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The Tale of the Princes of Vladimir : ウィキペディア英語版 | The Tale of the Princes of Vladimir
The ''Tale of the Princes of Vladimir'' ((ロシア語:Сказание о князьях Владимирских)) is an early 16th-century Muscovite treatise which propounds the conception of Moscow as the third Rome.〔Dimitrij Cizevskij. ''History of Russian Literature: From the Eleventh Century to the End of the Baroque''. Walter de Gruyter, 1960. Pages 251–252.〕 The book traces the male-line descent of Muscovy's royal family not only from Rurik, but from a certain Prus, to whom his uncle, Emperor Augustus, gave the northern part of the world, which later came to be known as "Prussia".〔(Soviet Historical Encyclopaedia )〕 These claims to imperial heritage are further shored up by the story of Monomach's Cap, a purported imperial crown which Constantine IX of Byzantium is supposed to have presented to his grandson, Vladimir Monomakh, and which was used at coronations in Muscovy. ''The Tale of the Princes of Vladimir'' has been attributed either to Dmitry Gerasimov or Pachomius the Serb, among other learned monks.〔Жданов И. Н., Повести о Вавилоне и "Сказание о князьях владимирских", СПБ, 1891.〕 Similar ideas were expressed by Spiridon, Metropolitan of Kiev in an epistle dating from about 1500.〔 The treatise provided the ideological background for Ivan IV's coronation as the first Russian Tsar〔Isabel De Madariaga. ''Ivan the Terrible''. Yale University Press, 2006. Pages 32–33.〕 and inspired Athanasius, Metropolitan of Moscow to compile the famous ''Book of Degrees''. The Tsar's place for praying in the Dormition Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin was decorated with a set of bas-reliefs illustrating ''The Tale''. == References ==
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