The enserfment of the Russian peasantry / [by] R. E. F. Smith, Professor of Russian University of Birmingham.

By: Smith, R. E. F. (Robert E. F.) [author.]Material type: TextTextLondon : Cambridge University Press, 1968©1968 Description: xiii, 180 pages : maps ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 0521071011 (hardback)Subject(s): Land tenure -- Russia -- History -- Sources | Peasants -- Russia -- History -- SourcesLOC classification: HD714 .S54 1968Online resources: Publisher description | Publisher description Summary: In 1649 a Code of Laws was issued in Moscow completing, at least in law, the process of enserfment of the Russian peasantry. This book illustrates this process with fifty-six documents of the twelfth to seventeenth centuries. They relate mainly to the central and northern area of European Russia known, in the sixteenth century, as Muscovy. An introductory note prefaces each document, placing it in context and giving its source. An introduction partly contributed by Professor Rodney Hilton discusses enserfment in Eastern and Western Europe and explains why these particular documents were chosen. There is a glossary explaining the main technical terms found in the text. The book deals with a topic of major historical importance and makes a collection of documents, often of intrinsic interest, accessible to English readers
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Books MEF Üniversitesi Kütüphanesi
Genel Koleksiyon HD 714 .S54 1968 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 0004445

Bibliography: pages 164-167.

In 1649 a Code of Laws was issued in Moscow completing, at least in law, the process of enserfment of the Russian peasantry. This book illustrates this process with fifty-six documents of the twelfth to seventeenth centuries. They relate mainly to the central and northern area of European Russia known, in the sixteenth century, as Muscovy. An introductory note prefaces each document, placing it in context and giving its source. An introduction partly contributed by Professor Rodney Hilton discusses enserfment in Eastern and Western Europe and explains why these particular documents were chosen. There is a glossary explaining the main technical terms found in the text. The book deals with a topic of major historical importance and makes a collection of documents, often of intrinsic interest, accessible to English readers