1
Pavlov, A. P., Perrie, Maureen. Ivan the Terrible. London: : Pearson/Longman 2003.
2
Graham HF. A brief account of the character and brutal rule of Vasil’evich, tyrant of Muscovy. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1975;9:213–66. doi:10.1163/221023975X00612
3
Vernadsky, George, Pushkarev, S. G. VII.4 The Nikonian Chronicle on the coronation of Ivan IV, January 16, 1547. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 133–4.
4
von Herberstein S. Extract from ‘Description of Moscow and Muscovy 1557’. In: Description of Moscow and Muscovy. London: : Dent 1969.
5
Arel M. Section Two of ‘The Lawes of Russia Written’. Oxford Slavonic papers 1990;23:26–31.
6
Chancellor R. Extract from ‘The Voyage of Richard Chancellor’. In: Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968.
7
Pelenski J. Diplomatic records on the conquest of Kazan. In: Russia and Kazan: conquest and imperial ideology (1438-1560s). The Hague: : Mouton 1974.
8
Chancellor R. Extract from ‘The Voyage of Richard Chancellor’. In: Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968. 27–30.
9
Pelenski J. Ivan IV’s official chronicles on the conquest of Kazan (The Little Chronile: The Tsar’s prayer, Ivan IV’s address; The Book of Royal Genealogy/Stepennaia kniga). In: Russia and Kazan: conquest and imperial ideology (1438-1560s). The Hague: : Mouton 1974. 220–1.
10
Pelenski J. Diplomatic records on the conquest of Kazan. In: Russia and Kazan: conquest and imperial ideology (1438-1560s). The Hague: : Mouton 1974.
11
Armstrong, Terence E., Minorsky, Tatiana, Wileman, David. Yermak’s campaign in Siberia: a selection of documents. London: : Hakluyt Society 1975.
12
Dmytryshyn B. A letter from King Sigismund of Poland to Elizabeth I. In: Medieval Russia: a source book, 900-1700. New York: : Holt, Rinehart & Winston 1967. 197–9.
13
Zenkovsky S. The story of Stephen Bathory’s campaign against Pskov. In: Medieval Russia’s epics, chronicles, and tales. New York: : Dutton 1974.
14
Possevino A. On the Livonian war. In: The Moscovia of Antonio Possevino, S.J.: translated with a critical introduction and notes by Hugh F. Graham. Pittsburgh: : Univ of Pittsburgh Press 4–8.https://digital.library.pitt.edu/islandora/object/pitt%3A31735057894929/viewer#page/2/mode/2up
15
Chancellor R. Extract from ‘The Voyage of Richard Chancellor’. In: Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968. 9–11.
16
Vernadsky G. VII:18 Ivan IV and England: a letter to King Edward VI, February 1554. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 150–1.
17
Dmytryshyn B. First privileges granted by Ivan the Terrible to English merchants, 1555, and a letter from Ivan the Terrible to Elizabeth I, 1570. In: Medieval Russia: a source book, 900-1700. New York: : Holt, Rinehart & Winston 1967.
18
Vernadsky G. VII20: Ivan IV’s instructions to Pisemskii, 1582. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 151–2.
19
Vernadsky G. VII: 29 Legends about the origins of the Moscow dynasty. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 158–9.
20
Vernadsky G. VII: 4 The Nikonian chronicle on the coronation of Ivan IV, January 16, 1547. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 133–4.
21
Vernadsky G. VII:40 The charter of the patriarch of Constantinople. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
22
Miller D. Extract from ‘The Velikie Minei Chetii and the Stepennaia Kniga’. In: Lokalverwaltung u[nd] Ständerecht unter Nikolaus I. Wiesbaden: : Harrassowitz 1979.
23
Vernadsky G. VII:6 An edict on Mestnichestvo. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
24
Dewey, Horace William, Kleimola, Ann M. No. 57: Judgment Charter. In: Russian private law in the XIV-XVII centuries: an anthology of documents. Ann Arbor]: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Michigan 178–82.
25
Vernadsky G. VII:9 Decrees on military service, 1556. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 141–2.
26
Graham HF. News from Muscovy concerning  the life and tyranny of Prince Ivan, conveyed by the nobleman, Albert Schlichting. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1975;9:267–75. doi:10.1163/221023975X00621
27
Vernadsky G. VII:2, VII:7, VII:31, VII:32, VII:33 (Charters). In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
28
Vernadsky G. VII:5 The Subenik of 1550. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 134–7.
29
Chancellor R. Extract from ‘The Voyage of Richard Chancellor’. In: Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin Press 1968. 33–5.
30
Von Staden H. Extract from ‘The Land and Government of Muscovy’ begining “When two parties came together...” In: The land and government of Muscovy: a sixteenth-century account. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1967. 15–6.
31
Dewey, Horace William, Kleimola, Ann M. No 55: Judgment Charter. In: Russian private law in the XIV-XVII centuries: an anthology of documents. Ann Arbor]: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Michigan
32
Vernadsky G. VII:11 The Nikonian chronicle on the establishment of the Oprichnina. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972. 142–5.
33
Graham HF. A brief account of the character and brutal rule of Vasil’evich, tyrant of Muscovy. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1975;9:213–66. doi:10.1163/221023975X00612
34
Von Staden H. The Oprichnina Court Building: Extract from ‘The Land and Government of Muscovy’. In: The land and government of Muscovy: a sixteenth-century account. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1967. 48–57.
35
Vernadsky G. VII:3, VII:14, VII:15 The Nikonian chronicle, The Alexander Nevskii monastry chronicle and a statement of the Zemskii Sobor. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
36
Vernadsky G. VII:25. VII:26, VII:27, VII:37, VII:43 Documents about the Church, Stoglav. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
37
Dewey, Horace William, Kleimola, Ann M. No 63: Antenuptial Agreement. In: Russian private law in the XIV-XVII centuries: an anthology of documents. Ann Arbor]: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Michigan 219–20.
38
Pouncy C. Extract from ’Rules of Russian households in the time of Ivan the Terrible. In: The ‘Domostroi’: rules for Russian households in the time of Ivan the Terrible. Ithaca, NY: : Cornell University Press 1994.
39
Chancellor R. Extract from ‘The Voyage of Richard Chancellor’. In: Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968. 39–41.
40
Jenkinson A. Extract from The voyage of Anthony Jenkinson. In: Rude & barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968. 56–8.https://contentstore.cla.co.uk/secure/link?id=68d677ca-b247-e811-80cd-005056af4099
41
Graham HF. A brief account of the character and brutal rule of Vasil’evich, tyrant of Muscovy. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1975;9:213–66. doi:10.1163/221023975X00612
42
Martin J. Economic Development in the Varzuga Fishing Volost’ During the Reign of Ivan IV. Russian History 1987;14:315–32. doi:10.1163/187633187X00169
43
Von Staden H. Extract from ‘The Land and Government of Muscovy’ beginning “In the podkletnye sela...” In: The land and government of Muscovy: a sixteenth-century account. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1967. 38–40.
44
Vernadsky G. VII:34, V:II:48 Pomeste Grant, Fedor’s Decree. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
45
Dewey, Horace William, Kleimola, Ann M. No 73: Surety Bond for a peasant. In: Russian private law in the XIV-XVII centuries: an anthology of documents. Ann Arbor]: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Michigan 245–6.
46
Kolycheva E. ‘Economic crisis in sixteenth-century Russia’ and Documents recording self-sale into slavery (1595-1603)’. In: Reinterpreting Russian history: readings, 860-1860s. New York: : Oxford University Press 1994.
47
Zenkovsky S. Peter and Fevronia of Murom. In: Medieval Russia’s epics, chronicles, and tales. New York: : Dutton 1974. 290–300.
48
Clarke Waugh D. The Unsolved Problem of Tsar Ivan IV’s Library. Russian History 1987;14:395–408. doi:10.1163/187633187X00196
49
Flier M. The throne of Monomakh. In: Architectures of Russian identity: 1500 to the present. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 2003.
50
Ivan IV. Account of the early life of Ivan IV. In: The correspondence between Prince A. M. Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV of Russia, 1564-1579. Cambridge: : [Cambridge] University Press 1955. 68–73.
51
Kurbsky AM. On Ivan IV. In: Prince A.M. Kurbsky’s History of Ivan IV. Cambridge: : University Press 1965.
52
Possevino A. On Ivan IV, Religious Dispute. In: The Moscovia of Antonio Possevino, S.J.: translated with a critical introduction and notes by Hugh F. Graham. Pittsburgh: : Univ of Pittsburgh Press
53
Kurbsky AM. On two halves of Ivan IV’s reign. In: Prince A.M. Kurbsky’s History of Ivan IV. Cambridge: : University Press 1965.
54
Perrie M. S. M. Eisenstein’s Film. In: The cult of Ivan the terrible in Stalin’s Russia. Basingstoke: : Palgrave 2001. 149–78.
55
Stalin JV. Stalin: the discussion with Sergei Eisenstein on the film Ivan the Terrible. Revolutionary Democracy 1997;3.
56
Dmytryshyn, Basil. Medieval Russia: a source book, 850-1700. Gulf Breeze, Florida: : Academic International press 2000.
57
Berry, Lloyd E., Crummey, Robert O. Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968.
58
Vernadsky, George, Pushkarev, S. G. A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven ; London: : Yale University Press 1972.
59
Marker, Gary, Kaiser, Daniel H. Reinterpreting Russian history: readings, 860-1860s. New York: : Oxford University Press 1994.
60
Zenkovsky, Serge A. Medieval Russia’s epics, chronicles, and tales. Rev. and enl. ed. New York: : Dutton 1974.
61
Arel MS. The Lawes of Russia Written: An English Manuscript on Muscovy at the End of the Sixteenth Century. Oxford Slavonic papers 1990;23:13–38.
62
Dmytryshyn, Basil, Crownhart-Vaughan, E. A. P., Vaughan, Thomas. Russia’s conquest of Siberia, 1558-1700: a documentary record. 2nd printing. Portland, Or: : Western Imprints, The Press of the Oregon Historical Society 1990.
63
Dewey, Horace William. Muscovite judicial texts, 1488-1556. Ann Arbor: : [University of Michigan, Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature] 1966.
64
Kurbskiĭ, Andreĭ Mikhaĭlovich, Ivan, Fennell, John Lister Illingworth, et al. The correspondence between Prince A. M. Kurbsky and Tsar Ivan IV of Russia, 1564-1579. Cambridge: : [Cambridge] University Press 1955.
65
Kurbskiĭ, Andreĭ Mikhaĭlovich, Fennell, John Lister Illingworth. Prince A.M. Kurbsky’s History of Ivan IV. Cambridge: : University Press 1965.
66
Iosif, Goldfrank, David M. The monastic rule of Iosif Volotsky. New rev. ed. Kalamazoo, Mich: : Cistercian Publications 2000.
67
Goldfrank DM. Sisterhood Just Might Be Powerful: the Testament-Rule of Elena Devochkina. Russian History 2007;34:189–205. doi:10.1163/187633107X00103
68
Graham, Hugh F. The Moscovia of Antonio Possevino, S.J.: translated with a critical introduction and notes by Hugh F. Graham. [Nachdr.] der Ausg. Pittsburg, Univ. of Pittsburg, 1977. Pittsburgh: : Univ of Pittsburgh Press http://digital.library.pitt.edu/p/pittpress/
69
Graham HF. Paul Juusten’s Mission To Muscovy. Russian History 1986;13:41–92. doi:10.1163/187633186X00025
70
GRAHAM HF. ‘A Brief Account of the Character and Brutal Rule of Vasil’evich, Tyrant of Muscovy’ (Albert Schlichting on Ivan Groznyi). Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1975;9:204–12. doi:10.1163/221023975X00603
71
Hamel, J. England and Russia: comprising, The voyages of John Tradescant the elder, Sir Hugh Willoughby, Richard Chancellor, Nelson, and others to the White Sea. [s.l]: : Kessinger publishing Company 2008.
72
Hakluyt, Richard, Payne, Edward John. The Principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English Nation: Vol. 2 : Northeastern Europe and adjacent countries. Charleston, S.C.: : BiblioBazaar 2008.
73
Hakluyt, Richard. The Principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English Nation: Vol. 3 : Northeastern Europe and adjacent countries : Part II. Middlessex: : The Echo Library 2006.
74
Herberstein, Sigmund, Picard, Bertold, Grundy, John Brownsdon Clowes. Description of Moscow and Muscovy. London: : Dent 1969.
75
Howes, Robert C., Russia. The testaments of the Grand Princes of Moscow. Ithaca, N.Y: : Cornell University Press
76
Dewey, Horace William, Kleimola, Ann M. Russian private law in the XIV-XVII centuries: an anthology of documents. Ann Arbor]: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literature, University of Michigan
77
Pouncy, Carolyn. The ‘Domostroi’: rules for Russian households in the time of Ivan the Terrible. Ithaca, NY: : Cornell University Press 1994.
78
Staden, Heinrich von, Esper, Thomas. The land and government of Muscovy: a sixteenth-century account. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1967.
79
Smith, R. E. F. The Enserfment of the Russian peasantry. London: : Cambridge U.P. 1968.
80
Tolstoy, George. The first forty years of intercourse between England and Russia, 1553-1593. New York: : Kessinger Publishing 2009.
81
Ivan, Rokyta, Jan, Tumins, Valerie A. Tsar Ivan IV’s Reply to Jan Rokyta. The Hague: : Mouton 1971.
82
Wileman, David, Armstrong, Terence, Minorsky, Tatiana, et al. Yermak’s campaign in Siberia: a selection of documents. Farnham, England: : Ashgate http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=UCL&isbn=9781409433453
83
Armstrong, Terence E., Minorsky, Tatiana, Wileman, David. Yermak’s campaign in Siberia: a selection of documents. London: : Hakluyt Society 1975.
84
Kleimola, Ann M., Lenhoff, Gail. Culture and identity in Muscovy, 1359-1584. Moscow: : ‘ITZ-Garant’ 1997.
85
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur Osteuropäischen Geschichte.
86
Ostrowski, Donald G., Pliguzov, A. I., Rowland, Daniel B., et al. Kamenʹ Kraėugʺlʹn: rhetoric of the medieval slavic world : Essays presented to Edward L. Keenan on his Sixtieth Birthday by his Colleagues and Studesnts. 1995;Harvard Ukrainain Studies.
87
Flier, Michael S., Rowland, Daniel B. Medieval Russian culture: Vol. 2. Berkeley ; London: : University of California Press 1994.
88
Wieczynski, Joseph L., Rhyne, George N. The modern encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet history. Gulf Breeze, Fla: : Academic International Press 1976.
89
University of London. The Slavonic and East European review. 1922.
90
Poe, Marshall, Lohr, Eric. The military and society in Russia: 1450-1917. Boston, MA: : Brill 2002.
91
Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas.
92
Crummey, Robert O. The formation of Muscovy, 1304-1613. London ; New York: : Longman 1987.
93
Kli͡uchevskiĭ, V. O., Hogarth, C. J. A history of Russia. London ; New York: : J. M. Dent & sons, ltd 1911.
94
Martin, Janet. Medieval Russia, 980-1584. Cambridge ; New York: : Cambridge University Press 1995.
95
Nørretranders, Bjarne. The shaping of czardom under Ivan Groznyj. Copenhagen: : Munksgaard 1964.
96
Perrie, Maureen, Lieven, D. C. B., Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Cambridge history of Russia. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2006.
97
Solovʹev, Sergeĭ Mikhaĭlovich, Rhinelander, A. L. H. History of Russia: Kazan, Astrakhan, Livonia, the Oprichnina and the Polotsk campaign, Vol. 10: The rule of Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, Fl: : Academic International Press 1995.
98
Solovʹev, Sergeĭ Mikhaĭlovich, Korros, Alexandra Shecket. Hsitory of Russia: the struggle against Bathory ; expansion into Siberia, Vol. 11: The reign of Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, Fla: : Academic International Press 2002.
99
Solovʹev, Sergeĭ Mikhaĭlovich, Smith, T. A. History of Russia: Vol. 12: Russian society under Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, Fl: : Academic International Press 1996.
100
Brumfield, William Craft, Velimirović, Miloš, Library of Congress. Christianity and the arts in Russia. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1991.
101
Brumfield, William Craft. A history of Russian architecture. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1993.
102
Cormack, Robin, Gaze, Delia. The art of holy Russia: icons from Moscow, 1400-1660. London: : Royal Academy of Arts 1998.
103
Fennell, John Lister Illingworth, Stokes, Antony. Early Russian literature. London: : Faber 1974.
104
Georges Florovsky. The Problem of Old Russian Culture. Slavic Review;Vol. 21:1–15.
105
Riha, Thomas. Readings in Russian civilization. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press
106
Cherniavsky, Michael. The structure of Russian history: interpretive essays. [1st ed.]. New York: : Random House
107
Grierson, Roderick, Walters Art Gallery (Baltimore, Md.), Princeton University, et al. Gates of mystery: the art of holy Russia. Cambridge: : Lutterworth Press
108
Kostochkin, V. V. Drevnerusskie goroda: pami͡atniki zodchestva XI-XVII vv. Moskva: : Iskusstvo 1972.
109
Rowland, Daniel B., Kivelson, Valerie A. The new Muscovite cultural history: a collection in honor of Daniel B. Rowland. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2009.
110
Lotman, I͡U. M., Shukman, Ann, Uspenskiĭ, Boris Andreevich. The semiotics of Russian culture. Ann Arbor: : Dept. of Slavic Languages and Literatures, University of Michigan 1984.
111
Onasch, Konrad. Icons. London: : Faber and Faber
112
Onasch, Konrad. Russian icons. Oxford: : Phaidon 1977.
113
Voyce, Arthur. The art and architecture of medieval Russia. [1st ed.]. Norman: : University of Oklahoma Press 1967.
114
Perrie, Maureen, Lieven, D. C. B., Suny, Ronald Grigor. The Cambridge history of Russia. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2006.
115
Millar, James R. Encyclopedia of Russian history. New York: : Macmillan Reference 2003.
116
Millar, James R. Encyclopedia of Russian history. New York: : Macmillan Reference 2003.
117
Berry, Lloyd E., Crummey, Robert O. Rude & Barbarous kingdom: Russia in the accounts of sixteenth-century English voyagers. University of Wisconsin P 1968.
118
Millar, James R. Encyclopedia of Russian history. New York: : Macmillan Reference 2003.
119
Madariaga, Isabel de. Ivan the Terrible: first tsar of Russia. London: : Yale University Press 2005.
120
Skrynnikov, R. G., Graham, Hugh F. Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, FL: : Academic International Press 1981.
121
Pavlov, A. P., Perrie, Maureen. Ivan the Terrible. London: : Pearson/Longman 2003.
122
Platonov, S. F., Hellie, Richard. Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, FL: : Academic International Press 1986.
123
Platonov, S. F., Hellie, Richard. Ivan the Terrible. Gulf Breeze, FL: : Academic International Press 1974.
124
Review by: Nikolay Andreyev, Tsar Ivan, IV and Andrey Kurbsky. The Authenticity of the Correspondence between Ivan IV and Prince Andrey Kurbsky. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 53:582–8.
125
Wieczynski, Joseph L., Rhyne, George N. The modern encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet history. Gulf Breeze, Fla: : Academic International Press 1976.
126
Graham HF. How Do We Know What We Know About Ivan the Terrible? (a Paradigm). Russian History 1987;14:179–98. doi:10.1163/187633187X00097
127
Charles J. Halperin. Keenan’s Heresy Revisited. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:481–99.
128
Charles J. Halperin. Edward Keenan and the Kurbskii-Groznyi Correspondence in Hindsight. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:376–403.
129
KEENAN EL. Apocryphal-Not Apocryphal?-Apocryphal! Niels Rossing and Birgit Ronne. Apocryphal-Not Apocryphal? A Critical Analysis of the Discussion Concerning the Correspondence Between Tsar Ivan IV Groznyj and Prince Andrej Kurbskij (Kobenhavens Universitets Slaviske Institut, Studier, 7).Copenhagen: Rosenkilde and Bagger, 1980. 189 pp. Dkr 80 (paper). Canadian-American Slavic Studies 1982;16:95–112. doi:10.1163/221023982X00579
130
Edward L. Keenan. Response to Halperin, ‘Edward Keenan and the Kurbskii-Groznyi Correspondence in Hindsight’. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:404–15.
131
Keenan, Edward L. The Kurbskii-Groznyi apocrypha: the seventeenth-century genesis of the ‘correspondence’ attributed to Prince A. M. Kurbskii and Tsar Ivan IV. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1971.
132
Miller DB. Official History in the Reign of Ivan Groznyi and Its Seventeenth-Century Imitators. Russian History 1987;14:333–60. doi:10.1163/187633187X00178
133
R. G. Skrynnikov. On the Authenticity of the Kurbskii-Groznyi Correspondence: A Summary of the Discussion. Slavic Review;Vol. 37:107–15.
134
Rowney, Don Karl, World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies. Imperial power and development: papers on pre-revolutionary Russian history : selected papers of the Third World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies. Columbus, Ohio: : Slavica Pub 1990.
135
Bogatyrev S. Normalizing the Debate about Kurbskii? Kritika : explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2012;13.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v013/13.4.bogatyrev.pdf
136
Dukes, Paul. World order in history: Russia and the West. London: : Routledge 1996.
137
Baron, Samuel H. Explorations in Muscovite history. [Aldershot]: : Variorum 1991.
138
Kämpfer, Frank, Frötschner, Reinhard. 450 Jahre Sigismund von Herbersteins Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii: 1549-1999. Wiesbaden: : Harrassowitz 2002.
139
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur Osteuropäischen Geschichte. 1978;24:101–30.
140
Poe, Marshall. A people born to slavery: Russia in early modern European ethnography, 1476-1748. Ithaca [N.Y.]: : Cornell University Press 2000.
141
Poe, Marshall. Foreign descriptions of Muscovy: an analytic bibliography of primary and secondary sources. Columbus, Ohio: : Slavica Publishers 1995.
142
Rogozhin, N. M., Buganov, V. I., Bushkovitch, Paul, et al. England and the north: the Russian embassy of 1613-1614. Philadelphia: : American Philosophical Society 1994.
143
Kappeler, Andreas, Clayton, Alfred. The Russian empire: a multiethnic history. Harlow: : Longman 2001.
144
Kleimola, Ann M., Lenhoff, Gail. Culture and identity in Muscovy, 1359-1584. Moscow: : ‘ITZ-Garant’ 1997.
145
Khodarkovsky M. Taming the ‘Wild Steppe’: Muscovy’s Southern Frontier, 1480-1600. Russian History 1999;26:241–97. doi:10.1163/187633199X00094
146
Khodarkovsky, Michael. Russia’s steppe frontier: the making of a colonial empire, 1500-1800. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2002.
147
Ostrowski, Donald G. Muscovy and the Mongols: cross-cultural influences on the steppe frontier, 1304-1589. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1998.
148
Pelenski, Jaroslaw. Russia and Kazan: conquest and imperial ideology (1438-1560s). The Hague: : Mouton 1974.
149
Skryivnikov RG. Ermak’s Siberian Expedition. Russian History 1986;13:1–39. doi:10.1163/187633186X00016
150
Armstrong, Terence E., Minorsky, Tatiana, Wileman, David. Yermak’s campaign in Siberia: a selection of documents. London: : Hakluyt Society 1975.
151
Davies, Brian L. Warfare, state and society on the Black Sea steppe: 1500-1700. New York: : Routledge 2007.
152
Dunning C, Smith NS. Moving Beyond Absolutism: Was Early Modern Russia a ‘Fiscal-Military’ State? Russian History 2006;33:19–44. doi:10.1163/187633106X00023
153
Thomas Esper. Military Self-Sufficiency and Weapons Technology in Muscovite Russia. Slavic Review;Vol. 28:185–208.
154
Filjushkin, Alexander. Ivan the Terrible: a military history. Barnsley: : Frontline 2008.
155
Frost, Robert I. The northern wars: war, state, and society in Northeastern Europe, 1558-1721. Harlow, England: : Longman (Pearson Education) 2000.
156
Hellie, Richard. Enserfment and military change in Muscovy. Chicago ; London: : University of Chicago Press 1971.
157
Keep, John L. H. Soldiers of the tsar: army and society in Russia, 1462-1874. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1985.
158
Lohr, Eric, Poe, Marshall. The military and society in Russia: 1450-1917. Leiden, Boston, MA: : Brill 2002.
159
Martin J. Two Pomeshchiki From the Novgorod Lands: Their Fates and Fortunes During the Livonian War. Russian History 2007;34:239–53. doi:10.1163/187633107X00130
160
Michael C. Paul. The Military Revolution in Russia, 1550-1682. The Journal of Military History;Vol. 68:9–45.
161
Poe M. Elite Service Registry in Muscovy, 1500-1700. Russian History 1994;21:251–88. doi:10.1163/187633194X00170
162
Poe M. The Consequences of the Military Revolution in Muscovy: A Comparative Perspective. Comparative Studies in Society and History 2009;38. doi:10.1017/S0010417500020478
163
Poe M. The Military Revolution, Administrative Development, and Cultural Change in Early Modern Russia. Journal of Early Modern History 1998;2:247–73. doi:10.1163/157006598X00207
164
Dianne L. Smith. Muscovite Logistics, 1462-1598. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 71:35–65.
165
Stevens, Carol Belkin. Russia’s wars of emergence: 1460-1730. New York: : Pearson Longman 2007.
166
Esper T. A Sixteenth-Century anti-Russian Arms Embargo. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 1967;2:180–96.
167
Lohr, Eric, Poe, Marshall. The military and society in Russia: 1450-1917. Leiden, Boston, MA: : Brill 2002.
168
Sergei Bogatyrev. Reinventing the Russian Monarchy in the 1550s: Ivan the Terrible, the Dynasty, and the Church. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 85:271–93.
169
Charles J. Halperin. Ivan IV and Chinggis Khan. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:481–97.
170
Kaiser DH. Symbol and Ritual in the Marriages of Ivan IV. Russian History 1987;14:247–62. doi:10.1163/187633187X00123
171
Flier, Michael S., Rowland, Daniel B. Medieval Russian culture: Vol. 2. Berkeley ; London: : University of California Press 1994.
172
John H. Lind. Ivan IV’s Great State Seal and His Use of Some Heraldic Symbols During the Livonian War. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:481–94.
173
Miller DB. Creating Legitimacy: Ritual, Ideology, and Power in Sixteenth-Century Russia. Russian History 1994;21:289–315. doi:10.1163/187633194X00189
174
David B. Miller. The Coronation of Ivan IV of Moscow. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:559–74.
175
Daniel Rowland. Did Muscovite Literary Ideology Place Limits on the Power of the Tsar (1540s-1660s)? Russian Review;Vol. 49:125–55.
176
Flier, Michael S., Rowland, Daniel B. Medieval Russian culture: Vol. 2. Berkeley ; London: : University of California Press 1994.
177
Halperin CJ. Did Ivan IV’s Oprichniki Carry Dogs’ Heads on Their Horses? Canadian-American Slavic Studies 2012;46:40–67. doi:10.1163/221023911X611100
178
Bogatyrev, Sergei, Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia. The sovereign and his counsellors: ritualised consultations in Muscovite political culture, 1350s-1570s. Helsinki: : Academia Scientiarum Fennica 2000.
179
Hellie R. Why Did the Muscovite Elite Not Rebel ? Russian History 1998;25:155–62. doi:10.1163/187633198X00121
180
Hellie Richard. Thoughts on the Absence of Elite Resistance in Muscovy. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2000;1:5–20. doi:10.1353/kri.2008.0029
181
Grobovsky, Antony N. The ‘chosen council’ of Ivan IV: a reinterpretation. Brooklyn, N.Y.: : T. Gaus’ Sons
182
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur Osteuropäischen Geschichte.
183
Ann M. Kleimola. The Changing Face of the Muscovite Aristocracy The 16th Century: Sources of Weakness. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:481–93.
184
Kleimola AM. Military Service and Elite Status in Muscovy in th e Second Quarter of th e Six teen th Cen tury. Russian History 1980;7:47–64. doi:10.1163/187633180X00067
185
Kleimola AM. Up Through Servitude: The Changing Condition of the Muscovite Elite in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. Russian History 1979;6:210–29. doi:10.1163/187633179X00096
186
Kollmann, Nancy Shields. By honor bound: state and society in early modern Russia. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1999.
187
Kollmann, Nancy Shields. Kinship and politics: the making of the Muscovite political system, 1345-1547. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1987.
188
Shields Kollmann N. The Grand Prince in Muscovite Politics: the Problem of Genre in Sources On Ivan’s Minority. Russian History 1987;14:293–313. doi:10.1163/187633187X00150
189
Kleimola AM. Ivan the Terrible and His ‘Go-Fers’: Aspects of State Security in the 1560S. Russian History 1987;14:283–92. doi:10.1163/187633187X00141
190
Poe M. The Truth about Muscovy. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2002;3:473–86. doi:10.1353/kri.2002.0044
191
Crummey RO, Dunning CSL, Martin R, et al. Rude & barbarous kingdom revisited: essays in Russian history and culture in honor of Robert O. Crummey. Bloomington, IN: : Slavic 2009.
192
Martin R. A bride for the Tsar: bride-shows and marriage politics in early modern Russia. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 2012.
193
Bogatyrev, Sergei, Suomalainen Tiedeakatemia. Russia takes shape: patterns of integration from the Middle Ages to the present. Helsinki: : Academia Scientiarum Fennica 2004.
194
Brown PB. Muscovite Government Bureaus. Russian History 1983;10:269–330. doi:10.1163/187633183X00163
195
Davies BL. The Town Governors in the Reign of Ivan IV. Russian History 1987;14:77–143. doi:10.1163/187633187X00060
196
Horace W. Dewey. The 1550 Sudebnik as an Instrument of Reform. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas;:161–80.
197
Kleimola, Ann M., Lenhoff, Gail. Culture and identity in Muscovy, 1359-1584. Moscow: : ‘ITZ-Garant’ 1997.
198
Hellie R. The Origins of Denunciation in Muscovy. Russian History 1997;24:11–26. doi:10.1163/187633197X00023
199
Kaiser, Daniel H. The growth of the law in medieval Russia. Princeton ; Guildford: : Princeton University Press 1980.
200
Kaiser DH. Modernization in Old Russian Law. Russian History 1979;6:230–42. doi:10.1163/187633179X00104
201
George G. Weickhardt. The Pre-Petrine Law of Property. Slavic Review;Vol. 52:663–79.
202
Weickhardt GG. The Canon Law of Rus’, 1100-1551. Russian History 2001;28:411–45. doi:10.1163/187633101X00235
203
Weickhardt GG. Muscovite Judicial Duels as a Legal Fiction. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2006;7:713–32. doi:10.1353/kri.2006.0059
204
Kleimola AM. Justice in Medieval Russia: Muscovite judgement charters (Pravye gramoty) of the Fifteenth and Sixteenth centuries. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society
205
Dewey HW. The 1550 Sudebnik as an instrument of reform. Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas 1962.
206
Sergei Bogatyrev. Reinventing the Russian Monarchy in the 1550s: Ivan the Terrible, the Dynasty, and the Church. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 85:271–93.
207
Bushkovitch, Paul. Religion and society in Russia: the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. New York: : Oxford University Press 1992.
208
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur osteuropäischen Geschichte.
209
Ostrowski, Donald G., Pliguzov, A. I., Rowland, Daniel B., et al. Kamenʹ Kraėugʺlʹn: rhetoric of the medieval slavic world : Essays presented to Edward L. Keenan on his Sixtieth Birthday by his Colleagues and Studesnts. 1995;Harvard Ukrainain Studies.
210
Kollmann JE. The Stoglav Council and Parish Priests. Russian History 1980;7:65–91. doi:10.1163/187633180X00076
211
HALPERIN CJ. Metropolitan Makarii and Muscovite Court Politics during the Reign of Ivan IV. The Russian Review 2014;73:447–64. doi:10.1111/russ.10740
212
Bogatyrev S. The Resignation of Metropolitan Afanasii in 1566. Canadian-American Slavic Studies 2015;49:174–92. doi:10.1163/22102396-04902004
213
Halperin CJ. Women in Medieva l Russia. Russian History 1983;10:139–40. doi:10.1163/187633183X00073
214
Goldfrank DM. Sisterhood Just Might Be Powerful: the Testament-Rule of Elena Devochkina. Russian History 2007;34:189–205. doi:10.1163/187633107X00103
215
Ann M. Kleimola. ‘In Accordance with the Canons of the Holy Apostles’: Muscovite Dowries and Women’s Property Rights. Russian Review;Vol. 51:204–29.
216
Levin, Eve. Sex and society in the world of the Orthodox Slavs, 900-1700. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1989.
217
Carolyn Johnston Pouncy. The Origins of the Domostroi: A Study in Manuscript History. Russian Review;Vol. 46:357–73.
218
Pushkareva, N. L., Levin, Eve. Women in Russian history: from the tenth to the twentieth century. Armonk, N.Y.: : M.E. Sharpe 1997.
219
Clements, Barbara Evans, Engel, Barbara Alpern, Worobec, Christine. Russia’s women: accommodation, resistance, transformation. Berkeley ; Oxford: : University of California Press 1991.
220
Thyrêt, Isolde. Between God and tsar: religious symbolism and the royal women of Muscovite Russia. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 2001.
221
Blum, Jerome. Lord and peasant in Russia from the ninth to the nineteenth century. New York: : Atheneum 1964.
222
Hellie, Richard. Slavery in Russia, 1450-1725. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 1982.
223
Hellie R. The Russian Smoky Hut and Its Probable Health Consequences. Russian History 2001;28:171–84. doi:10.1163/187633101X00118
224
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur osteuropäischen Geschichte.
225
Baron, Samuel H. Explorations in Muscovite history. [Aldershot]: : Variorum 1991.
226
Baron, Samuel H. Explorations in Muscovite history. [Aldershot]: : Variorum 1991.
227
Zlotnik MD. Muscovite Fiscal Policy: 1462-1584. Russian History 1979;6:243–58. doi:10.1163/187633179X00113
228
Martin J. Economic Development in the Varzuga Fishing Volost’ During the Reign of Ivan IV. Russian History 1987;14:315–32. doi:10.1163/187633187X00169
229
Billington, James H. The icon and the axe: an interpretive history of Russian culture. London: : Weidenfeld & Nicolson 1966.
230
Bogatyrev S. Ivan the Terrible Discovers the West: the Cultural Transformation of Autocracy DuRing the Early Northern Wars. Russian History 2007;34:161–88. doi:10.1163/187633107X00095
231
Rowland, Daniel B., Kivelson, Valerie A. The new Muscovite cultural history: a collection in honor of Daniel B. Rowland. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2009.
232
SERGEI BOGATYREV. Bronze Tsars: Ivan the Terrible and Fedor Ivanovich in the Décor of Early Modern Guns. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 88:48–72.
233
Cherniavsky M. Ivan the Terrible and the Iconography of the Kremlin Cathedral of Archangel Michael. Russian History 1975;2:3–28. doi:10.1163/187633175X00018
234
Rowland, Daniel B., Kivelson, Valerie A. The new Muscovite cultural history: a collection in honor of Daniel B. Rowland. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2009.
235
Dukes, Paul. World order in history: Russia and the West. London: : Routledge 1996.
236
Kleimola, Ann M., Lenhoff, Gail. Culture and identity in Muscovy, 1359-1584. Moscow: : ‘ITZ-Garant’ 1997.
237
Freie Universität Berlin. Forschungen zur osteuropäischen Geschichte.
238
Miller DB. The Viskovatyi Affair of 1553-54: Official Art, the Emergence of Autocracy, and the Disintegration of Medieval Russian Culture. Russian History 1981;8:293–332. doi:10.1163/187633181X00165
239
Flier, Michael S., Rowland, Daniel B. Medieval Russian culture: Vol. 2. Berkeley ; London: : University of California Press 1994.
240
Ryan, W. F. The bathhouse at midnight: an historical survey of magic and divination in Russia. Stroud: : Sutton Publishing 1999.
241
MICHAEL S. FLIER. Filling in the Blanks: The Church of the Intercession and the Architectonics of Medieval Muscovite Ritual. Harvard Ukrainian Studies;Vol. 19:120–37.
242
Michael Cherniavsky. Ivan the Terrible as Renaissance Prince. Slavic Review;Vol. 27:195–211.
243
Hellie R. What Happened? How Did He Get a Way With It?: Ivan Groznyi’s Paranoia and the Problem of Institutional Restraints. Russian History 1987;14:199–224. doi:10.1163/187633187X00105
244
Halperin CJ. Ivan IV’s Insanity. Russian History 2007;34:207–18. doi:10.1163/187633107X00112
245
Priscilla Hunt. Ivan IV’s Personal Mythology of Kingship. Slavic Review;Vol. 52:769–809.
246
KEENAN E. IVAN IV AND THE ‘KING’S EVIL’: NI MAKA LI TO BUDET? Russian History 1993;20:5–13. doi:10.1163/187633193X00036
247
Ostrowski, Donald G., Pliguzov, A. I., Rowland, Daniel B., et al. Kamenʹ Kraėugʺlʹn: rhetoric of the medieval slavic world : Essays presented to Edward L. Keenan on his Sixtieth Birthday by his Colleagues and Studesnts. 1995;Harvard Ukrainain Studies.
248
Crummey R. New wine in old bottles? Ivan IV and Novgorod. Russian history 1987;14.
249
Clarke Waugh D. The Unsolved Problem of Tsar Ivan IV’s Library. Russian History 1987;14:395–408. doi:10.1163/187633187X00196
250
Brooks J. From Folklore To Popular Literature: a Changing View of the Autocrat and the Eaipire. Russian History 1987;14:37–46. doi:10.1163/187633187X00033
251
Baron, Samuel H., Heer, Nancy Whittier, American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies. Windows on the Russian past: essays on Soviet historiography since Stalin. Columbus, Ohio: : American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies 1977.
252
Edward L. Keenan. How Ivan Became ‘Terrible’. Harvard Ukrainian Studies;Vol. 28:521–42.
253
Incham NW. The Groza of Ivan Gruznyi in Russian Folklore. Russian History 1987;14:225–45. doi:10.1163/187633187X00114
254
Perrie, Maureen. The image of Ivan the Terrible in Russian folklore. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1987.
255
Maureen Perrie. The Popular Image of Ivan the Terrible. The Slavonic and East European Review;Vol. 56:275–86.
256
Perrie, Maureen. The cult of Ivan the Terrible in Stalin’s Russia. Basingstoke: : Palgrave 2001.
257
Platt KMF. History and Despotism, or: Hayden White vs. Ivan the Terrible and Peter the Great. Rethinking History 1999;3:247–69. doi:10.1080/13642529908596349
258
Davidson, Pamela. Russian literature and its demons. New York: : Berghahn Books 2000.
259
Kevin M. F. Platt and David Brandenberger. Terribly Romantic, Terribly Progressive, or Terribly Tragic: Rehabilitating Ivan IV under I. V. Stalin. Russian Review;Vol. 58:635–54.
260
Yanov, Alexander. The origins of autocracy: Ivan the Terrible in Russian history. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1981.
261
Black, Cyril Edwin. Rewriting Russian history: Soviet interpretations of Russia’s past. New York: : Published for the Research Program on the U.S.S.R. [by] F. A. Praeger
262
Russian Studies in History. 2014;53.http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/mrsh20/53/1