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Names of Rusʹ, Russia and Ruthenia

Originally, the name Rusʹ (Cyrillic: Русь) referred to the people,[1] regions, and medieval states (9th to 12th centuries) of the Kievan Rusʹ. Its territories are today distributed among Belarus, Northern Ukraine, Eastern Poland, and the European section of Russia. The term Россия (Rossija), comes from the Byzantine Greek designation of the Rusʹ, Ρωσσία Rossía—related to both Modern Greek: Ρως, romanizedRos, lit.'Rusʹ', and Ρωσία (Rosía, "Russia", pronounced [roˈsia]).

One of the earliest written sources mentioning the people called Rusʹ (as Rhos) dates to 839 in the Annales Bertiniani. This chronicle identifies them as a Germanic tribe called the Swedes. According to the Kievan Rusʹ Primary Chronicle, compiled in about 1113, the Rusʹ were a group of Varangians, Norsemen who had relocated somewhere from the Baltic region (literally "from beyond the sea"), first to Northeastern Europe, then to the south where they created the medieval Kievan state.[2] In the 11th century, the dominant term in the Latin tradition was Ruscia. It was used, among others, by Thietmar of Merseburg, Adam of Bremen, Cosmas of Prague and Pope Gregory VII in his letter to Izyaslav I. Rucia, Ruzzia, Ruzsia were alternative spellings. During the 12th century, Ruscia gradually made way for two other Latin terms, "Russia" and "Ruthenia". "Russia" (also spelled Rossia and Russie) was the dominant Romance-language form, first used by Liutprand of Cremona in the 960s and then by Peter Damian in the 1030s. It became ubiquitous in English and French documents in the 12th century. Ruthenia, first documented in the early 12th century Augsburg annals, was a Latin form preferred by the Apostolic Chancery of the Latin Church.

The modern name of Russia (Rossija), which came into use in the 15th century,[3][4][5] is derived from the Greek Ρωσία, which in turn derives from Ῥῶς, the self-name of the people of Rusʹ.[6]

A hypothetical predecessor of Kievan Rusʹ is the 9th-century Rusʹ Khaganate, whose name and existence are inferred from a handful of early medieval Byzantine and Persian and Arabic sources.[citation needed]

Etymology

 
Scandinavia with what later became Sweden, here in the 9th century. Roslagen is located in Uppland, the southeastern part of the yellow area of Svealand.
  Swedes
  Geats

The most common theory about the origins of Russians is the Germanic version. The name Rus', like the Proto-Finnic name for Sweden (*Ruotsi), supposed to be descended from an Old Norse term for "the men who row" (rods-) as rowing was the main method of navigating the rivers of Eastern Europe, and that it could be linked to the Swedish coastal area of Roslagen (Rus-law) or Roden, as it was known in earlier times.[7][8] The name Rus' would then have the same origin as the Finnish, Estonian, Võro and Northern Sami names for Sweden: Ruotsi, Rootsi, Roodsi and Ruoŧŧa.[9] The local Finnic and Permic peoples in northern Russia proper use the same (Rus'-related) name both for Sweden and Russia (depending on the language): thus the Veps name for Sweden and Swedish is Ročinma / Ročin,[10] while in the Komi language spoken further east the etymologically corresponding term Roćmu / Roć means already Russia and Russian instead.[11][12] The Finnish scholar Tor Karsten has pointed out that the territory of present-day Uppland, Södermanland and East Gothland in ancient times was known as Roðer or roðin. Thomsen accordingly has suggested that Roðer probably derived from roðsmenn or roðskarlar, meaning seafarers or rowers.[13][page needed] Ivar Aasen, the Norwegian philologist and lexicographer, noted proto-Germanic root variants Rossfolk, Rosskar, Rossmann.[14]

George Vernadsky theorized about the association of Rus and Alans. He claimed that Ruxs in Alanic means "radiant light", thus the ethnonym Roxolani could be understood as "bright Alans".[15] He theorized that the name Roxolani a combination of two separate tribal names: the Rus and the Alans.[15]

Early evidence

In Old East Slavic literature, the East Slavs refer to themselves as "[muzhi] ruskie" ("Rus' men") or, rarely, "rusichi." The East Slavs are thought to have adopted this name from the Varangian elite,[citation needed] which was first mentioned in the 830s in the Annales Bertiniani. The Annales recount that Louis the Pious's court at Ingelheim am Rhein in 839 (the same year as the first appearance of Varangians in Constantinople), was visited by a delegation from the Byzantine emperor. The delegates included two men who called themselves "Rhos" ("Rhos vocari dicebant"). Louis inquired about their origins and learned that they were Swedes. Fearing that they were spies for their brothers the Danes, he jailed them. They were also mentioned in the 860s by Byzantine Patriarch Photius under the name "Rhos."[citation needed]

Rusiyyah was used by Ahmad ibn Fadlan for Varangians near Astrakhan, and by the Persian traveler Ahmad ibn Rustah who visited Veliky Novgorod[16] and described how the Rus' exploited the Slavs.

As for the Rus, they live on an island ... that takes three days to walk round and is covered with thick undergrowth and forests; it is most unhealthy... They harry the Slavs, using ships to reach them; they carry them off as slaves and... sell them. They have no fields but simply live on what they get from the Slav's lands... When a son is born, the father will go up to the newborn baby, sword in hand; throwing it down, he says, "I shall not leave you with any property: You have only what you can provide with this weapon."[17]

When the Varangians arrived in Constantinople, the Byzantines considered and described the Rhos (Greek Ῥῶς) as a different people from the Slavs.

The earliest written mention of the word Rus' appears in the Primary Chronicle under the year 912. When describing a peace treaty signed by the Varangian Oleg of Novgorod during his campaign on Constantinople, it contains the following passage, "Oleg sent his men to make peace and sign a treaty between the Greeks and the Rus', saying thus: [...] "We are the Rus': Karl, Inegeld, Farlaf, Veremud, Rulav, Gudi, Ruald, Karn, Frelav, Ruar, Aktevu, Truan, Lidul, Vost, Stemid, sent by Oleg, the great prince of Rus', and all those under him[.]"[citation needed]

Later, the Primary Chronicle states that they conquered Kiev and created what is now called Kievan Rus'. The territory they conquered was named after them as were, eventually, the local people (cf. Normans).[citation needed]

However, the Synod Scroll of the Novgorod First Chronicle, which is partly based on the original list of the late 11th Century and partly on the Primary Chronicle, does not name the Varangians asked by the Chuds, Slavs and Krivichs to reign their obstreperous lands as the "Rus'". One can assume that there was no original mention of the Varangians as the Rus' due to the old list predating the Primary Chronicle and the Synod Scroll only referred to the Primary Chronicle if the pages of the old list were blemished.[citation needed]

Other spellings used in Europe during the 9th and 10th centuries were as follows: Ruzi, Ruzzi, Ruzia and Ruzari. Sources written in Latin routinely confused the Rus' with the Rugii, an ancient East Germanic tribe related to the Goths. Olga of Kiev, for instance, was called "queen of the Rugii" (regina Rugorum) in the Lotharingian Chronicle compiled by the anonymous continuator of Regino of Prüm.[18]

Spread further east

The word for "Russian" can be reconstructed for Proto-Permic as *rôć [rotɕ]. Besides Komi-Zyrian роч / roć, this develops also into Komi-Yazva ruć, Udmurt ӟыч / dźuć.[19] The word serves further as a source for exonyms of the Russians in several languages spoken in Siberia. The name surfaces in Mansi as roš, ruš, in Khanty as ruś, ruť, rüť depending on the variety, and in Selkup as ruš.[20]

Alternate anti-Normanist theories

A number of alternative etymologies have been suggested. These are derived from the "anti-Normanist" school of thought in Russian historiography during the 19th century and in the Soviet era. These hypotheses are considered unlikely in Western mainstream academia.[9] Slavic and Iranian etymologies suggested by "anti-Normanist" scholars include:

  • The Roxolani, a Sarmatian (i. e., Iranian) people who inhabited southern Ukraine, Moldova and Romania;[citation needed]
  • Several river-names in the region contain the element rus/ros and these might be the origin of the name of the Rus'.[21] In Ukraine, the Ros and Rusna, near Kiev and Pereyaslav, respectively, whose names are derived from a postulated Slavic term for "water", akin to rosa (dew), rusalka (water nymph), ruslo (stream bed). (A relation of rosa to the Sanskrit rasā́- "liquid, juice; mythical river" suggests itself; compare Avestan Raŋhā "mythical stream" and the ancient name of the Volga River, Ῥᾶ , from a cognate Scythian name.)[citation needed]
  • Rusiy (Русый), light-brown, said of hair color (the translation "reddish-haired", cognate with the Slavic "ryzhiy", "red-haired", is not quite exact);[citation needed]
  • A postulated proto-Slavic word for "bear", cognate with arctos and ursus.[citation needed]

The name Rus' may have originated from the Iranian name of the Volga River (by F. Knauer, Moscow 1901), as well as from the Rosh of Ezekiel.[22] Prof. George Vernadsky has suggested a derivation from the Roxolani or from the Aryan term ronsa[verification needed] (moisture, water). River names such as Ros are common in Eastern Europe.[13][page needed]

The Russian linguist Igor Danilevsky, in his Ancient Rus as Seen by Contemporaries and Descendants, argued against these theories, stating that the anti-Normanists neglected the realities of the Ancient Slavic languages and that the nation name Rus' could not have arisen from any of the proposed origins.[citation needed]

  • The populace of the Ros River would have been known as Roshane;
  • Red-haired or bear-origined people would have ended their self-name with the plural -ane or -ichi, and not with the singular -s' (red hair is one of the natural hair colors of Scandinavians and other Germanic peoples);
  • Most theories are based on a Ros- root, and in Ancient Slavic an o would never have become the u in Rus'.[citation needed]

Danilevskiy further argued[citation needed] that the term followed the general pattern of Slavic names for neighboring Finnic peoples—the Chud', Ves', Perm', Sum', etc.—but that the only possible word that it could be based on, Ruotsi, presented a historical dead-end, since no such tribal or national name was known from non-Slavic sources. "Ruotsi" is, however, the Finnish name for Sweden.[23] Danilevskiy shows that the oldest historical source, the Primary Chronicle, is inconsistent in what it refers to as the "Rus'": in adjacent passages, the Rus' are grouped with Varangians, with the Slavs, and also set apart from the Slavs and Varangians. Danilevskiy suggests that the Rus' were originally not a nation but a social class, which can explain the irregularities in the Primary Chronicle and the lack of early non-Slavic sources.[citation needed]

From Rus' to Russia

In modern English historiography, common names for the ancient East Slavic state include Kievan Rus or Kyivan Rus (sometimes retaining the apostrophe in Rus', a transliteration of the soft sign, ь),[24] Kievan or Kyivan Rus, and Kyivan or Kievan Ruthenia. It is also called the Princedom or Principality of Kyiv or Kiev, or just Kyiv or Kiev.[citation needed]

The term Kievan Rus' was established by modern historians to distinguish the period from the 9th century to the beginning of the 12th century, when Kiev was the center of a large state.[25]

The vast political state was subsequently divided into several parts. The most influential were, in the south, Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia and in the north, Vladimir-Suzdal and the Novgorod Republic.[citation needed]

Northeast principalities

In the 14th–16th centuries most of northeastern Rus' principalities were united under the power of the Grand Duchy of Moscow,[26] once a part of Vladimir-Suzdal, and formed a large state.[27][clarification needed] While the oldest endonyms were Rus' (Russian: Русь) and the Rus' land[28] or Russian land[28] (Russian: Русская земля),[29] a new form of its name, Rusia or Russia, appeared in the 15th century, and became common thereafter.[3][4][5] In the 1480s Muscovite state scribes Ivan Cherny and Mikhail Medovartsev mention Russia under the name Росиа, Medovartsev also mentions "the sceptre of Russian lordship (Росийскаго господства)".[30] In the following century Russia co-existed with the old name Rus' and appeared in an inscription on the western portal of the Transfiguration Cathedral of the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Monastery in Yaroslavl (1515), on the icon case of the Theotokos of Vladimir (1514), in the work by Maximus the Greek,[31] the Russian Chronograph written by Dosifei Toporkov (?–1543/44[32]) in 1516–22 and in other sources.[33]

By the 15th century, the rulers of the Grand Duchy of Moscow had incorporated the northern parts of the former Kievan Rus'.[citation needed] Ivan III of Moscow was the first local ruler to claim the title of "Grand Prince of all Rus'"[citation needed] This title was used by the Grand Dukes of Vladimir since the early 14th century,[citation needed] and the first prince to use it was Mikhail of Tver.[citation needed] Ivan III was styled by Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor as rex albus and rex Russiae.[citation needed] Later, Rus’ — in the Russian language specifically — evolved into the Byzantine-influenced form, Rossiya (Russia is Ῥωσσία (Rhōssía) in Greek).[citation needed]

Tsardom of Russia

In 1547, Ivan IV assumed the title of "Tsar and Grand Duke of all Rus'" (Царь и Великий князь всея Руси) and was crowned on 16 January,[34] thereby proclaiming the Tsardom of Russia, or "the Great Russian Tsardom", as it was called in the coronation document,[35] by Constantinople Patriarch Jeremiah II[36][37] and in numerous official texts,[38][39][40][41][42][43] but the state partly remained referred to as Moscovia (English: Muscovy) throughout Europe, predominantly in its Catholic part, though this Latin term was never used in Russia.[44] The two names "Russia" and "Moscovia" appear to have co-existed as interchangeable during the later 16th and throughout the 17th century with different Western maps and sources using different names, so that the country was called "Russia, or Moscovia" (Latin: Russia seu Moscovia) or "Russia, popularly known as Moscovia" (Latin: Russia vulgo Moscovia). In England of the 16th century, it was known both as Russia and Muscovy.[45][46] Such notable Englishmen as Giles Fletcher, author of the book Of the Russe Common Wealth (1591), and Samuel Collins, author of The Present State of Russia (1668), both of whom visited Russia, were familiar with the term Russia and used it in their works.[47] So did numerous other authors, including John Milton, who wrote A brief history of Moscovia and of other less-known countries lying eastward of Russia, published posthumously,[48] starting it with the words: "The Empire of Moscovia, or as others call it, Russia...".[49]

In the Russian Tsardom, the word Russia replaced the old name Rus' in official documents, though the names Rus' and Russian land were still common and synonymous to it,[50] and often appeared in the form Great Russia (Russian: Великая Россия), which is more typical of the 17th century,[51] whereas the state was also known as Great-Russian Tsardom (Russian: Великороссийское царствие).[38]

According to historians like Alexander Zimin and Anna Khoroshkevich, the continuous use of the term Moscovia was a result of traditional habit[citation needed] and the need to distinguish between the Muscovite and the Lithuanian part of the Rus', as well as of the political interests of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, which competed with Moscow for the western regions of the Rus'. Due to the propaganda of the Commonwealth,[52][53] as well as of the Jesuits, the term Moscovia was used instead of Russia in many parts of Europe where prior to the reign of Peter the Great there was a lack of direct knowledge of the country. In Northern Europe and at the court of the Holy Roman Empire, however, the country was known under its own name, Russia or Rossia.[54] Sigismund von Herberstein, ambassador of the Holy Roman Emperor in Russia, used both Russia and Moscovia in his work on the Russian tsardom and noted: "The majority believes that Russia is a changed name of Roxolania. Muscovites ("Russians" in the German version) refute this, saying that their country was originally called Russia (Rosseia)".[55] Pointing to the difference between Latin and Russian names, French captain Jacques Margeret, who served in Russia and left a detailed description of L’Empire de Russie of the early 17th century that was presented to King Henry IV, stated that foreigners make "a mistake when they call them Muscovites and not Russians. When they are asked what nation they are, they respond 'Russac', which means 'Russians', and when they are asked what place they are from, the answer is Moscow, Vologda, Ryasan and other cities".[56] The closest analogue of the Latin term Moscovia in Russia was “Tsardom of Moscow”, or “Moscow Tsardom” (Московское царство), which was used along with the name "Russia",[57][58] sometimes in one sentence, as in the name of the 17th century Russian work On the Great and Glorious Russian Moscow State (Russian: О великом и славном Российском Московском государстве).[59]

Official state names

Polity name Timespan Notes
Grand Duchy of Moscow 1263–1547 Also Muscovy. From the 15th century, the Grand Princes of Moscow increasingly started claiming the title "of all Rus'", and later "of Russia".
Tsardom of Russia 1547–1721
Russian Empire 1721–1917
Russian Republic 1917–1918 Government abolished in 1918 after the October Revolution.
Russian Democratic Federal Republic 1918 Name used in the 1918 constitution.
Russian Soviet Republic 1917–1918
Russian State 1918–1920 Located in Ufa.
Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic 1918–1936 Constituent republic of the USSR from 1922.
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 1936–1991
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 1922–1991 Commonly known as the “Soviet Union”.
Russian Federation 1991–present Official name defined in the 1993 Constitution of Russia.

From Rus' to Ruthenia

Southwest principalities

In the 13th–14th centuries, many of southwestern Rus' principalities were united under the power of the Kingdom of Rus' (Latin: Regnum Rusiae), historiographically better known as the Kingdom of Galicia–Volhynia. Roman the Great was variously named dux Rutenorum, princeps Ruthenorum or rex Ruthenorum by Polish chroniclers.[60] Danylo of Galicia was crowned Rex Ruthenorum or "king of the Rus'" in 1253.[61] Alternatively, Danylo and his brother Vasylko Romanovych were styled Princeps Galiciae, Rex Russiae, and Rex Lodomeriae in Papal documents, while the population of Halych and Volhynia was called Rusciae christiani and populus Russiae amongst other names.[62] The Gesta Hungarorum (c. 1280) stated that the Carpathian mountains between Hungary and Halych were situated in finibus Ruthenie ("on the borders of Ruthenia").[62]

Galicia–Volhynia declined by mid-14th century due to the Galicia–Volhynia Wars after the poisoning of king Yuri II Boleslav by local Ruthenian nobles in 1340. Iohannes Victiensis Liber (page 218) records the death of Boleslav as Hoc anno rex Ruthenorum moritur (...) ("In that year the king of the Ruthenians died (...)").[63] The Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Rus', Samogitia became its successor state, and the Kingdom of Poland later absorbed Galicia as the Rus Voivodeship. The latter became the Ruthenian Voivodeship (or "Russian"; Latin: Palatinatus Russiae) in 1434.[citation needed]

 
Engraving of 1617 with the inscription "Premislia celebris Rvssiae civitas" (Peremyshl – the famous city of Rus)

While in the Grand Principality of Moscow the rulers called their realm Rus, the residents of Western Rus lands called themselves Rusyny, Rusniaky or Rus'ki.[citation needed]

White, Black, Red

While gradually most of the territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, Rus', Samogitia retained the name Rus', some of them got more color-specific names:

Although the name Ruthenia arose as a Latinized form of the name Rus' in Western European documents in medieval times, Russia was still the predominant name for Western Rus' territories up until 19th century.[citation needed]

Modern Ruthenia

Later application of the name "Ruthenia" became narrowed to Carpathian Ruthenia (Karpats'ka Rus’), the northeastern part of the Carpathian Mountains, in the Kingdom of Hungary where the local Slavs had Rusyn identity. Carpathian Ruthenia incorporated the cities of Mukachevo (Hungarian: Munkács), Uzhhorod (Hungarian: Ungvár) and Prešov (Pryashiv; Hungarian: Eperjes). Carpathian Rus' had been part of the Kingdom of Hungary since 907, and had been known as "Magna Rus'" but was also called "Karpato-Rus'" or "Zakarpattya".[citation needed]

Little Russia, New Russia

In 1654, under the Pereyaslav Agreement, the Cossack lands of the Zaporozhian Host were signed into the protectorate of the Tsardom of Russia, including the Cossack Hetmanate of Left-bank Ukraine, and Zaporozhia. In Russia, these lands were referred to as Little Russia (Malorossiya). Colonies established in lands ceded from the Ottoman Empire along the Black Sea were called Novorossiya "New Russia".[citation needed]

Ecclesiastical titles

Originally, there was a metropolitan based in Kiev (Kyiv) calling himself "metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus'", but in 1299, the Kyivan metropolitan chair was moved to Vladimir by Metropolitan Maximos, Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus'. One line of metropolitans settled in Moscow in 1325 and continued titling themselves "of Kiev and all Rus'". Patriarch Callistus I of Constantinople in 1361 created two metropolitan sees with their own names (in Greek) for the northern and southern parts: respectively, Μεγάλη Ῥωσσία (Megálē Rhōssía,[64] Great Russia) in Vladimir and Kiev and Μικρὰ Ῥωσσία (Mikrà Rhōssía, Russia Minor or Little Russia) with the centers in Halych and Novogrudok.[citation needed]

After the 15th–16th century Moscow–Constantinople schism, the Muscovite church became autocephalous in 1589, renamed itself the Moscow Patriarchate (today better known as the Russian Orthodox Church) and switched to the title of "Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus'". On the other hand, the southwestern territories of former Kievan Rus' would undergo Polonisation and experience the 1596 Union of Brest, leading to the creation of the Ruthenian Uniate Church (Belarusian: Руская Уніяцкая Царква; Ukrainian: Руська Унійна Церква; Latin: Ecclesia Ruthena unita; Polish: Ruski Kościół Unicki). The primate of this church was titled "Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia and all Ruthenia". The Annexation of the Metropolitanate of Kyiv by the Moscow Patriarchate happened in c. 1685–1722.[citation needed]

When the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church proclaimed itself in 1917, its primates styled themselves "Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine", thus replacing "Rus'" with "Ukraine", until 1936. From 1991 to 2000, two further patriarchs of the UAOC called themselves "Patriarch of Kyiv and all Rus-Ukraine", but then "Rus" was definitively dropped from the name.[citation needed] After the Unification Council of 2018 which established the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU), the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine was first held by Epiphanius I of Ukraine. His rival Filaret (Denysenko) of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate (UOC-KP) continues claiming the title "Patriarch of Kyiv and All Rus'-Ukraine". Onufriy (Berezovsky) of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) (UOC-MP) also claims the title of "Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine", and in 2022 the UOC formally cut ties with the Russian Orthodox Church.[citation needed]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica: "Rus People"
  2. ^ Duczko, Wladyslaw (2004). Viking Rus. Brill Publishers. pp. 10–11. ISBN 978-90-04-13874-2. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  3. ^ a b Kloss 2012, p. 13.
  4. ^ a b E. Hellberg-Hirn. Soil and Soul: The Symbolic World of Russianness. Ashgate, 1998. P. 54
  5. ^ a b Lawrence N. Langer. Historical Dictionary of Medieval Russia. Scarecrow Press, 2001. P. 186
  6. ^ Milner-Gulland, R. R. (1997). The Russians: The People of Europe. Blackwell Publishing. pp. 1–4. ISBN 9780631218494.
  7. ^ Blöndal, Sigfús (1978). The Varangians of Byzantium. Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780521035521. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  8. ^ Stefan Brink, 'Who were the Vikings?', in The Viking World, ed. by Stefan Brink and Neil Price (Abingdon: Routledge, 2008), pp. 4-10 (pp. 6–7).
  9. ^ a b "Russia," Online Etymology Dictionary
  10. ^ "Зайцева М. И., Муллонен М. И. Словарь вепсского языка (Dictionary of Veps language). Л., «Наука», 1972.
  11. ^ Zyri͡ansko-russkīĭ i russko-zyri͡anskīĭ slovarʹ (Komi – Russian dictionary) / sostavlennyĭ Pavlom Savvaitovym. Savvaitov, P. I. 1815–1895. Sankt Peterburg: V Tip. Imp. Akademīi Nauk, 1850.
  12. ^ Русско–коми словарь 12000 слов (Russian – Komi dictionary, Л. М. Безносикова, Н. К. Забоева, Р. И. Коснырева, 2005 год, 752 стр., Коми книжное издательство.
  13. ^ a b Samuel Hazzard Cross; Olgerd P. Sherbowitz-Wetzor, eds. (1953). The Russian Primary Chronicle: Laurentian Text (PDF). Translated by Samuel Hazzard Cross; Olgerd P. Sherbowitz-Wetzor. Mediaeval Academy of America, Cambridge, Massachusetts. ISBN 978-0-910956-34-5. Retrieved 14 May 2016.
  14. ^ Ivar Aasen, Norsk Ordbog, med dansk Forklaring, Kristiania 1918 (1873), p.612
  15. ^ a b George Vernadsky (1959). The Origins of Russia. Clarendon Press. In the Sarmatian period the Rus' were closely associated with the Alans. Hence the double name Rus- Alan (Roxolani). As has been mentioned,1 ruxs in Alanic means 'radiant light'. The name 'Ruxs-Alan' may be understood in two ways: ... of two clans or two tribes.1 That the Roxolani were actually a combination of these two clans may be seen from the fact that the name Rus (or Ros) was on many occasions used separately from that of the Alans. Besides, the armour of the ...
  16. ^ "RUSRIKET: Vikingar skapade Europas största rike". Varldenshistoria.se (in Swedish). 28 April 2022. Retrieved 15 December 2022.
  17. ^ Ahmad ibn Rustah, according to National Geographic, March 1985
  18. ^ Henrik Birnbaum (8 January 2021). "Christianity Before Christianization". In Boris Gasparov; Olga Raevsky-Hughes (eds.). California Slavic Studies, Volume XVI: Slavic Culture in the Middle Ages. Vol. XVI. Univ of California Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-520-30918-0.
  19. ^ Лыткин, В.И.; Гуляев, Е.С. (1970). Краткий этимологический словарь коми языка. Moscow: Nauka.
  20. ^ Steinitz, Wolfgang (1966–1988). Dialektologisches und etymologisches Wörterbuch der ostjakischen Sprache. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag. pp. 1288–1289.
  21. ^ P.B., Golden, “Rūs”, in: Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Consulted online on 26 July 2018 doi:10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0942.
  22. ^ For the most thorough summary of this option see, Jon Ruthven, The Prophecy That Is Shaping History: New Research on Ezekiel's Vision of the End. Fairfax, VA: Xulon Press, 2003, 55–96. ISBN 1-59160-214-9 (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011. Retrieved 20 April 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  23. ^ Ruotsi – Wikipedia (FI)
  24. ^ Echoes of glasnost in Soviet Ukraine, by Romana M. Bahry, p. viii
  25. ^ J. B. Harley and D. Woodward, eds., The History of Cartography, Volume III, Part 1. P. 1852. Note 3. University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London. 2007. ISBN 978-0-226-90733-8
  26. ^ Halperin 2022, p. 1–3.
  27. ^ Robert O. Crummey. The Formation of Muscovy 1300–1613. Routledge. 2013. P. 29-84
  28. ^ a b Halperin 2022, p. vii–viii.
  29. ^ Kloss 2012, p. 3.
  30. ^ Kloss 2012, p. 30–38.
  31. ^ Kloss 2012, p. 55–56.
  32. ^ Kloss 2012, p. 61.
  33. ^ Kloss 2012, p. 57.
  34. ^ Robert Auty, Dimitri Obolensky. Companion to Russian Studies: Volume 1: An Introduction to Russian History. Cambridge University Press, 1976. P. 99
  35. ^ "Образование и развитие единого русского государства – Виртуальная выставка к 1150-летию зарождения российской государственности". rusarchives.ru.
  36. ^ Lee Trepanier. Political Symbols in Russian History: Church, State, and the Quest for Order and Justice. Lexington Books, 2010. P. 61: "so your great Russian Tsardom, more pious than all previous kingdoms, is the Third Rome"
  37. ^ Barbara Jelavich. Russia's Balkan Entanglements, 1806–1914. Cambridge University Press, 2004. P. 37. Note 34: "Since the first Rome fell through the Appollinarian heresy and the second Rome, which is Constantinople, is held by the infidel Turks, so then thy great Russian Tsardom, pious Tsar, which is more pious than previous kingdoms, is the third Rome"
  38. ^ a b Richard S. Wortman. Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas II. Princeton University Press, 2013. P. 17
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  55. ^ Sigismund von Herberstein. Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii. Synoptische Edition der lateinischen und der deutschen Fassung letzter Hand. Basel 1556 und Wien 1557. München, 2007. P. 29
  56. ^ Advertissement au Lecteur // Jacques Margeret. Estat de l'empire de Russie et grande duché de Moscovie, avec ce qui s'y est passé de plus mémorable et tragique... depuis l'an 1590 jusques en l'an 1606 en septembre, par le capitaine Margeret. M. Guillemot, 1607. Modern French-Russian edition: Маржерет Ж. Состояние Российской империи (Тексты, комментарии, статьи). Ж. Маржерет в документах и исследованиях. Серия: Studia historica М. Языки славянской культуры. 2007. С. 46, 117
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Sources

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  • Kloss, Boris (Б. М. Клосс) (2012). О происхождении названия "Россия" [On the origin of the name "Russia"] (in Russian). Moscow: Litres. p. 152. ISBN 9785457558656. Retrieved 10 February 2023. (first published 2012 by Рукописные памятники Древней Руси [Manuscript monuments of ancient Rus'], Moscow).
  • E. Nakonechniy. The Stolen Name: How the Ruthenians became Ukrainians. (Lviv, 1998)
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  • Voloshchuk, Myroslav (2021). Ruthenians (the Rus’) in the Kingdom of Hungary (11th to mid-14th Century): Settlement, Property, and Socio-Political Role. Leiden: Brill. p. 360. ISBN 9789004469709. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  • Zerkalo Nedeli (Mirror Weekly):
    • "How Rusyns Became Ukrainians", Zerkalo Nedeli (Mirror Weekly), July 2005. Available online and .
    • "Such a Deceptive Triunity", Zerkalo Nedeli (Mirror Weekly), 2–8 May 1998. Available online in Russian and in Ukrainian[permanent dead link].
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names, rusʹ, russia, ruthenia, this, article, about, rusʹ, name, information, about, rusʹ, people, rusʹ, people, other, uses, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources,. This article is about Rusʹ as a name For information about the Rusʹ people see Rusʹ people For other uses see Rus This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Names of Rusʹ Russia and Ruthenia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Look up Rus in Wiktionary the free dictionary Originally the name Rusʹ Cyrillic Rus referred to the people 1 regions and medieval states 9th to 12th centuries of the Kievan Rusʹ Its territories are today distributed among Belarus Northern Ukraine Eastern Poland and the European section of Russia The term Rossiya Rossija comes from the Byzantine Greek designation of the Rusʹ Rwssia Rossia related to both Modern Greek Rws romanized Ros lit Rusʹ and Rwsia Rosia Russia pronounced roˈsia One of the earliest written sources mentioning the people called Rusʹ as Rhos dates to 839 in the Annales Bertiniani This chronicle identifies them as a Germanic tribe called the Swedes According to the Kievan Rusʹ Primary Chronicle compiled in about 1113 the Rusʹ were a group of Varangians Norsemen who had relocated somewhere from the Baltic region literally from beyond the sea first to Northeastern Europe then to the south where they created the medieval Kievan state 2 In the 11th century the dominant term in the Latin tradition was Ruscia It was used among others by Thietmar of Merseburg Adam of Bremen Cosmas of Prague and Pope Gregory VII in his letter to Izyaslav I Rucia Ruzzia Ruzsia were alternative spellings During the 12th century Ruscia gradually made way for two other Latin terms Russia and Ruthenia Russia also spelled Rossia and Russie was the dominant Romance language form first used by Liutprand of Cremona in the 960s and then by Peter Damian in the 1030s It became ubiquitous in English and French documents in the 12th century Ruthenia first documented in the early 12th century Augsburg annals was a Latin form preferred by the Apostolic Chancery of the Latin Church The modern name of Russia Rossija which came into use in the 15th century 3 4 5 is derived from the Greek Rwsia which in turn derives from Ῥῶs the self name of the people of Rusʹ 6 A hypothetical predecessor of Kievan Rusʹ is the 9th century Rusʹ Khaganate whose name and existence are inferred from a handful of early medieval Byzantine and Persian and Arabic sources citation needed Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Early evidence 1 2 Spread further east 1 3 Alternate anti Normanist theories 2 From Rus to Russia 2 1 Northeast principalities 2 2 Tsardom of Russia 2 3 Official state names 3 From Rus to Ruthenia 3 1 Southwest principalities 3 2 White Black Red 3 3 Modern Ruthenia 4 Little Russia New Russia 5 Ecclesiastical titles 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 SourcesEtymology EditFurther information Rus people Scandinavia with what later became Sweden here in the 9th century Roslagen is located in Uppland the southeastern part of the yellow area of Svealand Swedes Geats Gotlanders The most common theory about the origins of Russians is the Germanic version The name Rus like the Proto Finnic name for Sweden Ruotsi supposed to be descended from an Old Norse term for the men who row rods as rowing was the main method of navigating the rivers of Eastern Europe and that it could be linked to the Swedish coastal area of Roslagen Rus law or Roden as it was known in earlier times 7 8 The name Rus would then have the same origin as the Finnish Estonian Voro and Northern Sami names for Sweden Ruotsi Rootsi Roodsi and Ruoŧŧa 9 The local Finnic and Permic peoples in northern Russia proper use the same Rus related name both for Sweden and Russia depending on the language thus the Veps name for Sweden and Swedish is Rocinma Rocin 10 while in the Komi language spoken further east the etymologically corresponding term Rocmu Roc means already Russia and Russian instead 11 12 The Finnish scholar Tor Karsten has pointed out that the territory of present day Uppland Sodermanland and East Gothland in ancient times was known as Roder or rodin Thomsen accordingly has suggested that Roder probably derived from rodsmenn or rodskarlar meaning seafarers or rowers 13 page needed Ivar Aasen the Norwegian philologist and lexicographer noted proto Germanic root variants Rossfolk Rosskar Rossmann 14 George Vernadsky theorized about the association of Rus and Alans He claimed that Ruxs in Alanic means radiant light thus the ethnonym Roxolani could be understood as bright Alans 15 He theorized that the name Roxolani a combination of two separate tribal names the Rus and the Alans 15 Early evidence Edit In Old East Slavic literature the East Slavs refer to themselves as muzhi ruskie Rus men or rarely rusichi The East Slavs are thought to have adopted this name from the Varangian elite citation needed which was first mentioned in the 830s in the Annales Bertiniani The Annales recount that Louis the Pious s court at Ingelheim am Rhein in 839 the same year as the first appearance of Varangians in Constantinople was visited by a delegation from the Byzantine emperor The delegates included two men who called themselves Rhos Rhos vocari dicebant Louis inquired about their origins and learned that they were Swedes Fearing that they were spies for their brothers the Danes he jailed them They were also mentioned in the 860s by Byzantine Patriarch Photius under the name Rhos citation needed Rusiyyah was used by Ahmad ibn Fadlan for Varangians near Astrakhan and by the Persian traveler Ahmad ibn Rustah who visited Veliky Novgorod 16 and described how the Rus exploited the Slavs As for the Rus they live on an island that takes three days to walk round and is covered with thick undergrowth and forests it is most unhealthy They harry the Slavs using ships to reach them they carry them off as slaves and sell them They have no fields but simply live on what they get from the Slav s lands When a son is born the father will go up to the newborn baby sword in hand throwing it down he says I shall not leave you with any property You have only what you can provide with this weapon 17 When the Varangians arrived in Constantinople the Byzantines considered and described the Rhos Greek Ῥῶs as a different people from the Slavs The earliest written mention of the word Rus appears in the Primary Chronicle under the year 912 When describing a peace treaty signed by the Varangian Oleg of Novgorod during his campaign on Constantinople it contains the following passage Oleg sent his men to make peace and sign a treaty between the Greeks and the Rus saying thus We are the Rus Karl Inegeld Farlaf Veremud Rulav Gudi Ruald Karn Frelav Ruar Aktevu Truan Lidul Vost Stemid sent by Oleg the great prince of Rus and all those under him citation needed Later the Primary Chronicle states that they conquered Kiev and created what is now called Kievan Rus The territory they conquered was named after them as were eventually the local people cf Normans citation needed However the Synod Scroll of the Novgorod First Chronicle which is partly based on the original list of the late 11th Century and partly on the Primary Chronicle does not name the Varangians asked by the Chuds Slavs and Krivichs to reign their obstreperous lands as the Rus One can assume that there was no original mention of the Varangians as the Rus due to the old list predating the Primary Chronicle and the Synod Scroll only referred to the Primary Chronicle if the pages of the old list were blemished citation needed Other spellings used in Europe during the 9th and 10th centuries were as follows Ruzi Ruzzi Ruzia and Ruzari Sources written in Latin routinely confused the Rus with the Rugii an ancient East Germanic tribe related to the Goths Olga of Kiev for instance was called queen of the Rugii regina Rugorum in the Lotharingian Chronicle compiled by the anonymous continuator of Regino of Prum 18 Spread further east Edit The word for Russian can be reconstructed for Proto Permic as roc rotɕ Besides Komi Zyrian roch roc this develops also into Komi Yazva ruc Udmurt ӟych dzuc 19 The word serves further as a source for exonyms of the Russians in several languages spoken in Siberia The name surfaces in Mansi as ros rus in Khanty as rus rut rut depending on the variety and in Selkup as rus 20 Alternate anti Normanist theories Edit Main article Anti Normanism A number of alternative etymologies have been suggested These are derived from the anti Normanist school of thought in Russian historiography during the 19th century and in the Soviet era These hypotheses are considered unlikely in Western mainstream academia 9 Slavic and Iranian etymologies suggested by anti Normanist scholars include The Roxolani a Sarmatian i e Iranian people who inhabited southern Ukraine Moldova and Romania citation needed Several river names in the region contain the element rus ros and these might be the origin of the name of the Rus 21 In Ukraine the Ros and Rusna near Kiev and Pereyaslav respectively whose names are derived from a postulated Slavic term for water akin to rosa dew rusalka water nymph ruslo stream bed A relation of rosa to the Sanskrit rasa liquid juice mythical river suggests itself compare Avestan Raŋha mythical stream and the ancient name of the Volga River Ῥᾶ Ra from a cognate Scythian name citation needed Rusiy Rusyj light brown said of hair color the translation reddish haired cognate with the Slavic ryzhiy red haired is not quite exact citation needed A postulated proto Slavic word for bear cognate with arctos and ursus citation needed The name Rus may have originated from the Iranian name of the Volga River by F Knauer Moscow 1901 as well as from the Rosh of Ezekiel 22 Prof George Vernadsky has suggested a derivation from the Roxolani or from the Aryan term ronsa verification needed moisture water River names such as Ros are common in Eastern Europe 13 page needed The Russian linguist Igor Danilevsky in his Ancient Rus as Seen by Contemporaries and Descendants argued against these theories stating that the anti Normanists neglected the realities of the Ancient Slavic languages and that the nation name Rus could not have arisen from any of the proposed origins citation needed The populace of the Ros River would have been known as Roshane Red haired or bear origined people would have ended their self name with the plural ane or ichi and not with the singular s red hair is one of the natural hair colors of Scandinavians and other Germanic peoples Most theories are based on a Ros root and in Ancient Slavic an o would never have become the u in Rus citation needed Danilevskiy further argued citation needed that the term followed the general pattern of Slavic names for neighboring Finnic peoples the Chud Ves Perm Sum etc but that the only possible word that it could be based on Ruotsi presented a historical dead end since no such tribal or national name was known from non Slavic sources Ruotsi is however the Finnish name for Sweden 23 Danilevskiy shows that the oldest historical source the Primary Chronicle is inconsistent in what it refers to as the Rus in adjacent passages the Rus are grouped with Varangians with the Slavs and also set apart from the Slavs and Varangians Danilevskiy suggests that the Rus were originally not a nation but a social class which can explain the irregularities in the Primary Chronicle and the lack of early non Slavic sources citation needed From Rus to Russia EditIn modern English historiography common names for the ancient East Slavic state include Kievan Rus or Kyivan Rus sometimes retaining the apostrophe in Rus a transliteration of the soft sign 24 Kievan or Kyivan Rus and Kyivan or Kievan Ruthenia It is also called the Princedom or Principality of Kyiv or Kiev or just Kyiv or Kiev citation needed The term Kievan Rus was established by modern historians to distinguish the period from the 9th century to the beginning of the 12th century when Kiev was the center of a large state 25 The vast political state was subsequently divided into several parts The most influential were in the south Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia and in the north Vladimir Suzdal and the Novgorod Republic citation needed Northeast principalities Edit In the 14th 16th centuries most of northeastern Rus principalities were united under the power of the Grand Duchy of Moscow 26 once a part of Vladimir Suzdal and formed a large state 27 clarification needed While the oldest endonyms were Rus Russian Rus and the Rus land 28 or Russian land 28 Russian Russkaya zemlya 29 a new form of its name Rusia or Russia appeared in the 15th century and became common thereafter 3 4 5 In the 1480s Muscovite state scribes Ivan Cherny and Mikhail Medovartsev mention Russia under the name Rosia Medovartsev also mentions the sceptre of Russian lordship Rosijskago gospodstva 30 In the following century Russia co existed with the old name Rus and appeared in an inscription on the western portal of the Transfiguration Cathedral of the Spaso Preobrazhensky Monastery in Yaroslavl 1515 on the icon case of the Theotokos of Vladimir 1514 in the work by Maximus the Greek 31 the Russian Chronograph written by Dosifei Toporkov 1543 44 32 in 1516 22 and in other sources 33 By the 15th century the rulers of the Grand Duchy of Moscow had incorporated the northern parts of the former Kievan Rus citation needed Ivan III of Moscow was the first local ruler to claim the title of Grand Prince of all Rus citation needed This title was used by the Grand Dukes of Vladimir since the early 14th century citation needed and the first prince to use it was Mikhail of Tver citation needed Ivan III was styled by Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor as rex albus and rex Russiae citation needed Later Rus in the Russian language specifically evolved into the Byzantine influenced form Rossiya Russia is Ῥwssia Rhōssia in Greek citation needed Tsardom of Russia Edit In 1547 Ivan IV assumed the title of Tsar and Grand Duke of all Rus Car i Velikij knyaz vseya Rusi and was crowned on 16 January 34 thereby proclaiming the Tsardom of Russia or the Great Russian Tsardom as it was called in the coronation document 35 by Constantinople Patriarch Jeremiah II 36 37 and in numerous official texts 38 39 40 41 42 43 but the state partly remained referred to as Moscovia English Muscovy throughout Europe predominantly in its Catholic part though this Latin term was never used in Russia 44 The two names Russia and Moscovia appear to have co existed as interchangeable during the later 16th and throughout the 17th century with different Western maps and sources using different names so that the country was called Russia or Moscovia Latin Russia seu Moscovia or Russia popularly known as Moscovia Latin Russia vulgo Moscovia In England of the 16th century it was known both as Russia and Muscovy 45 46 Such notable Englishmen as Giles Fletcher author of the book Of the Russe Common Wealth 1591 and Samuel Collins author of The Present State of Russia 1668 both of whom visited Russia were familiar with the term Russia and used it in their works 47 So did numerous other authors including John Milton who wrote A brief history of Moscovia and of other less known countries lying eastward of Russia published posthumously 48 starting it with the words The Empire of Moscovia or as others call it Russia 49 In the Russian Tsardom the word Russia replaced the old name Rus in official documents though the names Rus and Russian land were still common and synonymous to it 50 and often appeared in the form Great Russia Russian Velikaya Rossiya which is more typical of the 17th century 51 whereas the state was also known as Great Russian Tsardom Russian Velikorossijskoe carstvie 38 According to historians like Alexander Zimin and Anna Khoroshkevich the continuous use of the term Moscovia was a result of traditional habit citation needed and the need to distinguish between the Muscovite and the Lithuanian part of the Rus as well as of the political interests of the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth which competed with Moscow for the western regions of the Rus Due to the propaganda of the Commonwealth 52 53 as well as of the Jesuits the term Moscovia was used instead of Russia in many parts of Europe where prior to the reign of Peter the Great there was a lack of direct knowledge of the country In Northern Europe and at the court of the Holy Roman Empire however the country was known under its own name Russia or Rossia 54 Sigismund von Herberstein ambassador of the Holy Roman Emperor in Russia used both Russia and Moscovia in his work on the Russian tsardom and noted The majority believes that Russia is a changed name of Roxolania Muscovites Russians in the German version refute this saying that their country was originally called Russia Rosseia 55 Pointing to the difference between Latin and Russian names French captain Jacques Margeret who served in Russia and left a detailed description of L Empire de Russie of the early 17th century that was presented to King Henry IV stated that foreigners make a mistake when they call them Muscovites and not Russians When they are asked what nation they are they respond Russac which means Russians and when they are asked what place they are from the answer is Moscow Vologda Ryasan and other cities 56 The closest analogue of the Latin term Moscovia in Russia was Tsardom of Moscow or Moscow Tsardom Moskovskoe carstvo which was used along with the name Russia 57 58 sometimes in one sentence as in the name of the 17th century Russian work On the Great and Glorious Russian Moscow State Russian O velikom i slavnom Rossijskom Moskovskom gosudarstve 59 Official state names Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Polity name Timespan NotesGrand Duchy of Moscow 1263 1547 Also Muscovy From the 15th century the Grand Princes of Moscow increasingly started claiming the title of all Rus and later of Russia Tsardom of Russia 1547 1721Russian Empire 1721 1917Russian Republic 1917 1918 Government abolished in 1918 after the October Revolution Russian Democratic Federal Republic 1918 Name used in the 1918 constitution Russian Soviet Republic 1917 1918Russian State 1918 1920 Located in Ufa Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic 1918 1936 Constituent republic of the USSR from 1922 Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic 1936 1991Union of Soviet Socialist Republics 1922 1991 Commonly known as the Soviet Union Russian Federation 1991 present Official name defined in the 1993 Constitution of Russia From Rus to Ruthenia EditMain article Ruthenia See also Ruthenian language Southwest principalities Edit In the 13th 14th centuries many of southwestern Rus principalities were united under the power of the Kingdom of Rus Latin Regnum Rusiae historiographically better known as the Kingdom of Galicia Volhynia Roman the Great was variously named dux Rutenorum princeps Ruthenorum or rex Ruthenorum by Polish chroniclers 60 Danylo of Galicia was crowned Rex Ruthenorum or king of the Rus in 1253 61 Alternatively Danylo and his brother Vasylko Romanovych were styled Princeps Galiciae Rex Russiae and Rex Lodomeriae in Papal documents while the population of Halych and Volhynia was called Rusciae christiani and populus Russiae amongst other names 62 The Gesta Hungarorum c 1280 stated that the Carpathian mountains between Hungary and Halych were situated in finibus Ruthenie on the borders of Ruthenia 62 Galicia Volhynia declined by mid 14th century due to the Galicia Volhynia Wars after the poisoning of king Yuri II Boleslav by local Ruthenian nobles in 1340 Iohannes Victiensis Liber page 218 records the death of Boleslav as Hoc anno rex Ruthenorum moritur In that year the king of the Ruthenians died 63 The Grand Duchy of Lithuania Rus Samogitia became its successor state and the Kingdom of Poland later absorbed Galicia as the Rus Voivodeship The latter became the Ruthenian Voivodeship or Russian Latin Palatinatus Russiae in 1434 citation needed Engraving of 1617 with the inscription Premislia celebris Rvssiae civitas Peremyshl the famous city of Rus While in the Grand Principality of Moscow the rulers called their realm Rus the residents of Western Rus lands called themselves Rusyny Rusniaky or Rus ki citation needed White Black Red Edit Main article Etymology of Belarus While gradually most of the territories of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania Rus Samogitia retained the name Rus some of them got more color specific names White Rus Russia Ruthenia Alba Belarus Rus Biala This would eventually become the name of the country Belarus citation needed Black Rus Russia Ruthenia Nigra Chorna Rus Rus Czarna citation needed Red Rus Russia Ruthenia Rubra Chervona Rus Rus Czerwona citation needed Although the name Ruthenia arose as a Latinized form of the name Rus in Western European documents in medieval times Russia was still the predominant name for Western Rus territories up until 19th century citation needed Modern Ruthenia Edit Later application of the name Ruthenia became narrowed to Carpathian Ruthenia Karpats ka Rus the northeastern part of the Carpathian Mountains in the Kingdom of Hungary where the local Slavs had Rusyn identity Carpathian Ruthenia incorporated the cities of Mukachevo Hungarian Munkacs Uzhhorod Hungarian Ungvar and Presov Pryashiv Hungarian Eperjes Carpathian Rus had been part of the Kingdom of Hungary since 907 and had been known as Magna Rus but was also called Karpato Rus or Zakarpattya citation needed Little Russia New Russia EditIn 1654 under the Pereyaslav Agreement the Cossack lands of the Zaporozhian Host were signed into the protectorate of the Tsardom of Russia including the Cossack Hetmanate of Left bank Ukraine and Zaporozhia In Russia these lands were referred to as Little Russia Malorossiya Colonies established in lands ceded from the Ottoman Empire along the Black Sea were called Novorossiya New Russia citation needed Ecclesiastical titles EditFurther information Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus List of metropolitans and patriarchs of Kyiv and List of metropolitans and patriarchs of Moscow Originally there was a metropolitan based in Kiev Kyiv calling himself metropolitan of Kiev and all Rus but in 1299 the Kyivan metropolitan chair was moved to Vladimir by Metropolitan Maximos Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus One line of metropolitans settled in Moscow in 1325 and continued titling themselves of Kiev and all Rus Patriarch Callistus I of Constantinople in 1361 created two metropolitan sees with their own names in Greek for the northern and southern parts respectively Megalh Ῥwssia Megale Rhōssia 64 Great Russia in Vladimir and Kiev and Mikrὰ Ῥwssia Mikra Rhōssia Russia Minor or Little Russia with the centers in Halych and Novogrudok citation needed After the 15th 16th century Moscow Constantinople schism the Muscovite church became autocephalous in 1589 renamed itself the Moscow Patriarchate today better known as the Russian Orthodox Church and switched to the title of Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus On the other hand the southwestern territories of former Kievan Rus would undergo Polonisation and experience the 1596 Union of Brest leading to the creation of the Ruthenian Uniate Church Belarusian Ruskaya Uniyackaya Carkva Ukrainian Ruska Unijna Cerkva Latin Ecclesia Ruthena unita Polish Ruski Kosciol Unicki The primate of this church was titled Metropolitan of Kyiv Galicia and all Ruthenia The Annexation of the Metropolitanate of Kyiv by the Moscow Patriarchate happened in c 1685 1722 citation needed When the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church proclaimed itself in 1917 its primates styled themselves Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine thus replacing Rus with Ukraine until 1936 From 1991 to 2000 two further patriarchs of the UAOC called themselves Patriarch of Kyiv and all Rus Ukraine but then Rus was definitively dropped from the name citation needed After the Unification Council of 2018 which established the Orthodox Church of Ukraine OCU the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine was first held by Epiphanius I of Ukraine His rival Filaret Denysenko of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Kyiv Patriarchate UOC KP continues claiming the title Patriarch of Kyiv and All Rus Ukraine Onufriy Berezovsky of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate UOC MP also claims the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and All Ukraine and in 2022 the UOC formally cut ties with the Russian Orthodox Church citation needed See also EditName of UkraineReferences EditCitations Edit Encyclopaedia Britannica Rus People Duczko Wladyslaw 2004 Viking Rus Brill Publishers pp 10 11 ISBN 978 90 04 13874 2 Retrieved 1 December 2009 a b Kloss 2012 p 13 a b E Hellberg Hirn Soil and Soul The Symbolic World of Russianness Ashgate 1998 P 54 a b Lawrence N Langer Historical Dictionary of Medieval Russia Scarecrow Press 2001 P 186 Milner Gulland R R 1997 The Russians The People of Europe Blackwell Publishing pp 1 4 ISBN 9780631218494 Blondal Sigfus 1978 The Varangians of Byzantium Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 9780521035521 Retrieved 2 February 2014 Stefan Brink Who were the Vikings in The Viking World ed by Stefan Brink and Neil Price Abingdon Routledge 2008 pp 4 10 pp 6 7 a b Russia Online Etymology Dictionary Zajceva M I Mullonen M I Slovar vepsskogo yazyka Dictionary of Veps language L Nauka 1972 Zyri ansko russkiĭ i russko zyri anskiĭ slovarʹ Komi Russian dictionary sostavlennyĭ Pavlom Savvaitovym Savvaitov P I 1815 1895 Sankt Peterburg V Tip Imp Akademii Nauk 1850 Russko komi slovar 12000 slov Russian Komi dictionary L M Beznosikova N K Zaboeva R I Kosnyreva 2005 god 752 str Komi knizhnoe izdatelstvo a b Samuel Hazzard Cross Olgerd P Sherbowitz Wetzor eds 1953 The Russian Primary Chronicle Laurentian Text PDF Translated by Samuel Hazzard Cross Olgerd P Sherbowitz Wetzor Mediaeval Academy of America Cambridge Massachusetts ISBN 978 0 910956 34 5 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Ivar Aasen Norsk Ordbog med dansk Forklaring Kristiania 1918 1873 p 612 a b George Vernadsky 1959 The Origins of Russia Clarendon Press In the Sarmatian period the Rus were closely associated with the Alans Hence the double name Rus Alan Roxolani As has been mentioned 1 ruxs in Alanic means radiant light The name Ruxs Alan may be understood in two ways of two clans or two tribes 1 That the Roxolani were actually a combination of these two clans may be seen from the fact that the name Rus or Ros was on many occasions used separately from that of the Alans Besides the armour of the RUSRIKET Vikingar skapade Europas storsta rike Varldenshistoria se in Swedish 28 April 2022 Retrieved 15 December 2022 Ahmad ibn Rustah according to National Geographic March 1985 Henrik Birnbaum 8 January 2021 Christianity Before Christianization In Boris Gasparov Olga Raevsky Hughes eds California Slavic Studies Volume XVI Slavic Culture in the Middle Ages Vol XVI Univ of California Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 520 30918 0 Lytkin V I Gulyaev E S 1970 Kratkij etimologicheskij slovar komi yazyka Moscow Nauka Steinitz Wolfgang 1966 1988 Dialektologisches und etymologisches Worterbuch der ostjakischen Sprache Berlin Akademie Verlag pp 1288 1289 P B Golden Rus in Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs Consulted online on 26 July 2018 doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam COM 0942 For the most thorough summary of this option see Jon Ruthven The Prophecy That Is Shaping History New Research on Ezekiel s Vision of the End Fairfax VA Xulon Press 2003 55 96 ISBN 1 59160 214 9 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 Retrieved 20 April 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Ruotsi Wikipedia FI Echoes of glasnost in Soviet Ukraine by Romana M Bahry p viii J B Harley and D Woodward eds The History of Cartography Volume III Part 1 P 1852 Note 3 University of Chicago Press Chicago amp London 2007 ISBN 978 0 226 90733 8 Halperin 2022 p 1 3 Robert O Crummey The Formation of Muscovy 1300 1613 Routledge 2013 P 29 84 a b Halperin 2022 p vii viii Kloss 2012 p 3 Kloss 2012 p 30 38 Kloss 2012 p 55 56 Kloss 2012 p 61 Kloss 2012 p 57 Robert Auty Dimitri Obolensky Companion to Russian Studies Volume 1 An Introduction to Russian History Cambridge University Press 1976 P 99 Obrazovanie i razvitie edinogo russkogo gosudarstva Virtualnaya vystavka k 1150 letiyu zarozhdeniya rossijskoj gosudarstvennosti rusarchives ru Lee Trepanier Political Symbols in Russian History Church State and the Quest for Order and Justice Lexington Books 2010 P 61 so your great Russian Tsardom more pious than all previous kingdoms is the Third Rome Barbara Jelavich Russia s Balkan Entanglements 1806 1914 Cambridge University Press 2004 P 37 Note 34 Since the first Rome fell through the Appollinarian heresy and the second Rome which is Constantinople is held by the infidel Turks so then thy great Russian Tsardom pious Tsar which is more pious than previous kingdoms is the third Rome a b Richard S Wortman Scenarios of Power Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas II Princeton University Press 2013 P 17 Maija Jansson England and the North The Russian Embassy of 1613 1614 American Philosophical Society 1994 P 82 the towns of our great Russian Tsardom all the people of all the towns of all the great Russian Tsardom Walter G Moss A History of Russia Volume 1 To 1917 Anthem Press 2003 P 207 Readings for Introduction to Russian civilization Volume 1 Syllabus Division University of Chicago Press 1963 P 253 Hans Georg Peyerle George Edward Orchard Journey to Moscow LIT Verlag Munster 1997 P 47 William K Medlin Moscow and East Rome A Political Study of the Relations of Church and State in Muscovite Russia Delachaux et Niestl 1952 P 117 Addressing Patriarch Jeremiah Tsar Feodor Ivanovich declares We have received the sceptre of the Great Tsardom of Russia to support and to watch over our pious and present Great Russian Tsardom and with God s grace Shmidt S O Pamyatniki pismennosti v kulture poznaniya istorii Rossii M 2007 T 1 Str 545 Felicity Stout Exploring Russia in the Elizabethan commonwealth The Muscovy Company and Giles Fletcher the elder 1546 1611 Oxford University Press 2015 Jennifer Speake editor Literature of Travel and Exploration An Encyclopedia Routledge 2014 P 650 Marshall Poe editor Early exploration of Russia Volume 1 Routledge 2003 John T Shawcross John Milton The Self and the World University Press of Kentucky 2015 P 120 A brief history of Moscovia and of other less known countries lying eastward of Russia as far as Cathay gather d from the writings of several eye witnesses by John Milton quod lib umich edu January 2003 Kloss 2012 p 4 Ruslan G Skrynnikov Reign of Terror Ivan IV BRILL 2015 P 189 Kudryavcev Oleg Fyodorovich Rossiya v pervoj polovine XVI v vzglyad iz Evropy Russkij mir 1997 1 Tihvinskij S L Myasnikov V S Vostok Rossiya Zapad istoricheskie i kulturologicheskie issledovaniya Pamyatniki istoricheskoj mysli 2001 S 69 Horoshkevich A L Russkoe gosudarstvo v sisteme mezhdunarodnyh otnoshenij konca XV nachala XVI v M Nauka 1980 S 84 Sigismund von Herberstein Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii Synoptische Edition der lateinischen und der deutschen Fassung letzter Hand Basel 1556 und Wien 1557 Munchen 2007 P 29 Advertissement au Lecteur Jacques Margeret Estat de l empire de Russie et grande duche de Moscovie avec ce qui s y est passe de plus memorable et tragique depuis l an 1590 jusques en l an 1606 en septembre par le capitaine Margeret M Guillemot 1607 Modern French Russian edition Marzheret Zh Sostoyanie Rossijskoj imperii Teksty kommentarii stati Zh Marzheret v dokumentah i issledovaniyah Seriya Studia historica M Yazyki slavyanskoj kultury 2007 S 46 117 Vernadsky V Moscow Tsardom in 2 v Moscow Agraph 2001 Russian V nekotorom carstve v nekotorom gosudarstve Sigurd Schmidt Doctor of history sciences academician of RAN Journal Rodina Nr 12 2004 Archived 29 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine O velikom i slavnom Rossijskom Moskovskom gosudarstve Gl 50 Arsenev Yu V Opisanie Moskvy i Moskovskogo gosudarstva Po neizdannomu spisku Kosmografii konca XVII veka M 1911 S 6 17 Zap Mosk arheol in ta T 11 Voloshchuk 2021 p 64 Serhii Plokhy The Gates of Europe A History of Ukraine 2017 p 84 a b Voloshchuk 2021 p 65 Kersken 2021 Germans and Poles in the Middle Ages The Perception of the Other and the Presence of Mutual Ethnic Stereotypes in Medieval Narrative Sources Leiden Brill p 210 ISBN 9789004466555 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Vasmer Max 1986 Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language Moscow Progress p 289 Archived from the original on 15 August 2011 Sources Edit This article lacks ISBNs for the books listed in it Please make it easier to conduct research by listing ISBNs If the Cite book or Citation templates are in use you may add ISBNs automatically or discuss this issue on the talk page June 2009 Halperin Charles J 2022 The Rise and Demise of the Myth of the Rus Land PDF Leeds Arc Humanities Press p 107 ISBN 9781802700565 Retrieved 1 February 2023 Kloss Boris B M Kloss 2012 O proishozhdenii nazvaniya Rossiya On the origin of the name Russia in Russian Moscow Litres p 152 ISBN 9785457558656 Retrieved 10 February 2023 first published 2012 by Rukopisnye pamyatniki Drevnej Rusi Manuscript monuments of ancient Rus Moscow E Nakonechniy The Stolen Name How the Ruthenians became Ukrainians Lviv 1998 P Pekarskiy Science and Literature in Russia in the Age of Peter the Great St Petersburg 1862 S M Solovyov History of Russia since the Ancient Times Moscow 1993 Hakon Stang The Naming of Russia Oslo Meddelelser 1996 Y M Suzumov Etymology of Rus in Appendix to S Fomin s Russia before the Second Coming available on line in Russian Voloshchuk Myroslav 2021 Ruthenians the Rus in the Kingdom of Hungary 11th to mid 14th Century Settlement Property and Socio Political Role Leiden Brill p 360 ISBN 9789004469709 Retrieved 10 February 2023 Zerkalo Nedeli Mirror Weekly How Rusyns Became Ukrainians Zerkalo Nedeli Mirror Weekly July 2005 Available online in Russian and in Ukrainian Such a Deceptive Triunity Zerkalo Nedeli Mirror Weekly 2 8 May 1998 Available online in Russian and in Ukrainian permanent dead link We Are More Russian than Them a History of Myths and Sensations Zerkalo Nedeli Mirror Weekly 27 January 2 February 2001 Available online in Russian and in Ukrainian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Names of Rusʹ Russia and Ruthenia amp oldid 1139127738, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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