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Save Muscovy and Mongol For Later Muscovy and the Mongols
Cross-cultural influences on the steppe frontier,
1304-1589
Donald Ostrowski
Harvard University
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY PRESSPUBLISHED BY THE PRESS SYNDICATE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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© Donald Ostrowski 1998
This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception
and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements,
no reproduction of any part may take place without
the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published 1998
Reprinted 2000
First paperback edition 2002
Typeface Fahmy 10/12 pt.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data
Ostrowski, Donald, 1945—
Muscovy and the Mongols: cross-cultural influences on the steppe frontier,
1304—1589 / Donald Ostrowski.
P. om.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0 521 59085 X (hardback)
1, Mongols~ Russia. 2. Russia ~ History - 1237-1480. 3. Russia - History
Period of consolidation, 1462-1605, 4. Russia - Foreign Influences. I. Title.
DK90.086 1998 947'.03-de21 97-21385 CIP
ISBN 0521 $9085X hardback
ISBN 0521 894107 paperbackContents
List of figures and tables
Preface
List of abbreviations
Introduction: understanding Muscovy
Part I: Mongol influence: what’s what and what’s not
Setting the scene
Administration, political institutions, and the military
Seclusion of women
Oriental despotism
Vk ene
Economic oppression
Part I: Development of an anti-Tatar ideology in the
Muscovite Church
6 Defining ideology
7 Anti-Tatar interpolations in the Rus’ chronicles
8 Fashioning the khan into a basileus
9 Byzantine political thought and Muscovy
10 Third Rome: delimiting the ruler’s power and authority
11 The myth of the “Tatar yoke”
Addendum: types of cross-cultural influence
Glossary
Chronology to 1589
Bibliography
Index
page x
xi
xv
29
31
36
64
85
108
133
135
144
164
199
219
244
249
251
254
266
312Figures and tables
8.2
21
5.1
9.1
9.2
Al
Figures
Relationship of texts of the Kulikovo cycle page 161
Proposed relationship of texts associated with
Skazanie o kniaz’iakh vladimirskikh 172
Genealogical relationships of Simeon Bekbulatovich 194
Tables
Asian dual-administration titles page 40
Ideological components 105
‘Tax-gathering equivalences 120
Relations between temporal ruler and his advisers 204
Spheres of responsibility of temporal and spiritual rulers 209
A typology of cross-cultural influence 250Introduction: understanding Muscovy
Scholars have expressed remarkably diverse opinions on the origins and
development of Muscovy. It is fair to say that no consensus exists on the
formation of Muscovite institutions, and by extension the development
of Muscovite political culture.! Nor does it appear likely that there will
be a consensus in the near future.
In studying Muscovy, one confronts, in addition to the wide-ranging
and often diametrically opposed interpretations of historians, a scarcity
of primary source material and often contradictory information in those
sources that do exist. If all or most of the interpretations about Muscovy
can be supported by evidence, then the diametrically opposed views
must result from giving different weight to that evidence, that is, of
emphasizing some aspects and dismissing other aspects of the testimony
of the primary sources. Therefore, unless we are prepared to continue to
deny categorically the contributions of all but a narrow range of studies
and evidence that agrees with our own view, we would be well advised to
formulate a framework for the study of Muscovite history to cope both
with the source problem and with the historiographic problem. By
establishing the delimiters of the historiographic tradition, we might
better be able to understand that problem, and, thereby, the source
problem as well. The following section is not intended to be an
exhaustive survey, but one that only characterizes the positions of the
different interpretive camps.
I
‘At one extreme in the historiography are those who believe Muscovite
institutions are indigenously “Russian,” that in part they were continua
' By “political culture” I mean the totality of institutions, attitudes, concepts, and
practices connected with the running of a polity. In Muscovy, we have some information
about institutions and practices and we have Church writings concerning ideology, but
we have to extrapolate from these the attitudes that were operative at any particular
time. For a discussion of the concept “political culture,” see Keith Michael Baker,
“Introduction,” in The French Revolution and the Creation of Modern Political Culture, 42 Introduction
tions of Kievan institutions and that in part they were created to meet
uniquely Muscovite needs. This interpretation does not admit that
“outside” influences, especially that of the Mongols, had any impact.
S. M. Solov’ev represented this point of view when he wrote: “we have
no reason to assume any great influence [of the Mongols] on [Russia’s]
internal administration as we do not see any traces of it.”? S. F. Platonov
carried this argument further:
And how could the Tatar influence on Rus’ life be considerable when the Tatars
lived far off, did not mix with the Rus’, and appeared in Russia only to gather
tribute or as an army, brought in for the most part by Rus’ princes for the
princes’ own purposes? . . . Therefore, we can proceed to consider the internal
life of Rus’ society in the thirteenth century without paying attention to the fact
of the Tatar yoke.
Both Solov’ev and Platonov were referring specifically to the thirteenth
century, but this principle holds for later centuries in their work as well.
B. D. Grekov and A. Iu. Iakubovskii also categorically denied any direct
influence of the Mongols on Muscovy, but they did see an indirect result:
“The Russian state with Moscow at its head was created not with the
assistance of the Tatars but in the process of a hard struggle of the
Russian people against the yoke of the Golden Horde.”* We can compare
this view with N. M. Karamzin’s statement about the Mongol invasion
that “the calamity was a blessing in disguise, for the destruction
contained the boon of unity. . . Another hundred years of princely feuds.
What would have been the result. . . Moscow, in fact, owes its greatness
to the khans.”* The proponents of this interpretation credited the positive
result of this struggle to the Russian people. Nicholas Riasanovsky, in his
widely used textbook, expressed a negative variant of this interpretation:
It is tempting, thus, to return to the older view and to consider the Mongols as
of little significance in Russian history. On the other hand, their destructive
impact deserves attention. And they, no doubt, contributed something to the
general harshness of the age and to the burdensome and exacting nature of the
centralizing Muscovite state which emerged out of this painful background.®
vols., ed. Keith Michael Baker and Colin Lucas, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987-1991, vol. I:
The Political Culture of the Old Regime, pp. xi—xiii.
S. M, Solov’ev, Istoriia Rossii s drevneishikh vremen, 15 vols., Moscow, Sotsialnaia-
ekonomicheskaia literatura, 1960-1966, vol. 2, p. 489.
S. F, Platonov, Lekisii po russkoi istoni, 3 vols., St. Petersburg, Stolichnaia staropechatnia,
1899, vol. 1, p. 85.
4 B.D, Grekov and A. Tu, Takubovskii, Zolotaia Orda i ee padenie, Moscow and Leningrad,
Akademiia nauk SSSR, 1950, p. 256.
N. M. Karamzin, Istoriia gosudarstva rossiiskogo, Sth edn., 12 vols., St. Petersburg,
Eduard Prats, 1842-1843, vol. 5, p. 223.
Nicholas Riasanovsky, A History of Russia, 4th edn., New York, Oxford University Press,
1984, p. 76.Introduction 3
V. I. Koretskii reiterated this negative assessment of the Mongol impact
on Russian development: “The Mongol Yoke and its effects were among
the main reasons why Russia became a backward country in comparison
with several of the countries of western Europe.”? The strength of this
interpretation is indicated by the fact that it appears even in the work of
Eurasian historians, like George Vernadsky, who have done as much as
anyone to define positive aspects of Mongol influence on Muscovy. At
one point in his volume on the Mongols, Vernadsky wrote: “inner
Russian political life was never stified but only curbed and deformed by
Mongol rule.® In a variant of this interpretation, the impact of the
Mongols is seen not only as destructive of Russian society and political
culture but also as detrimental to the development of the Russians
themselves. The military historian Christopher Duffy summed up such
views this way:
‘The princes of Muscovy became the most enthusiastic and shameless of the
Mongol surrogates and much that was distinctive and unattractive about the
Russian character and Russian institutions has been attributed to this experi-
ence, Mongol influence has been held variously responsible for the destruction
of the urban classes, the brutalisation of the peasantry, a denial of human
dignity, and a distorted sense of values which reserved a special admiration for
ferocity, tyrannical ways and slyness.?
7 V. IL. Koretskii, “Mongol Yoke in Russia,” in Moder Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet
History (MERSH), ed. Joseph L. Wieczynski, Gulf Breeze, FL, Academic International
Press, 54 vols., 1976-1990, vol. 23, p. 47. For a survey of the Soviet historiographical
denial of any positive influence from the Mongols, see Charles J. Halperin, “Soviet
Historiography on Russia and the Mongols,” Russian Review, vol. 41, 1982,
pp. 306-322.
® George Vernadsky, A History of Russia, 5 vols., New Haven, CT, Yale University Press,
1943-1969, vol. 3, The Mongols and Russia, p. 344.
° Christopher Dufiy, Russia’s Military Way 10 the West: Origins and Nature of Russian
Military Power 1700-1800, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981, p. 2. The Russians
are not the only ones who have been seen as victims of such influence. Recently, John
Keegan blamed Mongol influence for the ruthless ferocity of the Spanish Reconquista
against Islam and for the massacres by the Spanish conquistadores of the Aztecs and
Incas. Keegan reasoned that the Mongols brought ruthless ferocity to the Muslims, who
jn turn introduced it to the Crusaders, who in turn brought it back with them when they
returned from the Holy Land, so that it eventually found its way into Spain: “it is not
fanciful to suggest that the awful fate of the Incas and Aztecs . . . at the hand of the
Spanish conquistadors ultimately harked back to Genghis himself.” John Keegan, 4
History of Warfare, New York, Alfred A. Knopf, 1994, p. 214. Not only is it “fanciful,”
but Keegan’s construct is one of the most fanciful I have ever come across in historical
study. Ruthless ferocity is one characteristic that individuals within ethnic groups seem
quite capable of developing on their own without foreign borrowing or imposition. But if
anyone introduced ruthless ferocity to anyone, it is more likely the Crusaders who
introduced it to the Muslims rather than vice versa. Contemporary Islamic accounts
treat the Crusaders as barbarians not only because of their low cultural attainments but
also because of their savage behavior. See Francesco Gabrieli, Arab Historians of the
Crusades, trans. E. J. Costello, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1969. Eyewitness
Christian accounts tend to confirm the Islamic assessment. See, ¢.g., Raymond of4 Introduction
And the historian and journalist Harrison Salisbury commented in
1969: “It is current history. Russia still struggles against the legacy of
backwardness, ignorance, servility, submissiveness, deceit, cruelty, op-
pression, and lies imposed by the terrible Mongols.”!° Since these
historians rarely cite evidence to support their accusations of nefarious
Mongol influence, one begins to suspect we are encountering here their
own anti-Mongol biases.
It has been somewhat easier to argue that the Mongols had little or
no impact than to argue the same for Byzantium. Yet, Edward L.
Keenan, who in general accepts the idea that there were outside
influences on Muscovy, has categorically denied any specific influence
of Byzantium on Muscovite political culture: “To seek evidence of
influential links between modern Russia or even Muscovite political
culture and that of Kiev or Byzantium is, in my view, futile.”” Keenan
went on to write:
It cannot be demonstrated, for example, that during its formative period (i.e.,
1450-1500) Muscovite political culture was significantly influenced either by
the form or by the practice of Byzantine political culture or ideology. Nor is
there convincing evidence that any powerful Muscovite politician or political
group was conversant with Byzantine political culture, except perhaps as the
latter was reflected in the ritual and organization of the Orthodox Church,
which itself had little practical political importance in early Muscovy and little
formative impact upon Russian political behavior.
Other scholars have asserted that the overall impact of the Church has
been a negative one. Francis Thomson is perhaps the most vociferous of
present-day scholars who see a stultifying impact of the Church: “It was
not the Mongols who were responsible for Russia’s intellectual isolation
. it was the Church.”!? This view echoes that of Russian liberals of
Aguilers’ description of the massacre of Muslims and Jews when the Crusaders took
Jerusalem in 1099. Raymond D’Aguilers, Historia Francorum qui ceperunt Jerusalem in
Recueil des historiens des Croisades, Historiens occidentaux, 5 vols., Paris, Imprimerie
Royale, 1844-1895, vol. 3, p. 300. According to Runciman, “it was this bloodthirsty
proof of Christian fanaticism that recreated the fanaticism of Islam.” Steven Runciman,
A History of the Crusades, 3 vols., Cambridge University Press, 1951, vol. 1, p. 287. In a
remarkable display of historical oversight, Keegan glosses over this and other outrageous
atrocities committed by the Crusaders against Muslims and Jews long before Chingiz
Khan was even born. Keegan, History, pp. 291-292.
1 Harrison E. Salisbury, War Between Russia and China, New York, W. W. Norton, 1969,
p31
11 Edward L. Keenan, “Muscovite Political Folkways,” Russian Review, vol. 45, 1986,
p. 118.
22 Keenan, “Muscovite Political Folkways,” p. 118.
»? Francis J. Thomson, “The Nature of the Reception of Christian Byzantine Culture in
Russia in the Tenth to Thirteenth Centuries and Its Implications for Russian Culture,”
Slavica Gandensia, vol. 5, 1978, p. 120.Introduction 5
the early twentieth century, like Paul Miliukov,"4 and the writings of
Richard Pipes to the effect that the Church had squandered its ideals,
sold out to the state in return for being allowed to keep its wealth, and
that “[t]he ultimate result of the policies of the Russian Orthodox
Church was not only to discredit it in the eyes of those who cared for
social and political justice, but to create a spiritual vacuum.”!5 The next
step in the historiography was to combine the two negative attitudes, the
anti-Mongol and the anti-Church, as Cyril Toumanoff did: “The
Mongol temporal ‘Iron Curtain’ completed the Byzantine spiritual
one.”!6
‘The indigenous-origin interpretation is an inherently Manichaean
one. If the proponents of this model allow for any outside influence, that
influence is, by definition, negative or destructive. Everything that is
positive and constructive comes from within Muscovy; everything that is
negative and destructive comes from without. In this interpretation,
social and administrative structures seem to spring up like mushrooms
after a rain, then disappear just as suddenly. They rise and fall, without
any apparent rationale. Furthermore, we then have difficulty in making
structural comparisons of Muscovite society with other traditional
societies in order to gain insights, because Muscovy is presented as
being totally different from any other society.
‘Numerous examples exist in the historiography to show that concen-
tration on the indigenous-origin model and the concomitant refusal to
look outside Muscovy for possible influence can lead scholars to faulty
interpretations. One small example and one large example should be
sufficient to illustrate this point. First, the small example: grand-princely
seals of the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries depict a beardless man
in a tunic on horseback slaying a dragon by means of a spear.” Some
scholars, after pointing out that there is no halo, have asserted that the
14 See Paul Miliukov, “The Religious Tradition,” in Russia and Its Crisis, University of
Chicago Press, 1906, pp. 65-130.
15 Richard Pipes, Russia Under the Old Regime, New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1974,
Pp. 2455 see also ibid., pp. 233~234.
16 Cyril Toumanoff, “Moscow the Third Rome: Genesis and Significance of a Politico-
Religious Idea,” Catholic Historical Review, vol. 40, 1954/55, p. 433. The appeal of this
notion of a dual Byzantine- and Mongol-induced isolation of Russia can be seen in the
fact that it has been used by some textbook writers, along with Russia’s geographical
distance from western Europe, to explain the limited European influence during this
period. See, e.g., Anthony Esler, The Human Venture: a World History from Prehistory to
the Present, 2nd edn., Englewood Cliffs, NJ, Prentice Hall, 1992, p. 449.
Snimki dreonikh russkikh pechatei, 2 vols., Moscow, Komissiia pechataniia gosudarstven-
nykh gramot i dogorov, 1880, vol. 1, seals nos. 1-7, and 9. These seals date from the
reigns of Ivan I11, Vasilii IIL, and Ivan IV. This same figure appears on Muscovite coins
of the period. From the spear (kop’e) that the horseman is carrying we obtain the term
“kopeck” (kopeika),6 Introduction,
figure is a “tsar on horseback,” most likely a representation of the grand
prince himself.!8 Yet, as early as 1880, Baron Théodore de Biihler had
discussed the improbability of the grand prince’s being represented as a
half-dressed and beardless youth. Instead, Biihler identified the figure
with St. George the Dragonslayer in Byzantine icons.!? More recently,
Robert Croskey pointed out that saints in Byzantine icons were not
always shown with halos and that a halo around the head of the rider
would have interrupted the inscription on the seal.”° It is clear that the
representation cannot be that of the tsar or grand prince of Muscovy
and must be that of St. George in Byzantine icons. Gustave Alef
recognized the similarity between the representation of this figure on the
seal and that of St. George in a Novgorod icon of the late fourteenth or
early fifteenth century.*) And when we recall that St. George was the
name saint of Iurii Dolgorukii, traditionally regarded as the founder of
Moscow, and that Iurii built churches dedicated to St. George in
Vladimir and Turiey-Polskii in 1152,?? it becomes abundantly clear that
an attempt to disregard the Byzantine antecedents of Muscovite culture
has led some scholars to propose and defend an untenable position.
Now, the large example: a number of historians have been trying for
some time to find linkages between Judaism and the Novgorod-Moscow
heresy of the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Yet, all such
attempts have failed.?? The reason these historians are seeking such
18 B. I, Kamentseva and N. V. Ustiugov, Russkaia sfragistika i geral’dika, Moscow,
Vysshaia shkola, 1963, pp. 111-113; G. V. Vilinbakhov, “Vsadnik russkogo gerba,”
Trudy Gosudarstoennogo Enmitazha, vol. 21, Numismarika, vol. 5, 1981, pp. 117-122.
19 Fedor Biuler [Baron Théodore de Buhler], “Predislovie,” Snimki drevnikh russkith
pechatei, vol. 1, p. XVI.
20 See Robert M. Croskey, Muscovite Diplomatic Practice in the Reign of Ivan II, New York,
Garland, 1987, pp. 202-204.
21 Gustave Alef, “The Adoption of the Muscovite Two-Headed Eagle: a Discordant
View,” Speculum, vol. 41, 1966, p. 1; repr. in Gustave Alef, Rulers and Nobles in
Fifteenth-Century Muscovy, London, Variorum, 1983, item 9. Cf. Istoriia russkogo
iskusstoa, 13 vols., Moscow, Nauka, 1954-1964, vol. 2, illustration facing p. 220 (see
also pp. 133 and 235). Cf. Konrad Onasch, Jkonen, Berlin, Giiterstoher Verlagshaus,
1961, plates 67 and 126.
For his building the church in Vladimir, see Polnoe sobranie russkikh leropisei (PSRL), 40
vols., St. Petersburg/Petrograd/Leningrad and Moscow, Arkheograficheskaia komissiia,
Nauka, and Arkheograficheskii tsentr, 1843-1995, vol. 4, p. 8; vol. 7, p. 575 vol. 9,
pp. 196-1975 and vol. 24, p. 77. For his building the church in luriev-Polskii, see
PSRL, vol. 4, p. 8; vol. 9, p. 1965 vol. 15, pt. 2, cols. 219-220; and vol. 28, pp. 32,
187. For a detailed discussion of the church itself, see N. N. Voronin, Zodchestva severo-
vostochnoi Rusi XI-XV vekov, 2 vols., Moscow, Akademiia nauk SSSR, 1962, vol. 2,
pp. 68-107. The Compilation of the End of the Fifteenth Centry states that he built a
church in Suzdal’ dedicated to St. George also in 1152. PSRL, vol. 25, p. 56. But this
entry may be a mistake on the part of the scribe. See also Voronin, Zodchestoa severo-
vostachnoi Rusi, vol. 1, pp. 91-100.
See Ia. S. Lur’e {Jakov S. Luria], “Unresolved Issues in the History of the Ideological
Movements of the Late Fifteenth Century,” in Medieval Russian Culture, ed. HenrikIntroduction 7
connections is the reference by Archbishop Gennadii and later Church
writers to the heretics as Judaizers. But referring to heretics generically
as “Jews” and “Judaizers” was commonplace among Byzantine Church
writers, even if there was no Jewish influence.** It was most likely
through the works of John of Damascus that the Byzantine theory of all
heresies deriving ultimately from either Judaism or paganism reached
Rus’.?5 Not understanding this usage has led many scholars on a wild
goose chase to demonstrate a connection between the Novgorod-
Moscow heretics and some Hebrew texts that had recently been
translated into Ruthenian.
Proponents of the indigenous model have litde difficulty in saying
they see no influence even when the evidence is overwhelmingly in favor
of the influence. A. N. Kirpichnikov, for example, denied any influence
of the Mongol army on the Muscovite army.2° Yet, the Mongol army
was the mightiest war machine of its time. To argue that Muscovite
military leaders did not borrow from the superior strategies, tactics, and
weaponry of the Mongols makes the Muscovites appear not only
ignorant but obstinate. Likewise, to argue that Muscovite leaders did
not borrow administrative techniques of the largest and most efficiently
run empire of the time tends to denigrate their abilities (as though they
were incapable of doing so). In short, it is too facile for historians to
deny outside influence on Muscovy as long as they continue to succumb
to their own mindsets rather than test their beliefs against the evidence.
Likewise, failure to integrate Muscovite history into world history
risks keeping the Muscovite field arcane and obsolete. If we maintain
Muscovy as completely sui generis, then we certainly have a history, but
one that no one will be interested in except as a quaint curiosity. As a
result, those who write integrative histories?’ will feel free to ignore
Muscovy or continue to write the old shibboleths about it and its
political culture,
At the other extreme in the historiography are those who believe
Birnbaum and Michael S. Flier, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984,
pp. 150-163.
2 Steven B. Bowman, The Jews of Byzantium, 1204-1453, Birmingham, University of
Alabama Press, 1985, pp. 29-30.
25 Jana Howlett [Ia. R. Khoulett], “Svidetel'stvo arkhiepiskopa Gennadiia o eresi
‘novgorodskikh eretikov zhidovskaia mudr”stvuiushchikh’,” Trudy Oidela dreunerusskoi
literatury (TODRL), vol. 46, 1993, pp. 64-65,
26 &_N. Kirpichnikov, “Fakty, gipotezy i zabluzhdeniia v izuchenii russkoi voennoi istorii
XII_XV w," Drevneishic gosudarstoa na territorii SSSR. Materialy i issledovaniia 1984
god, Moscow, Nauka, 1985, pp. 233-234 fi. 18 and p. 238 fn. 31
27 Joseph Fletcher sketched an outline for such a history in his “Integrative History:
Parallels and Interconnections in the Early Modern Period, 1500-1800,” Journal of
Turkish Studies, vol. 9, 1985, pp. 37-57.Ed Introduction
Muscovite institutions are all imports. This interpretation tends to see
Muscovy as being an imitation of other societies, in particular Byzan-
tine, Mongol, or European. The image of Muscovy as a variant of
Byzantine culture was expressed definitively by Dimitri Obolensky:
the attempt to identify and describe the local “recensions” which Byzantine
civilisation underwent in medieval Russia is, like the recognition of distinctive
styles in art, a worthwhile undertaking, however tentative its outcome may be.
In the last resort, however, these local variations may well prove, from the
historian’s viewpoint, to be less significant than the pattern of values, beliefs,
and intellectual and aesthetic experience which, in common with other peoples
of Eastern Europe, the Russians of the Middle Ages acquired from Byzan-
tium,?8
Other scholars also share this viewpoint. John Meyendorff wrote that
“nothing in Russian medieval culture and society can be fully explained
without reference to the Byzantine inheritance.”?° One of the earliest
propagators of this line of interpretation was A. A. Kunik, who asked:
“Is it not so, generally speaking, that the greater part of Russian history
is the reflection of the history of Byzantium?”?”
In contrast, the Eurasianists have adopted the Mongol model.
Nicholas Trubetskoi, for example, asserted that “the Russian state . . .
is the inheritor, the successor, the continuator of the historical work of
Chingiz Khan.”?! And George Vernadsky has stated that Muscovy “in a
sense, might be considered an offspring of the Mongol Empire.”?2
While accepting the destructiveness of the initial Mongol invasions and
negative aspects of Tatar hegemony, Vernadsky discussed a number of
positive Mongol influences on administration and the army.?? One of
the most visible of those who have argued in favor of the Mongol model
has been Karl Wittfogel, who wrote: “Tatar rule alone among the three
major Oriental influences affecting Russia was decisive both in de-
sttoying the non-Oriental Kievan society and in laying the foundations
28 Dimitri Obolensky, “The Relations Between Byzantium and Russia (Eleventh to
Fifteenth Century),” XIII International Congress of Historical Sciences. Moscow, August
16-23, 1970, Moscow, Nauka, 1970, p. 12.
John Meyendorff, “The Byzantine Impact on Russian Civilization,” in Windows on the
Russian Past: Essays on Soviet Historiography Since Stalin, ed. Samuel H. Baron and
Nancy W. Heer, Columbus, OH, American Association for the Advancement of Slavic
Studies, 1977, p. 45.
A. A. Kunik, “Pochemu Vizantiia donyne ostaetsia zagadkoi vo vsemirnoi istori
Uchenie zapiski Imp. Akademii nauk po pervomu i tret’emu otdeleniiam, vol. 2, pt. 3, 1853,
p.441
Nicholas Trubetskoi [I R.], Nasledie Chingiskhana. Vagliad na russkuiu istoriiu ne s
Zapada, a s Vostka, Berlin, Evraziiskoe izdatel’stvo, 1925, p. 9.
® George Vernadsky, “The Scope and Content of Chingis Khan’s Yasa,” Harvard Journal
of Asiatic Studies, vol. 3, 1938, p. 348.
3 Vernadsky, Mongols and Russia, pp. 344-366.Introduction 9
for the despotic state of Muscovite and post-Muscovite Russia.”**
Likewise, Tibor Szamuely, in his reinterpretation of Russian history,
wrote: “The Mongols bequeathed to Muscovy not only their conception
of society and of the state, but also the system of government and
administration that had served them so well, and that was so admirably
fitted to the needs of a large, expanding and powerful state.”** This
model is clearly in conflict with other historiographic models that
attribute Muscovite development either solely to indigenous causes or
predominantly to Byzantine influence.
Some historians, however, have proposed a model that combines the
Byzantine and Mongol influences. This model is what B, H. Sumner
must have had in mind when he wrote: “In the make-up of tsarism the
ideas and ritual traceable to Byzantine influence were fused with the
hard fact and practice of the Tatar khans.”2° Michael Cherniavsky and
Francis Dvornik explored this road further.27 One of the first scholars,
as far as I know, to have formulated this line of argument was Hedwig
Fleischhacker.2 She, in turn, may have been influenced by the ideas of
the Eurasianists. Trubetskoi had formulated the core of the idea when
he wrote that the Russians
had to do away with what was unacceptable, what made it {the Tatar state idea]
foreign and hostile. In other words, it had to be separated from its Mongolness
and connected with Orthodoxy, so it could be declared as one’s own, as
Russian. In fulfilling this task, Russian national thought turned to Byzantine
state ideas and traditions and in it found the material useful in the religious
appropriation and Russification of the Mongolian state system. The ideas of
Chinghiz Khan, obscured and eroded during the process of their implementa-
tion but still glimmering within the Mongolian state system, once again came to
life, but in a completely new, unrecognizable form after they had received a
Byzantine-Christian foundation.°?
He suggested that it was because of the Tatar hegemony that
“Byzantine state ideologies, which earlier did not have any particular
34 Karl Wittfogel, Oriental Desporism: a Comparative Study of Total Power, New York,
Vintage, 1981, p. 225.
95 Tibor Szamuely, The Russian Tradition, London, Secker & Warburg, 1974, p. 20.
3B. H. Sumner, A Short History of Russia, New York, Harcourt, 1949, p. 82
37 Michael Cherniavsky, “Khan or Basileus: an Aspect of Russian Mediaeval Political
Theory,” Journal of the History of Ideas, vol. 20, 1959, pp. 459-476; reprinted in The
Structure of Russian History: Interpretive Essays, ed. Michael Cherniavsky, New York,
Random House, 1970, pp. 65-79. Cherniavsky, however, like the anti-Mongolists,
seems to have equated Asiatic with barbaric, a bias that Dvornik did not exhibit.
Francis Dvornik, The Slavs in European History and Civilization, New Brunswick, NJ;
Rutgers University Press, 1962, pp. 378-380.
Hedwig Fleischhacker, Russland zwischen ztcei Dynastien (1598-1613). Ein Untersuching
iiber die Krise in der obersten Geteali, Vienna, Rudolf M. Rober, 1933, pp. 17-37.
3° Trubetskoi, Nasledie Chingiskhana, p. 19.
a810 Introduction
popularity, came to occupy a central place in the Russian national
consciousness” and that “these ideologies . . . were needed only to link
an idea of the state, Mongolian in origin, to Orthodoxy, thereby making
it Russian.”#? To reduce and oversimplify this model somewhat: in
articulation of theory, Muscovy was Byzantine; in administrative prac-
tice, Mongol. I have found this model helpful in understanding much
that otherwise is murky about Muscovy, but I am the first to admit that
this model is not sufficient by itself to explain the dynamics of Muscovite
society adequately.
A fifth model that has been proposed to explain Muscovy uses Europe
as an exemplar. A practitioner of this model is Alexander Yanov, who, in
his book on autocracy, wrote: “If. . . Russia [of the sixteenth century]
was indeed undergoing significant economic expansion, and in par-
ticular a building boom, the necessary preconditions which existed in
every European country ~ such as a free labor market, significant free
capital, and judicial protection of private property — must have been
present there too.”4! The most influential western European model was
supplied by Karl Marx with his stages of historical development of
societies: tribal, slave, feudal, bourgeois, all based on nineteenth-
century conceptions of western European history. How unsuccessful
this model has been is particularly clear in the attempts to deny that
Muscovy had slavery,!? or in attempts to find that Muscovy had
feudalism the same as in medieval western Europe.*?
Thus, any variation between the Muscovite form of the institution or
practice and its exemplar is dismissed as no more than a local corrup-
tion. These import/variant interpretations are slightly more helpful than
concentrating solely on indigenous developments because we can at
least begin to make structural-functional comparisons of Muscovite
institutions and practices with those in other societies. But it can also be
faulted as a uni-dimensional approach that all too easily degenerates
into superficial schematizations. To be sure, there are those who would
like to make sweeping generalizations about which governments were
influenced by the Mongols and which were not. Such generalizations
show an ignorance of both Muscovy and the Mongols. For example,
Boleslaw Szczesniak, in referring to the Mongol hegemony in Rus’, calls
4° Trubetskoi, Nasledie Chingiskhana, p. 20.
41 Alexander Yanov, The Origins of Autocracy: Ivan the Temible in Russian History, Berkeley,
University of California Press, 1981, p. 4.
* Fora discussion of this problem, see Richard Hellie, “Recent Soviet Historiography on
Medieval and Early Modern Russian Slavery,” Russian Review, vol. 35, 1976, pp. 1-32.
4 T discuss this problem in my article “The Military Land Grant Along the Muslim-
Christian Frontier,” Russian History, vol. 19, 1992, pp. 337-343, “Errata,” Russian
History, vol. 21, 1994, pp. 249-250.Introduction IL
it “this sad chapter of history,” “this period of national humiliation,”
“the greatest calamity for the Rus’ lands,” and “one of the greatest
historical evils.” Furthermore, he asserts that the “devious traditions” of
Mongol rule, which were “embodied in the Muscovite state, are visible
even today.” Finally, he breathes a sigh of relief that Belarus, Lithuania,
and Ukraine were spared “the evil forces created by the Tartar Yoke.”4#
After reading such assertions, one finds oneself agreeing more and more
with Alan Fisher’s assessment: “we still are without sophisticated
analyses of the origins of Russian institutions.”*
One of the problems with the acceptance of the view that the Mongols
may have made a positive contribution to Muscovite political culture is
the idea that a “pro-Mongol” evaluation must imply an anti-Russian
attitude. Richard Pipes pointed out that “[tJhe subject of Mongol
influence is a very sensitive one for Russians, who are quick to take
offence at the suggestion that their cultural heritage has been shaped in
any way by the orient, and especially by the oriental power best
remembered for its appalling atrocities and the destruction of great
centres of civilization.”* In the Soviet Union, those who attempted to
suggest that the Mongol influence may have had some positive results
were accused of “idealization of the history of the Turco-Mongol
nomads,” with the implication they were motivated by nationalist
considerations as a result of paying insufficient attention to Marxism.‘”
Over thirty years ago, a telling exchange occurred in the pages of
Slavic Review among Karl A. Wittfogel, Bertold Spuler, and Nicholas
Riasanovsky."® Both Wittfogel and Spuler argued in favor of seeing
positive Mongol influence on Muscovite and Russian institutional
development. Spuler added that “discussion on this issue is today
scarcely necessary any longer.” Yet, Riasanovsky’s position on Mongol
“* Boleslaw Szezesniak, “A Note on the Character of the Tatar Impact upon the Russian
State and Church,” Etudes Slaves et Est-Européens, vol. 17, 1972, pp. 92, 95, 97.
4 Alan W. Fisher, “Muscovite-Ottoman Relations in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries,” Humaniora Islamica, vol, 1, 1973, p. 213 fn. 11.
46 Pipes, Russia Under the Old Regime, p. 74.
*7 J. P. Petrushevskii, Zemledelie i agrarnye otnosheniia v Irane XIII-XIV vekov, Moscow
and Leningrad, Akademiia nauk SSSR, 1960, p. 31 fn. 1; pp. 36-37. For a discussion
of this point, see Bernard Lewis, “The Mongols, the Turks, and the Muslim Polity,”
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th ser., vol. 18, 1968, pp. 50-52; reprinted
in Bernard Lewis, Islam in History: Ideas, People, and Events in the Middle East, 2nd edn.,
Chicago, Open Court, 1993, pp. 190-191.
“8 Slavic Review, vol. 22, 1963: Karl A. Wittfogel, “Russia and the East: a Comparison
and Constrast,” pp. 627-643; Nicholas Riasanovsky, “‘Oriental Despotism’ and
Russia,” pp. 644-649; Bertold Spuler, “Russia and Islam,” pp. 650-655; and Karl A.
Wittfogel, “Reply,” pp. 656-662; reprinted in The Development of the USSR: an
Exchange of Views, ed. Donald W. Treadgold, Seattle, University of Washington Press,
1964, pp. 323-358.
*® Spuler, “Russia and Islam,” p. 6503 Development, p. 346.12 Introduction
influence is most clearly represented by his statement: “aspirin is not
borrowed from a headache.”*° Riasanovsky was referring here specifi-
cally to the fortifications built to repel Tatar intrusions of the sixteenth
century, but I think it a not unfair characterization of Riasanovsky’s
general view on Mongol influence. In response, Wittfogel accused
Riasanovsky of a “self-imposed conceptual blackout” that prevented
him from seeing the overwhelming influence of the Mongols.>!
We can explain the vehement difference in opinions, at least partially,
by differing perceptual positions. Scholars who deny or minimize
outside influence tend to be specialists in Muscovite and Russian
studies. Those who see only outside influence tend to be specialists in
other historical areas. Likewise, when viewing Muscovy from the inside,
one tends to see almost exclusively Muscovite developments; when
viewing it from the outside, one tends to see almost exclusively foreign
influences. Muscovite political culture thus appears to be both exclu-
sively indigenous and exclusively influenced by outside societies simulta-
neously, depending upon which frame of reference one is using at the
time. Like Schrédinger’s Cat, it is in both states of being at the same
time until the historian “opens the box” (i.e. makes an arbitrary
decision). Benedetto Croce has argued that history is not history until
the historian thinks it and remains history only as long as the historian
continues to think it.>? So, too, as each historian thinks it in turn,
Muscovy becomes both free from outside influence and influenced from
the outside — two states of being at once. The idea is to break down the
either/or bifurcation in order to see it as a both/and unity. We can
achieve fuller understanding by being aware and having an appreciation
of external influences when we focus on internal developments and by
being aware and having an appreciation of internal developments when
we focus on outside influences. Thus far, however, nationalist intransi-
gence, historical chauvinism, and ideological prefigurations have
blocked any attempt at constituting a unified model.
If there had been no Byzantium or Qipchaq Khanate, we might be led
to postulate “action at a distance” in relation to influence from western
Europe, that is, parallel institutional structures and functions with no
direct connections discernible. Although we cannot eliminate western
Europe as a possible influence, we can find more direct connections
with Byzantium, via the Rus’ metropolitans’ coming from Constanti-
nople until the mid-fifteenth century, and the Qipchaq Khanate, via the
grand princes’ frequent trips to Sarai during the fourteenth century. We
5° Riasanovsky, “Oriental Despotism’ and Russia,” p. 646; Development, p. 342.
31 Wittfogel, “Reply,” p. 662; Development, p. 358.
5? Benedetto Croce, Teoria e storia della storiografia, Bari, Laterza, 1917, p. 5.