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  1. From 1550 to 1700, Russia grew by an average of 35,000 square kilometres (14,000 sq mi) per year. [11] The period includes the upheavals of the transition from the Rurik to the Romanov dynasties, wars with the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, Sweden, and the Ottoman Empire, and the Russian conquest of Siberia, to the reign of Peter the Great, who took power in 1689 and transformed the tsardom ...

  2. 8 de sept. de 2023 · Much as the original Christian Church had suffered a dramatic schism, the Russian Orthodox Church underwent a split of its own in the seventeenth century. When the Church’s Patriarch advanced liturgical reforms but a movement of Orthodox worshippers resisted. They believed Russia’s traditional forms of Christian worship were correct in the eyes of God.

  3. The Kremlin's cathedrals were the backdrop to the baptisms, coronations, and funerals of all the Russian tsars… until Peter the Great came to power in the late 17th century.

  4. Russian fashion in the 17th century. History says that Russia's relations with Europe only began to develop in the 17th century, but the fashion trends of the European dress are already gradually affecting the outfits of the Russian nobility. So, the first bright influence on the Russian outfit can be seen in the business suit of the boyars.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2005 · This study is the first comprehensive assessment of Russia's commercial relations with the outside world in the seventeenth century and of the relationship between trade and economic growth. Based on exhaustive research in some thirty archival repositories, it represents the first systematic quantification of commodity flows across the range of Russia's trade partners. The book reveals late ...

  6. The following 22 files are in this category, out of 22 total.

  7. By the time Peter the Great became tsar, Russia was the largest country in the world, stretching from the Baltic Sea to the Pacific Ocean. Much of Russia’s expansion had taken place in the 17th century, culminating in the first Russian settlement of the Pacific in the mid-17th century, the reconquest of Kiev, and the pacification of the Siberian tribes. However,