A History of RussiaRandom House, 1961 - 857 páginas For the student and general reader. |
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Página 92
... boyars were no longer adequate by themselves to staff the increasingly complex administrative apparatus , so they played an ever smaller independent role in putting armed forces into the field . The “ serving princes " and other boyars ...
... boyars were no longer adequate by themselves to staff the increasingly complex administrative apparatus , so they played an ever smaller independent role in putting armed forces into the field . The “ serving princes " and other boyars ...
Página 107
... boyars remained unassailable , at least by frontal assault . The boyar duma continued to be a body with which the ruler had to reckon in making major decisions . Ivan's father and grandfather had provoked bitter complaints because they ...
... boyars remained unassailable , at least by frontal assault . The boyar duma continued to be a body with which the ruler had to reckon in making major decisions . Ivan's father and grandfather had provoked bitter complaints because they ...
Página 140
... boyars of the duma , and without the counsel and consent of the boyars of the duma his grace the sovereign shall make no decision " ; significantly , Sigismund here curtailed the proposed phrase " boyars and men of the duma " ( Article ...
... boyars of the duma , and without the counsel and consent of the boyars of the duma his grace the sovereign shall make no decision " ; significantly , Sigismund here curtailed the proposed phrase " boyars and men of the duma " ( Article ...
Contenido
INTRODUCTORY | 3 |
Christianity and the Role of the Church | 32 |
Decline of Kievan | 46 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Términos y frases comunes
accepted administrative agricultural Alexis army authority autocracy Baltic Bolsheviks Boris Boris Godunov boyar duma boyars capital capitalist Central century chief Church Commissar Committee Communism Communist Congress of Soviets continued coöperation cossacks Council decree despite Dmitry Dnieper Duma dvoriane economic effort elected emperor established Europe factories forces foreign German grand prince Ibid industry Ivan the Terrible Ivan's Jews Kerensky Kiev Kievan labor land landholding landlords later Lenin mass Mensheviks ment military Minister monasteries Moscow Muscovite nobility nobles Novgorod official oprichnina organization Orthodox Party patriarch peace peasantry peasants percent Peter Petrograd Poland Polish Politburo political population principle production provinces reform regime reign remained revolution revolutionary ruler Russian Slavs social socialist Soviet Union Stalin steppe Tatar throne tion trade treaty Trotsky tsar tsar's Ukraine Vasily Vladimir Volga West Western workers zemsky sobor zemstvo