Where did Russia come from Alex Gendler

Where did Russia come from,

why is it so big,

and what are the differences
between it and its neighbors?

The answers lie in an epic story
of seafaring warriors,

nomadic invaders,

and the rise and fall of a medieval state
known as Kievan Rus.

In the first millennium,

a large group of tribes spread through
the dense woodlands of Eastern Europe.

Because they had no writing system,

much of what we know about them
comes from three main sources:

archaeological evidence,

accounts from literate scholars
of the Roman Empire and the Middle East,

and, lastly, an epic history called
the Primary Chronicle

compiled in the 12th century
by a monk named Nestor.

What they tell us is that these tribes
who shared a common Slavic language

and polytheistic religion

had by the 7th century split into
western, southern and eastern branches,

the latter stretching from
the Dniester River

to the Volga and the Baltic Sea.

As Nestor’s story goes, after years of
subjugation by Vikings from the north,

who, by the way, did not wear
horned helmets in battle,

the region’s tribes revolted
and drove back the Northmen,

but left to their own devices,
they turned on each other.

Such chaos ensued that, ironically,

the tribes reached out to the foreigners
they had just expelled,

inviting them to return
and establish order.

The Vikings accepted, sending a prince
named Rurik and his two brothers to rule.

With Rurik’s son, Oleg,
expanding his realm into the south,

and moving the capitol to Kiev,

a former outpost of the Khazar Empire,

the Kievan Rus was born,

“Rus” most likely deriving from
an old Norse word for “the men who row.”

The new princedom had complex relations
with its neighbors,

alternating between alliance and warfare
with the Khazar and Byzantine Empires,

as well as neighboring tribes.

Religion played an important
role in politics,

and as the legend goes, in 987,

the Rus prince Vladamir I decided
it was time to abandon Slavic paganism,

and sent emissaries
to explore neighboring faiths.

Put off by Islam’s prohibition on alcohol

and Judaism’s expulsion
from its holy land,

the ruler settled on Orthodox Christianity

after hearing odd accounts
of its ceremonies.

With Vladimir’s conversion and marriage
to the Byzantine emperor’s sister,

as well as continued trade
along the Volga route,

the relationship between
the two civilizations deepened.

Byzantine missionaries created an alphabet
for Slavic languages

based on a modified Greek script

while Rus Viking warriors served as the
Byzantine Emperor’s elite guard.

For several generations,

the Kievan Rus flourished
from its rich resources and trade.

Its noblemen and noblewomen married
prominent European rulers,

while residents of some cities
enjoyed great culture,

literacy, and even democratic freedoms
uncommon for the time.

But nothing lasts forever.

Fratricidal disputes over succession
began to erode central power

as increasingly independent cities
ruled by rival princes vied for control.

The Fourth Crusade
and decline of Constantinople

devastated the trade integral
to Rus wealth and power,

while Teutonic crusaders
threatened northern territories.

The final blow, however, would
come from the east.

Consumed by their squabbles,

Rus princes paid little attention
to the rumors

of a mysterious unstoppable hoard

until 1237, when 35,000 mounted
archers led by Batu Khan

swept through the Rus cities,

sacking Kiev before continuing
on to Hungary and Poland.

The age of Kievan Rus had come to an end,
its people now divided.

In the east, which remained
under Mongol rule,

a remote trading post, known as Moscow,

would grow to challenge
the power of the Khans,

conquering parts
of their fragmenting empire,

and, in many ways, succeeding it.

As it absorbed other
eastern Rus territories,

it reclaimed the old name
in its Greek form, Ruscia.

Meanwhile, the western regions
whose leaders had avoided destruction

through political maneuvering
until the hoard withdrew

came under the influence of Poland
and Lithuania.

For the next few centuries,

the former lands of Kievan Rus

populated by Slavs,

ruled by Vikings,

taught by Greeks,

and split by Mongols

would develop differences in society,
culture and language

that remain to the present day.

俄罗斯从何而来,

为何如此之大,

与邻国有何不同?

答案
在于航海战士、

游牧入侵者

以及被称为基辅罗斯的中世纪国家的兴衰的史诗故事

在第一个千年,

一大群部落
遍布东欧茂密的林地。

因为它们没有书写系统

,我们对它们的了解大部分
来自三个主要来源:

考古证据、

罗马帝国和中东文学学者的记述

,最后是一部
名为《初级编年史》的

史诗般的历史。 12世纪
由一位名叫内斯特的修道士。

他们告诉我们的是,这些
拥有共同斯拉夫语言

和多

神教的部落在 7 世纪分裂为
西部、南部和东部分支

,后者
从德涅斯特河延伸

到伏尔加河和波罗的海。

正如内斯特的故事所言,经过多年
的北方维京人的征服

,顺便说一句,他们
在战斗中没有戴角盔,

该地区的部落起义
并将北方人赶回,

但他们自己动手,
他们打开了每个 其他。

如此混乱接踵而至,具有讽刺意味的是

,部落向
他们刚刚驱逐的外国人伸出援手,

邀请他们返回
并建立秩序。

维京人接受了,派一位名叫鲁里克的王子
和他的两个兄弟来统治。

随着留里克的儿子奥列格
将他的领土扩展到南方,

并将首都迁至可

萨帝国的前哨站基辅

,基辅罗斯诞生了,

“罗斯”很可能源自
一个古老的北欧词,意思是“那些 排。”

新公国与邻国关系复杂

与可萨帝国和拜占庭帝国

以及邻近部落之间的联盟和战争交替出现。

宗教
在政治中发挥了重要作用

,正如传说中所说,在 987 年

,罗斯王子弗拉达米尔一世
决定是时候放弃斯拉夫的异教,

并派使者
去探索邻近的信仰。

由于伊斯兰教的禁酒令

和犹太教
从其圣地驱逐出境,

这位统治者在听到关于东正教

仪式的奇怪记录后决定选择东正教。

随着弗拉基米尔皈依并
与拜占庭皇帝的妹妹结婚,

以及
伏尔加河沿线的贸易往来不断,两个文明

之间的关系
不断加深。

拜占庭传教士根据修改后的希腊文字为斯拉夫语言创造了一个字母表

而罗斯维京战士则担任
拜占庭皇帝的精锐守卫。

几代人以来

,基辅罗斯
因丰富的资源和贸易而繁荣昌盛。

它的贵族和贵族妇女嫁给了
欧洲著名的统治者,

而一些城市的居民则
享有当时不常见的伟大文化、

文化,甚至民主自由

但没有什么是永恒的。 随着由敌对王子统治的日益独立的城市争夺控制权,

关于继承的自相残杀的争端
开始侵蚀中央权力

第四次十字军东征
和君士坦丁堡的衰落

摧毁
了罗斯财富和权力不可或缺的贸易,

而条顿十字军则
威胁着北方领土。

然而,最后一击将
来自东方。

被他们的争吵所消耗,

罗斯王子很少注意

关于神秘不可阻挡的囤积的谣言,

直到 1237 年,
由巴图汗率领的 35,000 名骑马弓箭手

横扫罗斯城市,

洗劫了基辅,然后
继续前往匈牙利和波兰。

基辅罗斯的时代已经结束,
它的人民现在分裂了。

在仍然
处于蒙古统治之下的东方

,一个被称为莫斯科的偏远贸易站

将发展壮大,以挑战
可汗的权力,

征服他们分裂的帝国的部分地区,

并在许多方面继承了它。

随着它吸收了其他
东罗斯领土,

它恢复
了其希腊形式的旧名称Ruscia。

与此同时,
其领导人

通过政治手段避免破坏,
直到囤积者撤离的西部地区,

却受到了波兰
和立陶宛的影响。

在接下来的几个世纪里

,以前

由斯拉夫人居住、

由维京人统治、

由希腊人教导

、被蒙古人分裂的基辅罗斯土地

将发展出社会、
文化和语言

的差异,这些差异一直持续到今天。