Natalia I. Shavelev (before marriage Vladimirov ) ( June 16, 1946 , Chisinau - April 28, 2001 , Moscow ) - Soviet and Russian historian - Slavic , candidate of historical sciences .
Natalia I. Shaveleva | |
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Date of Birth | July 16, 1946 |
Place of Birth | Kishinev |
Date of death | April 28, 2001 (54 years) |
Place of death | Moscow |
A country | USSR → RF |
Scientific field | Slavic studies , history of Russia , source study , historiography |
Place of work | Institute of Russian History, Russian Academy of Sciences |
Alma mater | University of Moscow |
Academic degree | Candidate of Historical Sciences |
Academic title | assistant professor |
Content
Biography
She was born in the family of a naval officer and a doctor. In 1964 she entered the Faculty of Philology of Moscow State University (Department of Classical Philology), which she graduated in 1969. During her studies, her teachers were A. N. Popov , S. I. Radtsig , A. P. Kazhdan , B. L Fonkich et al. In 1969, V. T. Pashuto created the “ Most Ancient States in the Territory of the USSR ” sector at the Institute of History of the USSR . Then Natalia Ivanovna was invited to this sector. From 1969 to 1974 she studied in graduate school of the Institute of History of the USSR. In 1976 she defended her thesis on the topic " Ancient Russia in Polish Latin chronology."
From 1976, after defending her dissertation, she began working as a research worker at the Institute of History of the USSR Academy of Sciences of the USSR (later renamed the Institute of Russian History of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1992 ) until the very end. Since the late 80s. The Soviet-Polish Historical Commission (later renamed the Russian-Polish Historical Commission) was headed by Ya. N. Shchapov , and Natalia Ivanovna became secretary. Together they led several scientific conferences and contributed to the publication of materials of those conferences.
She collaborated with the sector V. T. Pashuto, with a group led by E. A. Melnikova on the publication of the " Collection of the oldest sources on the history of Eastern Europe ", with the Center for the History of Religion and Church Ya. N. Shchapova. The main scientific interests were the history of Russian-Polish relations, the study and publication of Polish sources on the history of medieval Russia, as well as the training and publication of textbooks in the Latin language.
Scientific Works
Articles
- Shchaveleva N. I. Report of a 13th-century Catholic Missionary about traveling through Russia to the Tatars // From Russia to the new Russia. - Moscow: Institute of Russian History, Russian Academy of Sciences , 2000. - P. 19-27.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Old Russian News of the Wielkopolska Chronicles // Annals and Chronicles. 1976 - Moscow: Nauka , 1976. - S. 54-66.
- Shchaveleva N. I. News about Rus in the Polish chronicle of Master Vincent (XII century) // Problems of the socio-economic and political history of the USSR. - M .: Institute of History of the USSR , 1975. - p. 138-144.
- Shchaveleva N. And. Kiev mission of the Polish Dominicans // Most ancient states on the territory of the USSR. 1982 - Moscow: Nauka , 1984. - p. 139-151.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Prince Roman Galitsky in the cultural-historical tradition of Poland and Russia // Cultural relations of Russia and Poland of the XI-XX centuries. - M .: URSS , 1998. - P. 27—38.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Poverty orders as political mediators between the Order, Poland and Russia // Slavs and their neighbors: Catholicism and Orthodoxy in the Middle Ages. - M .: Science , 1991. - p. 18-19.
- Schaveleva N. And. About princely educators in ancient Poland // The most ancient states on the territory of the USSR. 1985 - Moscow: Nauka , 1986. - P. 123-131.
- Schaveleva N. I. Polka - the wives of Russian princes (XI - middle of the XIII centuries) // The oldest states on the territory of the USSR. 1987 - Moscow: Nauka , 1989. - pp. 50-58.
- Shchaveleva NI. The Message of the Bishop of Cracow Matthew to Bernard Klervosky about the “Appeal of the Russians” // Most Ancient States on the Territory of the USSR. 1975 - Moscow: Nauka , 1976. - P. 113-121.
- Schaveleva NI. Private prayers of Prince Izyaslav's wife // Church in the history of Russia: Collection of articles. - Moscow: Institute of Russian History, Russian Academy of Sciences , 1999. - Vol. 3. - p. 4-20.
- Shchaveleva NI. The Prussian Question in the Politics of Daniel Galitsky // The Oldest States of Eastern Europe. 1991 - Moscow: Nauka , 1994. - p. 251-258.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Rus in the reports of Polish travelers of the XIII century // Slavs and their neighbors: International relations in the era of feudalism. - M .: Science , 1989. - p. 30-31.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Tendentiousness of medieval historiography (on the example of the chronicle of Vincent Kadlubka) // Methodology for studying the oldest sources on the history of the peoples of the USSR. - M .: Science , 1978. - p. 154-165.
Translation Publications
- Lyrics of Ancient Hellas and Rome / Trans. from ancient Greek. and latin., comp. and comments. N. I. Schaveleva. - M .: Children's literature , 1990. - 191 p.
- Schaveleva N. I. Greece: Gods and Heroes. - Tver: Martin; Polina, 1996. - 781 p.
- Shchaveleva N. I. Ancient Russia in the Polish History by Jan Dlugosh (books I — VI): Text, translation, comment / Ed. ed. A.V. Nazarenko . - M .: Monuments of historical thought , 2004. - 495 p.
- Schavelev N. I. Polish Latin-speaking medieval sources: Texts, translation, comment / Ed. ed. V.L. Yanin . - M .: Science , 1990. - 210 p.
Literature
- Natalia I. Shaveleva (1946-2001) (In memory of a colleague and friend) // The oldest states of Eastern Europe. 1999 Eastern and Northern Europe in the Middle Ages. - M .: Eastern literature , 2001. - p. 460-466.
- Rumyantseva V.S. In memory of Natalia I. Shaveleva / / Church in the history of Russia. - Moscow: Institute of Russian History, Russian Academy of Sciences , 2003. - Sat. 5. - p. 373-376.
- Khoroshkevich A.L. In memory of Natalia I. Shavelevoy // Slavic studies . - 2002. - № 2. - p. 170-172.
- Shchaveleva (Vladimirova) Natalya Ivanovna // Slavonic studies in the USSR: The study of southern and western Slavs. Bio-bibliographic dictionary. - New York: Norman Ross Pub., 1993. - p. 495.