To understand Russian history without understanding serfdom--the peasant-lord relationship that shaped Russia for centuries--is impossible. Still, before Jerome Blum, no scholar had tackled the subject in depth. Monumental in scope and pathbreaking in its analysis, <i>Lord and Peasant in Russia</i>
Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century
β Scribed by Blum J.
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β¦ Synopsis
Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1961. - 654 pages. To understand Russian history without understanding serfdom-the peasant-lord relationship that shaped Russia for centuries-is impossible. Still, before Jerome Blum, no scholar had tackled the subject in depth. Monumental in scope and pathbreaking in its analysis, Lord and Peasant in Russia garnered immediate attention upon its publication in 1961, a year that also marked the one hundredth anniversary of the emancipation of the Russian serfs. As one reviewer remarked, "No better book on the subject exists; it is indispensable to the serious student of Russia." Blum's book explored the legal and social evolution of its predominantly agricultural population, the types of peasant status, and the multifaceted nature of the master-peasant relationship. More important, Blum was the first to articulate the necessity of placing serfs front and center in the study of Russian history. In 1962, it was awarded the Herbert Baxter Adams Prize of the American Historical Association; it remains a cornerstone of Russian historiography.
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π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The eight studies collected here comprise the best one-volume picture of the nineteenth-century Russian peasantry now available in English. They also strikingly demonstrate the centrality of the peasant in the entire institutional and cultural history of Russia. Topics considered are the peasant'
Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1968. - 314 pgs.<div class="bb-sep"></div>The Peasant Way of Life - Mary Matossian<br/>The Peasant and the Emancipation - Terence Emmons<br/>The Peasant and Religion - Donald W. Treadgold<br/>The Peasant and the Army - John S. Curtiss<br/>The Peasant