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The early
history of Russia, like those of many countries, is one of migrating peoples
and ancient kingdoms. In fact, early Russia was not exactly "Russia,"
but a collection of cities that gradually coalesced into an empire. I
n the early part of the ninth century, as part of the same great movement
that brough the Danes to England and the Norsemen to Western Europe, a
Scandanavian people known as the Varangians crossed the Baltic Sea and
landed in Eastern Europe. The leader of the Varangians was the semilegendary
warrior Rurik, who led his people in 862 to the city of Novgorod on the
Volkhov River. Whether Rurik took the city by force or was invited to
rule there, he certainly invested the city. From Novgorod, Rurik's successor
Oleg extended the power of the city southward. In 882, he gained control
of Kiev, a Slavic city that had arisen along the Dnepr River around the
5th century. Oleg's attainment of rule over Kiev marked the first establishment
of a unified, dynastic state in the region. Kiev became the center of
a trade route between Scandinavia and Constantinople, and Kievan Rus',
as the empire came to be known, flourished for the next three hundred
years.
By 989, Oleg's great-grandson
Vladimir I was ruler of a kingdom that extended to as far south as the
Black Sea, the Caucasus Mountains, and the lower reaches of the Volga
River. Having decided to establish a state religion, Vladimir carefully
considered a number of available faiths and decided upon Greek Orthodoxy,
thus allying himself with Constantinople and the West. It is said that
Vladimir decided against Islam partly because of his belief that his people
could not live under a religion that prohibits hard liquor. Vladimir was
succeeded by Yaroslav the Wise, whose reign marked the apogee of Kievan
Rus'. Yaroslav codified laws, made shrewd alliances with other states,
encouraged the arts, and all the other sorts of things that wise kings
do. Unfortunately, he decided in the end to act like Lear, dividing his
kingdom among his children and bidding them to cooperate and flourish.
Of course, they did nothing of the sort.
Within a few decades of Yaroslav's
death (in 1054), Kievan Rus' was rife with internecine strife and had
broken up into regional power centers. Internal divisions were made worse
by the depradations of the invading Cumans (better known as the Kipchaks).
It was during this time (in 1147 to be exact) that Yuri Dolgorukiy, one
of the regional princes, held a feast at his hunting lodge atop a hill
overlooking the confluence of the Moskva and Neglina Rivers. A chronicler
recorded the party, thus providing us with the earliest mention of Moscow,
the small settlement that would soon become the pre-eminent city in Russia.
Ancient
Russia | The
Mongols & the Emergence of Moscow | The
Romanovs |
Napoleon's
Invasion | The
Path to Revolution | The
Soviet Era
Copyright (c) 2000 Dm.Core
Ltd.. All rights reserved.
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