

Includes bibliographical references)Įurope to the thirteenth century - The last Premyslides, Bohemia, and Poland - John of Bohemia, Emperor Louis IV, and Poland - Charles IV, emperor and king of Bohemia, and Casimir the Great, king of Poland - The second Bulgarian empire, the rise of Serbia - The political organization of medieval Slavic states - Slavic medieval cultural achievements - The Czech reformation and its aftermath - The Russian principalities, the rise of Lithuania and Moscow, the Jagiellonian Federation - The Jagiellonian dynastic commonwealth and the Turkish danger - Poland-Lithuania and the Baltic - The growth of Muscovy and its relations with Poland-Lithuania - The Renaissance and the Slavs, Slavic cultural achievements in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries - The social and political development of the western and southern Slavs from the fifteenth to the seventeenth century - The growth of Muscovite autocracy: social and political changes in east Russia - The Reformation and the Slavs - The Hapsburgs, Muscovy, Poland-Lithuania, and Bohemia - Poland, Muscovy's "time of troubles, "and the birth of the Ukraine - The Muscovite state under the first Romanovs - Imperial Russia and the Slavic worldĪccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 07:02:30 Associated-names Archives of Czechs and Slovaks Abroad Boxid IA1784307 Camera Sony Alpha-A6300 (Control) Col_number COL-609 Collection_set printdisabled External-identifier


Includes bibliographical references (pages 565-635. A seminar on the history of Slavic politics, international relations, culture, and religion during the 6th through the 19th century
