Ritual and Politics in Early Rus

Two Military Saints, Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow

Date: Mar 4, 2021 Time: 3:00 PM–4:00 PM Location: Zoom

Alexandra Vukovich discusses the ceremonies and rituals of Rus in the pre-Mongol period.

Ritual and Politics in Early Rus

This lecture explores the political culture of early Rus, the ceremonies and rituals that held a constitutive significance in the various polities (or fortified towns) of Rus in the pre-Mongol period. The ceremonial culture of Rus offers insight into the influences on this emergent society, a place (or a series of places), that stretched from the Scandinavia to the Eurasian Steppe. The literature, iconography, material culture, and built landscape of early Rus all offer representations of ceremonies, such as enthronement, alliance-making, oath-swearing, and commensality. These acts, often repetitive and banal, reflect the political coordinates of an elite that began to emerge (according to written sources) in the tenth century. The evolution and change of these practices over the centuries preceding the Mongol conquest reflect the articulation of princely power in Rus, as well as its shifting political organization. 

Sponsored by the Mary Jaharis Center for Byzantine Art and Culture and Harvard University Standing Committee on Medieval Studies.

REGISTRATION FOR THIS LECTURE IS CLOSED.

This lecture will take place live on Zoom, followed by a question and answer period. Please register to receive the Zoom link. Registration closes at 10:00 AM (EST) on March 4, 2021.

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