14th-15th century, 1st half
LITERATURE OF THE LATE FOURTEENTH AND THE FIRST HALF OF THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY
In the latter half of the fourteenth and first half of the fifteenth century, under the descendants of Ivan the Money-Bag, Moscow emerged more and more actively as the centre uniting the principalities of North-Eastern Russia. Moscow’s struggle for supremacy against rival principalities was accompanied by constant clashes with external […]
Chronicle-Writing
In the late fourteenth and first half of the fifteenth century numerous chronicles were compiled. The compilers collected, revised and redacted local chronicles depending on the political interests that the compilation was intended to serve. Of great ideological importance was the tradition of including The Tale of Bygone Years or […]
Works of the Kulikovo Cycle. The Trans-Doniad
The victory of the Russians over the Mongols at Kulikovo Field not only made a great impression on contemporaries of this epoch-making event in Russian history, but also interested Russians for a long time afterwards. This is explained by the fact that the battle against Mamai was the subject of […]
The Chronicle Story of the Battle of Kulikovo
The chronicle story of the Battle of Kulikovo has survived in two versions: the short and the extended. The short chronicle story is found in chronicles that originate from the Cyprian compilation (The Trinity Chronicle). The extended story in its earliest form is in the Novgorod Fourth and Sophia First […]
The Tale of the Battle Against Mamai
The Tale of the Battle Against Mamai is the most lengthy work of the Kulikovo cycle. It contains the most detailed account of the events of the Battle of Kulikovo. The Tale describes the preparations for the campaign and the uryazhenie or deployment of the detachments, the order of battle […]
Tales of Mongol Attacks n Russia After the Battle of Kulikovo. The Tale of Tokhtamysh’s Campaign Against Moscow
The Tale of Tokhtamysh’s Campaign Against Moscow. After Mamai’s defeat at Kulikovo Field Khan Tokhtamysh seized power in the Horde. Realising that the victory over Mamai could mean a radical change in the attitude of the Russian princes to the Horde, Tokhtamysh undertook a campaign against Moscow in 1382. Due […]
The Tale of Temir Aksak
In 1395 Timur’s army invaded the Russian principalities. Timur (also known as Tamerlane or Timur i Leng), the famous Oriental conqueror, was Emir from 1370 to 1405 of a state that had its capital in Samarkand. His large, well-organised armies waged constant warfare and were famed for their cruelty. The […]
Hagiography
As in the preceding periods, together with chronicle-writing, hagiography remains one of the main literary genres which underwent a number of important changes during this period. In the late fourteenth and early fifteenth century in the Slav countries (Bulgaria, Serbia and Russia) there was a flowering of the expressive-emotional style […]
Cyprian
Cyprian, a Bulgarian, was a very learned man. He received an ecclesiastical and scholarly education in his homeland, in Byzantium and at Mount Athos. He was closely associated with his fellow-countryman Euthymius of Tyrnovo (1330-1402), the Bulgarian Patriarch, who was the founder and theoretician of the panegyric style in Bulgarian […]
Epiphanius the Most Wise
Epiphanius was born in Rostov in the first half of the fourteenth century. In 1379 he became a monk in a Rostov monastery. Later he moved to the Trinity Monastery of St Sergius. He visited Jerusalem and Mount Athos and most probably travelled in the Orient. He died in the […]