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Life of Alexander Nevsky

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Life of Alexander Nevsky
Russian: Житие Александра Невского
LanguageOld East Slavic and Old Church Slavonic

The Life of Alexander Nevsky (Russian: Житие Александра Невского, Zhitiye Aleksandra Nevskovo) is an Old East Slavic hagiography about Alexander Nevsky from the late 13th and early 14th centuries. It has been preserved in 13 manuscripts,[1] with the oldest extant manuscripts dating from the 14th century,[2] and the youngest to the 17th century.[1]

Textual history

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Historian Vasily Klyuchevsky (1871) was the first to make a distinction between different editions of the Life of Alexander Nevsky, naming the oldest edition the "First Edition" (Russian: Первоначальная редакция, romanizedPervonachal’naya redaktsiya).[2]

Iurii Begunov (1965), basing himself on thirteen stand-alone manuscripts,[3] dated the first redaction of the Life of Alexander Nevsky to the 1280s, hypothesising that it had been composed in the Rozhdestvensky (Nativity) monastery in Vladimir-on-Kliazma.[4] Begunov reasoned that during this recension, a passage was added mentioning that metropolitan Kirill II of Kiev declared that "the sun has set in the Suzdalian Land" at Nevsky's funeral.[4]

According to scholar Donald Ostrowski (2008), the original text of the Life of Alexander Nevsky was a secular military narrative, written by a layman in the late 13th century, who made no mention of "the Suzdalian Land", nor of "the Rus' Land".[3] Some hagiographic motifs would be inserted by a cleric a century later, but still no reference to "Suzdalian/Rus' Land".[3] Ostrowski argued that the earliest redaction of the Life should be dated to the mid-15th century, because it used the Novgorod First Chronicle Older Recension as a source.[3] It would be this editor who added an allusion to Volodimer I of Kiev's conversion of "the Rus' Land", and two mentions of "the Suzdalian Land", one of them the setting sun passage.[3]

Contents

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The Life of Alexander Nevsky describes the life and achievements of Aleksandr Yaroslavich ((1220/21–1263),[5] a prince of Novgorod and grand prince of Vladimir (r. 1252–1263– ), who defended the northern borders of Rus against the Swedish invasion, defeated the Teutonic knights at the Lake Chud in 1242 and paid a few visits to Batu Khan to protect the Vladimir-Suzdal Principality from the Khazar raids. The work is filled with 'patriotic spirit' and achieves a 'high degree of artistic expressiveness' in its description of Alexander's heroic deeds and those of his warriors.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ a b Isoaho 2006, p. 19.
  2. ^ a b Isoaho 2006, p. 17.
  3. ^ a b c d e Halperin 2022, p. 55.
  4. ^ a b Halperin 2022, p. 54.
  5. ^ Isoaho 2006, p. 1.
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Bibliography

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  • Halperin, Charles J. (2022). The Rise and Demise of the Myth of the Rus' Land (PDF). Leeds: Arc Humanities Press. p. 107. ISBN 9781802700565.
  • Isoaho, Mari (2006). The Image of Aleksandr Nevskiy in Medieval Russia: Warrior and Saint. Leiden: Brill. p. 428. ISBN 9789047409496. Retrieved 13 December 2024. (public version of PhD dissertation).