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Kyivan Rus

LC control no.n 91052954
Descriptive conventionsrda
Geographic headingKyivan Rus
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Geographic subdivision usageKyivan Rus
Variant(s)Kievan Rus
Drevni︠a︡i︠a︡ Rusʹ
Kieŭskai︠a︡ Rusʹ
Kievskai︠a︡ Rusʹ
Kyïvsʹka Rusʹ
Ruce
Rusʹ
Rus' Kieviana
Древняя Русь
Киевская Русь
Київська Русь
Русь
Special noteNon-Latin script reference not evaluated
Approximate dates for Kievan Rus cover the period from 862-1237--cf. (DLC) sh 91003846
Found inMAPA Digital Atlas of Ukraine Project, website, August 18, 2023 (From the time of the Christianization of Kyivan Rus' in 988 until the capture of Kyiv by the Mongols in 1240, a distinct literary and artistic culture emerged and flourished throughout the Kyivan Rus' principalities)
   <https://gis.huri.harvard.edu/golden-age-kyivan-rus>
Dumbarton Oaks, website, August 18, 2023 (For centuries, the peoples of Kyivan Rus and Byzantium were in constant, close contact with one another; numerous articles on this relationship have been published in Dumbarton Oaks Papers, a leading journal in the field of Byzantine Studies)
   <https://www.doaks.org/research/byzantine/resources/ukrainian-resources/in-dop>
Internet Encyclopedia of Ukraine, October 27, 2020 (Kyivan Rus' [Київська Русь; Kyivska Rus]; The first state to arise among the Eastern Slavs. It took its name from the city of Kyiv, the seat of the grand prince from about 880 until the beginning of the 13th century)
   <http://www.encyclopediaofukraine.com/display.asp?linkpath=pages%5CK%5CY%5CKyivanRushDA.htm>
Smarthistory, website, August 18, 2023 (Byzantium, Kyivan Rus', and their contested legacies; Kyivan Rus' emerged as a powerful confederation of city states during the second half of the ninth century in Eastern Europe, where rivers helped link the Baltic Sea with the Black Sea and facilitated trade with Constantinople, the wealthy capital of the Byzantine Empire)
   <https://smarthistory.org/byzantium-kievan-rus/>
Americana, 1990: v. 16, p. 438 (Kievan Rus; state encompassing several principalities with Kiev at its center as the senior principality; dates: 9th c. to approx. mid-13th c.)
Britannica, 15th ed.: v.10, p. 468 (Kiev ... Kievan Rus)
Tolochko, P.P. Drevni︠a︡i︠a︡ Rusʹ, 1987: t.p. (Древняя Русь = Drevni︠a︡i︠a︡ Rusʹ) intro. (Киевской Руси; Русь = Kievskoĭ Rusi; Rusʹ)
Ukrain̈sʹka radi︠a︡nskʹa ent︠s︡yklopedii︠a︡, 2d ed., 1980: v. 5, p. 133 (Київська Русь = Kyïvsʹka Rusʹ ... Medieval East Slavic state; territorially extending from the Baltic to the Black Sea from the Volga in the East to the Carpathians in the West)
Belaruskai︠a︡ savetskai︠a︡ ėntsyklapedyi︠a︡, 1972: v. 5, p. 560 (Kieŭskai︠a︡ Rusʹ)
L'idea del principe e le origini del potere politico nella Rus' Kieviana, 1988.
Semeniuk, Roman. Ruce. c1999: p. 1 (Ruce (Rus))
Geographic area codee-bw--- e-ru--- e-un---
Invalid LCCNsh 91003309