russia’s historical legacy: part i. central russia

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Russia’s Historical Legacy: Part I

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Page 1: Russia’s Historical Legacy: Part I. Central Russia

Russia’s Historical Legacy: Part I

Page 2: Russia’s Historical Legacy: Part I. Central Russia
Page 3: Russia’s Historical Legacy: Part I. Central Russia
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Central Russia

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Volga River

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Southern Russia

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Russia’s prairies: The Steppe

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Russia’s Black Sea coast

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The Russian Caucasus: Mount Elbrus

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Siberian taiga

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Russian winter

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The Russian Arctic

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Altai Mountains: foothills of the Himalayas

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The Russian Far East: Kamchatka Peninsula

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Russia’s Pacific Coast

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Russia’s Pacific Coast

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Moscow Kremlin Moscow, Kremlin: the center of Russian state power

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St. Petersburg, Russia’s “second capital”

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The State Emblem of the Russian Federation

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Russia’s major assets

Territory – size and position Natural resources Transportation networks Industrial base Science and education Nuclear weapons Space program

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7th largest economy, expected to become No.5 within a decade

1/3 or more of global natural resources A nuclear superpower A space superpower A permanent member of UNSC A member of G8 A key international actor across Eurasia (involved

in more international organizations and projects than any other state except US)

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Security-development ratios

Costs of development and security: four basic modes of interaction

D-costs high, S-costs high (Russia) D-costs low, S-costs low (USA, Canada) D-costs high, S-costs low (Scandinavia) D-costs low, S-costs high (?)

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Russia is 1,200 years old It has existed in 6 historical forms:

Kiev Rus (9th-13th centuries) Domain of the Tatar-Mongol empire (13th-15th centuries) The Moscow State (15th-17th centuries) The Russian Empire (18th century-1917) The Soviet Union (1917-1991) The Russian Federation (1991- today)

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Key questions re Russia’s historical legacy: State-society relations: patterns and balances Forms of state authority The state’s role in the economy Role of civil society institutions: market economy,

religion, rule of law Role of ideology Freedom and order

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RUSSIA 1 Kiev Rus The Slavic-Viking project

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Slav migrations: 5th-7th centuries

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Viking longboats on their way south across Slavic lands to Constantinople

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A Viking-Slav encounter, painting by V. Vasnetsov

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Kiev Rus

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Riurik, a Viking chief, the first Grand Prince of Kiev (9th century)

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Russia’s medieval democracy: veche, the city assembly

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Contact with the Eastern Roman Empire: Constantinople, 10th century

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The Second Rome: Hagia Sophia Cathedral, Constantinople

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The baptism of Prince Vladimir (painting by M Vasnetsov)

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988 CE: Russians are converted to the new faith

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Destruction of pagan gods

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“The Golden- Haired Saviour”

(Russian icon, 13th century)

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Power patterns in Russia 1 Kiev Rus became a major European state in a century Security costs moderate Development costs moderate Balance between state and society A robust market economy Democratic political institutions A state church sharing power with the Grand Prince

Key flaw: Feudal fragmentation, constant struggles for power among proliferating princes

Vulnerability to massive invasions