The Time of Troubles
A Historical Study of the Internal Crisis and Social Struggle
in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century Muscovy
S. F. Platanov
Translated by John T. Alexander
xviii, 198 pages, 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0062-5, $14.95
Sergei Feodorovich Platonov's
Time of Troubles is a classic study of the years 1598-1613,
a turbulent and decisive period in Russian history. Available
for the first time in English, this work will be a valuable tool
for students of the medieval as well as modern periods.
Platonov, himself a tragic victim of the regimentation imposed
on Soviet cultural life in the 1920s, was born in 1860 and attained
immense public and professional recognition in Russia as a leading
historian. In his work he synthesized, to a high degree, two
major traditions of Russian historiography: the St. Petersburg
"school," which emphasized the collection and rigorous
use of primary sources, and the Moscow "school" with
its socioeconomic and geopolitical approaches. Time of Troubles
represents the finished product of a lifetime spent in research,
writing, and teaching. In broad terms it treats nearly a century
and a half of Russian history (1500-1648); in detail it scrutinizes
developments in the Muscovite State from 1598 to 1613. Some of
the major issues covered in this volume are: the growing consolidation
of Muscovite absolutism and the formation of a national state;
the expansion of Muscovy to the west and southeast; the demise
of the boyar class and the rise of the service-gentry; the emergence
of serfdom as the social basis of Muscovite society; the cataclysmic
end of one dynasty, the House of Rurik, and the beginnings of
another, the House of Romanov. For Platanov--who devoted most
of his career as a scholar to the study of these dramatic years--the
epoch marked nothing less than the great divide between medieval
Muscovy and modern Russia, witnessing the downfall of an essentially
patrimonial regime and its replacement, after fierce struggles,
by a more modern state founded on a new constellation of social
groups.
JOHN T. ALEXANDER is a member of the history department
at the University of Kansas.
|