Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
The Court of the Grand Prince of Muscovy and the Court of France in the 14th–16th Centuries: Comparing the Incomparable? (Государев двор России и королевский двор Франции в XIV–XVI вв. : сравнение несравнимого?). / Корзинин, А.Л.; Шишкин, В.В.
In: Canadian-American Slavic Studies, Vol. 50, No. 4, 2016, p. 399-438.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - The Court of the Grand Prince of Muscovy and the Court of France in the 14th–16th Centuries: Comparing the Incomparable? (Государев двор России и королевский двор Франции в XIV–XVI вв. : сравнение несравнимого?)
AU - Корзинин, А.Л.
AU - Шишкин, В.В.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - This study compares the organization, function, and personnel of the royal courts in Muscovy and France in the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries, a period vital to the consolidation of monarchical power in both states. The article traces the rise and parallel development of the ruler’s court in Muscovy and France, and makes the case for significant similarities between the two. In both, membership in the court elite was rooted in similar social and political structures (in Muscovy, membership in the elite was rooted in birth and longtime service to the ruler, while in France it was rooted in birth and proximity to the king), and both courts were positioned in similar ways at the center of politics and religious culture. The similarities between Muscovy and France become especially apparent during the reigns of Ivan IV and Henry III, when both monarchs instituted reforms aimed at strengthening central monarchical power and institutions, and when the rulers were confronting significant centrifugal pressure
AB - This study compares the organization, function, and personnel of the royal courts in Muscovy and France in the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries, a period vital to the consolidation of monarchical power in both states. The article traces the rise and parallel development of the ruler’s court in Muscovy and France, and makes the case for significant similarities between the two. In both, membership in the court elite was rooted in similar social and political structures (in Muscovy, membership in the elite was rooted in birth and longtime service to the ruler, while in France it was rooted in birth and proximity to the king), and both courts were positioned in similar ways at the center of politics and religious culture. The similarities between Muscovy and France become especially apparent during the reigns of Ivan IV and Henry III, when both monarchs instituted reforms aimed at strengthening central monarchical power and institutions, and when the rulers were confronting significant centrifugal pressure
U2 - 10.1163/22102396-05004003
DO - 10.1163/22102396-05004003
M3 - статья
VL - 50
SP - 399
EP - 438
JO - Canadian-American Slavic Studies
JF - Canadian-American Slavic Studies
SN - 0090-8290
IS - 4
ER -
ID: 7622243