EMPEROR PRUS, EMPEROR AUGUSTUS’ BROTHER, IN RUSSIAN AND ANTI-RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE 16TH CENTURY Cover Image

CESARZ PRUS, BRAT CESARZA AUGUSTA, W PROPAGANDZIE MOSKIEWSKIEJ I ANTYMOSKIEWSKIEJ DRUGIEJ POŁOWY XVI WIEKU
EMPEROR PRUS, EMPEROR AUGUSTUS’ BROTHER, IN RUSSIAN AND ANTI-RUSSIAN PROPAGANDA IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE 16TH CENTURY

Author(s): Konstantin Jerusalimski
Subject(s): Military history, Political history, Evaluation research, 16th Century
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: Muscovite historiography; Ivan the Terrible; Stefan Batory; Livonian War; Roman inheritance in Europe;

Summary/Abstract: The rewriting of history in the 16th century Russia led to changes in the structure and frames of “our past.” The growth of state power needed new exemplifications based on historical exempla virtutis in common “Russian past.” The histories told in politically engaged chronicles included invented stories about Emperor Prus, the alleged forefather of the Rurikids, whose image was borrowed, adopted and reconstructed in Moscow from European chronicles. This image emerged as one among other similar ideological constructs as translatio insignium, e.g. Attila’s domination in prehistoric times, the Third Rome etc. Ivan IV crowned officially in 1547 maintained the idea of his imperial origins.

  • Issue Year: 146/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 63-80
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: Polish