Week 3 (September 6-9): Slavs, Khazars, and others

  •  Eastern Europe in the early Middle Ages (6th to 9th centuries) [Dmytryshyn 2-6]; read the paragraph in Jordanes’ Getica which mentions the peoples submitted by Ermanaric; see an image of a silver torc typical for the Ryazan’-Oka group; see a distribution of sites of the long-barrow group in northwestern Russia and a picture of a sopka; see a wooden bowl with a bear-shaped handle from Vanvizdino and examples of bronze figurines used by local shamans along the Viatka and Kama rivers
  •  In-class assignment #1. The Khazars; see portraits of Arthur Koestler and Itzhak Ben Zvi; see maps of Khazaria and of the conflicts in its history; see a view of the recent excavations near Astrakhan on a site (wrongly) believed to be Itil; see an aerial view and a model reconstruction of Sarkel, as well as a dirhem struck in Khazaria with the (Arabic) inscription mentioning Moses as the prophet of God; see examples of the curved sabre introduced by Khazars to the military equipment of the East European steppe lands

  Week 4 September 12-16): The coming of the Varangians

Week 5 (September 19-23): From the conversion of Olg’a to the conversion of Vladimir

 Week 6 (September 26-30): Martyrs and mercenaries (1015-1125)

Week 7 (October 3-7): Kievan Rus’ society

Week 8 (October 10-14): The last century of Kievan Rus’ (1140-1240)

Week 9 (October 17-21): The Golden Horde

Week 9 (October 24-28): The Russian lands within the Golden Horde

  • Dynastic and economic recovery [Martin 175-186; Dmytryshyn 99-105, 114-119]; see a map of the northern Rus’ principalities during the first half of the fourteenth century; see an aerial view of Tver and a view of Kostroma; see views of Pereiaslavl’ Zaleskii and of the citadel of Pskov strengthened by Daumantas; see a list of the Golden Horde khans, a view of the ruins of the Isaccea fortress, and a silver coin struck in Nogai’s name
  • Intradynastic competition and the rise of Moscow [Martin 187-219; Dmytryshyn 190-198]; visit Moscow and see an icon of Metropolitan Peter, who was buried in the Cathedral of the Assumption; see a coin struck for Boleslaw-Iurii II

Week 10 (October 31-November 4): The rise of the Danilovich

Week 11 (November 7-10): Unification and centralization of Muscovy

Week 12 (November 14-18, 21): Muscovite domestic consolidation

  •  Muscovite economy and administration [Martin 298-330; Dmytryshyn 261-275] 
  •  Political integration [Martin 330-335]

Week 13 (November 28-December 2): Foreign policy and foreign trade

  • Muscovy’s relations with its European neighbors [Martin 336-347]
  • Muscovite relations with the Tatar khanates [Martin 347-363]

Week 14 (December 5-7): Ivan the Terrible

  • In-class assignment #5. The political system and the foreign policy under Ivan IV [Martin 364-415; Dmytryshyn 276-308]