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Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича. / Веселов, Федор Никитович.

в: ВЕСТНИК НОВОСИБИРСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА. СЕРИЯ: ИСТОРИЯ, ФИЛОЛОГИЯ, Том 25, № 1, 08.02.2026, стр. 42-59.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Веселов, ФН 2026, 'Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича', ВЕСТНИК НОВОСИБИРСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА. СЕРИЯ: ИСТОРИЯ, ФИЛОЛОГИЯ, Том. 25, № 1, стр. 42-59. https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

APA

Веселов, Ф. Н. (2026). Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича. ВЕСТНИК НОВОСИБИРСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА. СЕРИЯ: ИСТОРИЯ, ФИЛОЛОГИЯ, 25(1), 42-59. https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

Vancouver

Веселов ФН. Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича. ВЕСТНИК НОВОСИБИРСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА. СЕРИЯ: ИСТОРИЯ, ФИЛОЛОГИЯ. 2026 Февр. 8;25(1):42-59. https://doi.org/10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

Author

Веселов, Федор Никитович. / Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича. в: ВЕСТНИК НОВОСИБИРСКОГО ГОСУДАРСТВЕННОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА. СЕРИЯ: ИСТОРИЯ, ФИЛОЛОГИЯ. 2026 ; Том 25, № 1. стр. 42-59.

BibTeX

@article{fcb7ea585b3e40f7a265f17a07bf0291,
title = "Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича",
abstract = "Accounts of the same event appearing in multiple sources are a relatively rare phenomenon for the Classical Middle Ages. Fortunately, the death of the Grand Prince of Rus{\textquoteright} Yaroslav Vsevolodovich at the Ordu of the Great Khan G{\"u}y{\"u}k{\textquoteright}s mother in September 1246 is recorded in the report of the envoy of the Apostolic See to the Mongols, John de Plano Carpini, and Russian medieval chronicles. This has led many historians to generally accept that he died from poison. However, some scholars challenge this interpretation, proposing that he may have succumbed to a food-borne illness and asserting that Russian sources are solely dependent on the news by the papal diplomat. They argue that a vassal in the Mongol Empire could only face punishment through a legitimate court. However, the study of inde-pendent sources on the history of the Mongol Empire demonstrates that the Chinggisids, using the scientific resources of the conquered peoples, had access to poisons and used them widely. Furthermore, reports of Yaroslav{\textquoteright}s violent death surfaced in Northern Rus{\textquoteright} independently of Friar John{\textquoteright}s narrative. Overall, a careful analysis of Friar John{\textquoteright}s firsthand account reinforces the conclusion that the prince most likely died from poisoning.",
keywords = "G{\"u}y{\"u}k, John de Plano Carpini, Rostov chronicle, T{\"o}regene Qatun, Yaroslav Vsevolodovich, poisons, the Mongol Empire",
author = "Веселов, {Федор Никитович}",
note = "Веселов Ф. Н. Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича // Вестник НГУ. Серия: История, филология. 2026. Т. 25, № 1: История. С. 42–59. DOI 10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59",
year = "2026",
month = feb,
day = "8",
doi = "10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59",
language = "русский",
volume = "25",
pages = "42--59",
journal = "Vestnik Novosibirskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta, Seriya: Istoriya, Filologiya",
issn = "1818-7919",
publisher = "Издательство Новосибирского университета",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича

AU - Веселов, Федор Никитович

N1 - Веселов Ф. Н. Бактерия или человек? Мнимая загадка смерти великого князя Ярослава Всеволодовича // Вестник НГУ. Серия: История, филология. 2026. Т. 25, № 1: История. С. 42–59. DOI 10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

PY - 2026/2/8

Y1 - 2026/2/8

N2 - Accounts of the same event appearing in multiple sources are a relatively rare phenomenon for the Classical Middle Ages. Fortunately, the death of the Grand Prince of Rus’ Yaroslav Vsevolodovich at the Ordu of the Great Khan Güyük’s mother in September 1246 is recorded in the report of the envoy of the Apostolic See to the Mongols, John de Plano Carpini, and Russian medieval chronicles. This has led many historians to generally accept that he died from poison. However, some scholars challenge this interpretation, proposing that he may have succumbed to a food-borne illness and asserting that Russian sources are solely dependent on the news by the papal diplomat. They argue that a vassal in the Mongol Empire could only face punishment through a legitimate court. However, the study of inde-pendent sources on the history of the Mongol Empire demonstrates that the Chinggisids, using the scientific resources of the conquered peoples, had access to poisons and used them widely. Furthermore, reports of Yaroslav’s violent death surfaced in Northern Rus’ independently of Friar John’s narrative. Overall, a careful analysis of Friar John’s firsthand account reinforces the conclusion that the prince most likely died from poisoning.

AB - Accounts of the same event appearing in multiple sources are a relatively rare phenomenon for the Classical Middle Ages. Fortunately, the death of the Grand Prince of Rus’ Yaroslav Vsevolodovich at the Ordu of the Great Khan Güyük’s mother in September 1246 is recorded in the report of the envoy of the Apostolic See to the Mongols, John de Plano Carpini, and Russian medieval chronicles. This has led many historians to generally accept that he died from poison. However, some scholars challenge this interpretation, proposing that he may have succumbed to a food-borne illness and asserting that Russian sources are solely dependent on the news by the papal diplomat. They argue that a vassal in the Mongol Empire could only face punishment through a legitimate court. However, the study of inde-pendent sources on the history of the Mongol Empire demonstrates that the Chinggisids, using the scientific resources of the conquered peoples, had access to poisons and used them widely. Furthermore, reports of Yaroslav’s violent death surfaced in Northern Rus’ independently of Friar John’s narrative. Overall, a careful analysis of Friar John’s firsthand account reinforces the conclusion that the prince most likely died from poisoning.

KW - Güyük

KW - John de Plano Carpini

KW - Rostov chronicle

KW - Töregene Qatun

KW - Yaroslav Vsevolodovich

KW - poisons

KW - the Mongol Empire

UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/ccce9318-6eda-3297-a8f5-8e1764603b1b/

U2 - 10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

DO - 10.25205/1818-7919-2026-25-1-42-59

M3 - статья

VL - 25

SP - 42

EP - 59

JO - Vestnik Novosibirskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta, Seriya: Istoriya, Filologiya

JF - Vestnik Novosibirskogo Gosudarstvennogo Universiteta, Seriya: Istoriya, Filologiya

SN - 1818-7919

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 149103594