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Name Unknown: The Life of a Rusian Queen
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Barnes and Noble
Name Unknown: The Life of a Rusian Queen
Current price: $180.00
Barnes and Noble
Name Unknown: The Life of a Rusian Queen
Current price: $180.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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Name Unknown: The Life of a Rusian Queen
offers an example of an eastern European queen as a corrective to the western European focus of medieval queenship studies.
Through a chronological approach, this book looks beyond the popular biographies of royal women such as Eleanor of Aquitaine and Berengaria of Castile and gathers material from sources throughout Europe. It engages with modern queenship studies literature to create a collective biography of a Rusian queen through the various cycles of her life from the marriage of eight-year-old Verkhuslava to the death of the ruler of Minsk whose generosity is recorded, but not her name. For medievalists interested in women and queens,
provides an entry point to an area of Europe rarely studied in that literature. For Slavists, it presents a way of looking at medieval Rusian women that has not yet appeared in this scholarly tradition. Ultimately, this biography integrates Rus, and eastern Europe, into the medieval world and acts as an important reminder that women are essential to our history and thus to our overall understanding of the past.
This book is of great use to students and scholars interested in the history of women, queenship, and medieval Europe.
offers an example of an eastern European queen as a corrective to the western European focus of medieval queenship studies.
Through a chronological approach, this book looks beyond the popular biographies of royal women such as Eleanor of Aquitaine and Berengaria of Castile and gathers material from sources throughout Europe. It engages with modern queenship studies literature to create a collective biography of a Rusian queen through the various cycles of her life from the marriage of eight-year-old Verkhuslava to the death of the ruler of Minsk whose generosity is recorded, but not her name. For medievalists interested in women and queens,
provides an entry point to an area of Europe rarely studied in that literature. For Slavists, it presents a way of looking at medieval Rusian women that has not yet appeared in this scholarly tradition. Ultimately, this biography integrates Rus, and eastern Europe, into the medieval world and acts as an important reminder that women are essential to our history and thus to our overall understanding of the past.
This book is of great use to students and scholars interested in the history of women, queenship, and medieval Europe.