The chroniclers of medieval Rus were monks, who celebrated the divine services of the Byzantine church throughout every day. This study is the first to analyze how these rituals shaped their writing of the 'Rus Primary Chronicle', the first written history of the East Slavs. During the eleventh century, chroniclers in Kiev learned about the conversion of the Roman Empire by celebrating a series of distinctively Byzantine liturgical feasts. When the services concluded, and the clerics sought to compose a native history for their own people, they instinctively drew on the sacred stories that they sang at church. The result was a myth of Christian origins for Rus - a myth promulgated even today by the Russian government - which reproduced the Christian origins myth of the Byzantine Empire. The book uncovers this ritual subtext and reconstructs the intricate web of liturgical narratives that underlie this foundational text of pre-modern Slavic civilization.
Author(s): Sean Griffin
Series: Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, Fourth Series, 112
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: X+276
Acknowledgements page vi
List of Abbreviations viii
INTRODUCTION 1
1. LITURGY AND HISTORY IN EARLY RUS 15
2. THE 'RUS PRIMARY CHRONICLE' 35
3. VESPERS AT THE KIEV MONASTERY OF THE CAVES 62
4. THE DAYSPRING BEFORE THE SUN: PRINCESS OLGA OF KIEV 93
5. A NEW CONSTANTINE IN THE NORTH: PRINCE VLADIMIR AND THE BAPTISM OF RUS 134
6. A RATIONAL SACRIFICE: THE MARTYRDOM OF PRINCES BORIS AND GLEB 188
CONCLUSION: THE MAKING OF ROYAL SAINTS IN EARLY RUS 229
Bibliography 243
Index 269