A History of RussiaRandom House, 1961 - 857 páginas |
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Página 28
... established their rule over considerable areas - notably the Danelaw in Saxon England and Normandy in Carolingian France . Lured by possibilities of plunder and of trade rooted in plunder similar to those that brought the Viking swarms ...
... established their rule over considerable areas - notably the Danelaw in Saxon England and Normandy in Carolingian France . Lured by possibilities of plunder and of trade rooted in plunder similar to those that brought the Viking swarms ...
Página 128
... established fortresses at Tiumen and Tobolsk . In succeeding years Moscow's authority was extended steadily eastward from the Ob toward the Yenisei ; Tomsk was established in 1604 . To these successes abroad corresponded what was to the ...
... established fortresses at Tiumen and Tobolsk . In succeeding years Moscow's authority was extended steadily eastward from the Ob toward the Yenisei ; Tomsk was established in 1604 . To these successes abroad corresponded what was to the ...
Página 333
... established : in the Pale , where anywhere from 30 to 80 percent of the urban population was Jewish , the figure was set at 10 percent of the Christian population ; outside the Pale , the quota was only 5 percent , in the two capitals 3 ...
... established : in the Pale , where anywhere from 30 to 80 percent of the urban population was Jewish , the figure was set at 10 percent of the Christian population ; outside the Pale , the quota was only 5 percent , in the two capitals 3 ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTORY | 3 |
The Question of Feudalism | 73 |
The Triumph of Moscow | 79 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accepted agricultural Alexander Alexis Allies April army autocracy Baltic Bolsheviks Boris boyars capital capitalist Catherine Central Committee century Church Commissar Communism Communist Congress of Soviets continued coöperation cossacks Council death decree democratic despite Dmitry Duma economic effort elected Emancipation emperor established Europe factories forces foreign France German grand prince Ibid increase industry Ivan Ivan the Terrible Jews July June Kerensky Khrushchev Kiev Kievan labor land landlords Lenin Malenkov March masses Mensheviks ment military Minister Moscow Muscovite Nicholas nobility nobles Novgorod official oprichnina organization Orthodox Party Patriarch peace peasantry peasants percent Peter Petersburg Petrograd Poland Polish Politburo political population principle production reform regime remained revolution revolutionary ruler Slavs sobranie social socialist Soviet Union Sovnarkom Stalin steppe Supreme Privy Council Tatar tion trade treaty Trotsky tsar Ukraine Vladimir Volga West Western workers York zemsky sobor zemstvo