The Russian View of a “Peripheral” Region

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FOLETTI Ivan

Rok publikování 2016
Druh Článek v odborném periodiku
Časopis / Zdroj Convivium. Exchanges and Interactions in the Arts of Medieval Europe, Byzantium, and the Mediterranean. Seminarium Kondakovianum Series Nova
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Filozofická fakulta

Citace
Obor Umění, architektura, kulturní dědictví
Klíčová slova Russian Caucasus; Russia as Byzantium; Nikodim P. Kondakov; Center-Periphery model
Popis Because of the late nineteenth-century studies of Russian scholars, our understanding of medieval Caucasus seems to be largely determinate by the Russian imperial aspiration during the reign of Alexander III (1881–1894) and Nicolas I (1894– 1917). For these Tsars, the Caucasus was, before all, a uniform region with no distinction between Armenia and Georgia. Following this idea, scholars like Nikodim P. Kondakov (1844–1825) or Dimitrij Bakradze (1826–1890) presented the medieval region as a homogenous phenomenon, regardless of the cultural and political reality of the Middle ages. Through the imperial glance, the Caucasus was just the periphery of an international empire. In the same way, the medieval artistic cultures of the southern Caucasus were presented by the aforementioned scholars as a cultural periphery of the Byzantine world. Despite of the incredible quality of Georgian enamels or of the Armenian architecture, the art of this region was thus considered provincial. The large reception of the nineteenth-century Russian historiography, pioneering under many other aspects, had and always maintains a huge impact on the present vision of the medieval Caucasian cultures.
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