1. The Works of Modern Russian Historians and the Historiography of Medieval Lithuania before and after the Red October
- Author
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Megem, Maksim and Wakar, Marcin
- Subjects
Baltic States ,History ,Sociology and Political Science ,history of Lithuania ,Geography, Planning and Development ,middle ages ,Istorija (mokslas) / History science ,lcsh:Regional economics. Space in economics ,nostalgia ,Iki revokiucinė istoriografija, sovietinė istoriografija ,Lietuva (Lithuania) ,Nostalgie ,Geschichte ,Historians ,Krom ,History of Lithuania ,General History ,Rusija (Rossija ,Rusijos Federacija ,Rossijskaja Federacija ,Rusijos imperija ,Carinė Rusija ,Russia) ,Historiker ,lcsh:HT388 ,Baltikum ,Lithuanian history ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,ddc:900 ,Soviet historiography ,allgemeine Geschichte ,Cultural Studies ,Litauen ,historian ,Istoriografija / Historiography ,Medieval Lithuania ,Geschichtsbild ,politische Situation ,Dvornichenko ,Pre-revolutionary historiography ,historiography ,political situation ,istorija ,Filyushkin ,Mikhalchenko ,Lithuania ,Archeologiniai tyrinėjimai / Archaeological investigations ,pre-revolutionary and Soviet historiography of medieval Lithuania, history of Lithuania, Dvornichenko, Krom, Filyushkin, Mikhalchenko ,conception of history ,Lietuva ,Geschichtsschreibung ,Istorikai ,Mittelalter ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,pre-revolutionary and Soviet historiography of medieval Lithuania - Abstract
This article examines the views of modern Russian scholars A. Dvornichenko, M. Krom, A. Filyushkin, and S. Mikhalchenko on the pre-revolutionary and Soviet historiography of medieval Lithuania. Chronological problem analysis constitutes the methodological framework of the study. Special attention is paid to the priorities of the Russian scholars in the analysis of the pre-revolutionary and Soviet Lithuanian studies. It is shown that the disintegration of the Soviet Union marked a new period in research on the historiography of medieval Lithuania. The activation of historical and historiographical studies was a result of a revision of views of Lithuanian past. The authors believe that modern historiography exhibits a “nostalgic” attitude to pre-revolutionary works, while the reception of the later, Soviet-era publications is more critically inclined. Post-Soviet historians do not restrict themselves by describing previous historiography: they also consider factors behind the change in the attitudes to Lithuani an past. Thus, the scholars pay special attention to studying the connection between the political situation and the evolution of the views of Russian scholars on the events of Lithuanian history.
- Published
- 2014