Divided Sovereignty in the Genghisid States as Exemplified by the Crimean Khanate :“Oriental Despotism” à rebours?

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dc.contributor.author Kołodziejczyk, Dariusz
dc.date.accessioned 2015-02-13T12:53:20Z
dc.date.available 2015-02-13T12:53:20Z
dc.date.issued 2012
dc.identifier.citation "Acta Slavica Iaponica", issue 32 / 2012, pp. 1-21. pl
dc.identifier.issn 0288-3503
dc.identifier.uri https://repozytorium.lectorium.pl/handle/item/920
dc.description.abstract In 1957, when Karl Wittfogel published his seminal book on “Oriental Despotism", it was evident from the outset that the author’s arguments were heavily biased against Russia and deeply rooted in the Cold War atmosphere. Wittfogel’s chief argument about the liaison between irrigation and state despotism had to wait for its critics until more recent times, but his treatment of Russia as an example of a “hydraulic society” was immediately perceived as an intellectual aberration. Nonetheless, the notion of Russia as an “Oriental Tyranny” or “Asiatic Tyranny” proved handy in journalistic efforts to explain the Soviet system to a Western reader, and it has retained some popular cur¬rency up to the present day. In a paragraph of his book, headed “The Introduction of Oriental Despotism into Russia,” Wittfogel blamed the Tatars for being “decisive both in destroying the non-Oriental Kievan society and in laying the foundations for the despotic state of Muscovite and post-Muscovite Russia.” In doing so, he invoked such different authorities as historians Vasilij Ključevskij and George Vernadsky, and... the poet Alexander Pushkin. Among the tremendously rich literary tradition that blames the Mongols and Tatars for infecting the Russian soul with the spirit of despotism, two other influential writers can be named here: a nineteenth-century French author Marquis de Custine and an early twentieth-century Polish historian Jan Kucharzewski. en
dc.language.iso en pl
dc.publisher The Slavic-Eurasian Research Center, Hokkaido University en
dc.rights Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
dc.subject oriental despotism en
dc.subject Crimean Khanate en
dc.subject despotyzm orientalny pl
dc.subject Chanat Krymski pl
dc.subject historia nowożytna pl
dc.subject early modern period en
dc.title Divided Sovereignty in the Genghisid States as Exemplified by the Crimean Khanate :“Oriental Despotism” à rebours? en
dc.type artykuł pl
dc.contributor.organization Instytut Historyczny Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego pl
dc.description.eperson Agnieszka Uziębło
dc.relation.lcategory historia pl
dc.identifier.alternativelocation http://www.ceeol.com/aspx/getdocument.aspx?logid=5&id=3545b022-46b6-4367-ab14-441901a84946 pl
dc.identifier.alternativelocation https://www.academia.edu/8270779/_Divided_Sovereignty_in_the_Genghisid_States_as_Exemplified_by_the_Crimean_Khanate_Oriental_Despotism_%C3%A0_rebours_ pl

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