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  1. rusmania.com › history-of-russia › 16th-century16th Century | Rusmania

    Russia during the 16th Century is dominated by one figure: Ivan the Terrible, who has gone down in history as one of the most infamous leaders of all times. His long reign, firstly as grand prince and then as the first tsar, witnessed Russia conquer the Kazan and Astrakhan Khanates and expand its borders into Siberia but this coincided with a ...

  2. 25 de abr. de 2023 · In the 17th century, Russia violated its treaty with the independent Ukrainian communities known as the Cossacks to seize control and partition their burgeoning country. A century later, Russia massacred thousands of Ukrainian civilians, betrayed the Cossacks, and eliminated the last traces of their independent rule.

  3. 29 de may. de 2014 · The Formation of Muscovy, 1304–1613. London: Longman, 1987. General yet comprehensive in scope, this small volume presents a highly readable introduction to the structure of Russian history from the 14th through the early 17th centuries. Evenhanded on the major historiographical debates, the book remains among the most accessible general ...

  4. Russian culture underwent a series of changes in the seventeenth century that some historians have described as a delayed 'Renaissance' that preceded the dramatic Westernisation of his country by Peter the Great. Echoes of Western art and culture had, of course, reached Russia long since: for example, elements of classical antiquity inherited ...

  5. 23 de ago. de 2017 · How to make it: 1. Wash the chicken filet, put in a pot and cover with water, add 2 bay leaves, 6 peppercorns, 1 teaspoon of salt. Boil for 20 minutes. 2. Wash the pike perch filet, cut into ...

  6. The harsh tradition of collective suicides by fire was born among the Russian Old Believers in the 17th century and continued into the 19th century. “With a heavy thud of the explosion, the ...

  7. Russia - Culture, Traditions, Arts: Russia’s unique and vibrant culture developed, as did the country itself, from a complicated interplay of native Slavic cultural material and borrowings from a wide variety of foreign cultures. In the Kievan period (c. 10th–13th century), the borrowings were primarily from Eastern Orthodox Byzantine culture. During the Muscovite period (c. 14th–17th ...