History of Ukraine-Rus'

Volume 2. The Eleventh to Thirteenth Centuries

By Mykhailo Hrushevsky
Edited by Christian Raffensperger, Frank E. Sysyn, and Tania Plawuszczak-Stech
Translated by Ian Press
Categories: World History
Series: History of Ukraine-Rus'
Publisher: CIUS Press
Hardcover : 9781894865104, 632 pages, January 2008
Hardcover : 9781894865173, 572 pages, January 2010
Hardcover : 9781894865258, 692 pages, January 2012
Hardcover : 9781894865371, 436 pages, January 2014
Hardcover : 9781894865456, 748 pages, January 2016
Hardcover : 9781894865487, 576 pages, January 2017
Hardcover : 9781894865548, 616 pages, January 2019
Hardcover : 9781894865586, 680 pages, April 2021
Hardcover : 9781895571196, 668 pages, January 1997
: 9781895571226, November 2020
Hardcover : 9781895571288, 616 pages, January 1999
Hardcover : 9781895571325, 896 pages, January 2002
Hardcover : 9781895571493, 844 pages, January 2004

Description

Volumes 1 through 3 of Mykhailo Hrushevsky’s ten-volume magnum opus, History of Ukraine-Rus', form a foundational unit for the history of the Ukrainian lands and people wherein the eminent historian explores the history of the Ukrainian lands from antiquity up until the dissolution of the Rus' state on western Ukrainian territories in the fourteenth century. Volume 2 acts as a chronological bridge within that unit.

The first half of the volume provides what is still the best political history of medieval southern East Slavic territory in any language. It draws on an extraordinarily wide range of evidence to document events from the time of the death of Volodymyr the Great in 1015 through the period of Mongol devastations in 1237–41. Hrushevsky describes the consolidation of the Rus' state in the middle Dnipro region and its rapid political and cultural growth and increasing prosperity in East Slavic territory under the ever-expanding lines of Volodymyr’s dynasty.

In the second half of the volume, Hrushevsky exploits all of the literary and archaeological evidence available at the turn of the twentieth century to describe as accurately as possible the physical presence of Rus' society on Ukrainian territory, including in the Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Pereiaslav lands, in Volhynia and Galicia, and in the steppe (what is now southern and eastern Ukraine). These two parts of the volume together make Hrushevsky’s case that the Ukrainian people had in their past a period of political statehood lasting for almost four centuries and that by 1900, they and their ancestors had lived continuously in the same territory for almost 1,500 years. Thus, Hrushevsky declares in his introductory remarks, “The history of the territory of present-day Ukraine is the history of the Ukrainian people.”