Standard

БРИТАНСКАЯ КОМПОЗИТАРНАЯ МОНАРХИЯ: ВЕРХОВНАЯ ВЛАСТЬ И ЭТНОКУЛЬТУРНЫЕ ПРОЦЕССЫ. / Федоров, Сергей Егорович.

в: НОВАЯ И НОВЕЙШАЯ ИСТОРИЯ, Том 66, № 5, 2022, стр. 34-45.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Author

BibTeX

@article{88ca8e9be4eb423d8b8a3c3cdd2df51d,
title = "БРИТАНСКАЯ КОМПОЗИТАРНАЯ МОНАРХИЯ: ВЕРХОВНАЯ ВЛАСТЬ И ЭТНОКУЛЬТУРНЫЕ ПРОЦЕССЫ",
abstract = "The concept of the composite monarchy as it developed by contemporary historiography, is an effective analytical research tool for study of extensive territorial states with a complex internal structure. This concept clearly demonstrates the diversity of ethnopolitical and ethnocultural processes undergone within such polities in the Early Modern Europe. Composite monarchies had been developed under the persistent impact of the two concurring discourses: the universalistic and particularistic ones. These discourses, in turn, structured the outlines and internal structural boundaries within composite states. The history of Britain in the High Middle Ages and particularly under the Tudors and the early Stuarts evidenced the emergence of so called “composite”(or multiple) identities. Being developed within complex and territorially heterogenous polities, «composite» identities took the form of the so-called consensual identities, associated with the minor regional and local ethnical communities which functioned under the pressure of the composite state. Conditions for several acculturation strategies (assimilation, separation, marginalization and integration) appeared inside of the Late Medieval and Early Modern states but an integration was the only possible way for developing of consensual identity within the composite monarchies. Acculturation allowed to actualize the historical and cultural heritage of the regional and local communities as well as to structure their collective consciences.",
keywords = "Britain, Composite monarchy, Ireland, Scotland, acculturation, consentual idenitiy, ethnicity, ethnomorphosis",
author = "Федоров, {Сергей Егорович}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.31857/s013038640018557-0",
language = "русский",
volume = "66",
pages = "34--45",
journal = "НОВАЯ И НОВЕЙШАЯ ИСТОРИЯ",
issn = "0029-5124",
publisher = "Издательство {"}Наука{"}",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - БРИТАНСКАЯ КОМПОЗИТАРНАЯ МОНАРХИЯ: ВЕРХОВНАЯ ВЛАСТЬ И ЭТНОКУЛЬТУРНЫЕ ПРОЦЕССЫ

AU - Федоров, Сергей Егорович

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The concept of the composite monarchy as it developed by contemporary historiography, is an effective analytical research tool for study of extensive territorial states with a complex internal structure. This concept clearly demonstrates the diversity of ethnopolitical and ethnocultural processes undergone within such polities in the Early Modern Europe. Composite monarchies had been developed under the persistent impact of the two concurring discourses: the universalistic and particularistic ones. These discourses, in turn, structured the outlines and internal structural boundaries within composite states. The history of Britain in the High Middle Ages and particularly under the Tudors and the early Stuarts evidenced the emergence of so called “composite”(or multiple) identities. Being developed within complex and territorially heterogenous polities, «composite» identities took the form of the so-called consensual identities, associated with the minor regional and local ethnical communities which functioned under the pressure of the composite state. Conditions for several acculturation strategies (assimilation, separation, marginalization and integration) appeared inside of the Late Medieval and Early Modern states but an integration was the only possible way for developing of consensual identity within the composite monarchies. Acculturation allowed to actualize the historical and cultural heritage of the regional and local communities as well as to structure their collective consciences.

AB - The concept of the composite monarchy as it developed by contemporary historiography, is an effective analytical research tool for study of extensive territorial states with a complex internal structure. This concept clearly demonstrates the diversity of ethnopolitical and ethnocultural processes undergone within such polities in the Early Modern Europe. Composite monarchies had been developed under the persistent impact of the two concurring discourses: the universalistic and particularistic ones. These discourses, in turn, structured the outlines and internal structural boundaries within composite states. The history of Britain in the High Middle Ages and particularly under the Tudors and the early Stuarts evidenced the emergence of so called “composite”(or multiple) identities. Being developed within complex and territorially heterogenous polities, «composite» identities took the form of the so-called consensual identities, associated with the minor regional and local ethnical communities which functioned under the pressure of the composite state. Conditions for several acculturation strategies (assimilation, separation, marginalization and integration) appeared inside of the Late Medieval and Early Modern states but an integration was the only possible way for developing of consensual identity within the composite monarchies. Acculturation allowed to actualize the historical and cultural heritage of the regional and local communities as well as to structure their collective consciences.

KW - Britain

KW - Composite monarchy

KW - Ireland

KW - Scotland

KW - acculturation

KW - consentual idenitiy

KW - ethnicity

KW - ethnomorphosis

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85142269244&partnerID=8YFLogxK

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/9d7baa2b-263a-348c-9706-577b94e15765/

U2 - 10.31857/s013038640018557-0

DO - 10.31857/s013038640018557-0

M3 - статья

VL - 66

SP - 34

EP - 45

JO - НОВАЯ И НОВЕЙШАЯ ИСТОРИЯ

JF - НОВАЯ И НОВЕЙШАЯ ИСТОРИЯ

SN - 0029-5124

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 99492775