Knowledge (XXG)

Archaeographic Commission

Source πŸ“

121: 17: 133: 71:. The commission spearheaded efforts to obtain foreign sources on Russian history and sent its emissaries in search of Russia-related documents to the major archives of Europe. 179: 105:(SPbIH). Today, the SPbIH archive contains documents collected by the previous Archaeographic Commission. The modern Archaeographic Commission was founded in 1956 by 101:(1925), the commission came under its jurisdiction. The Historical-Archaeographic Institute, founded in 1931, was liquidated in 1936 and transformed into the 139: 56: 98: 102: 164: 64: 37: 97:
In the 20th century the institution went through several reorganizations and name changes. After the establishment of the
51:
The commission was affiliated with the imperial ministry of education and was modeled on an earlier commission based in
169: 33: 44:
with the aim of publishing historical and ethnographic materials assembled by Stroyev and others in the provinces of
174: 79: 159: 75: 106: 91: 87: 83: 45: 59:, published from 1841 onward. Regional archaeographical commissions were established in 29: 153: 127: 41: 16: 132: 68: 52: 126:
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
74:
After Shirinsky-Shikhmatov the commission's presidents included
60: 20:
The Proceedings of the Russian Archival Commission from 1914
109:as a branch of the Academy's history department. 8: 140:Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary 28:(АрхСографичСская комиссия) was set up in 180:1834 establishments in the Russian Empire 57:Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles 15: 99:Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union 103:Saint Petersburg Institute of History 55:. Its first major enterprise was the 7: 134:"АрхСографичСскиС Коммиссии"  14: 119: 1: 165:Learned societies of Russia 34:Platon Shirinsky-Shikhmatov 196: 26:Archaeographic Commission 21: 19: 143:(in Russian). 1906. 170:Archives in Russia 107:Mikhail Tikhomirov 22: 92:Mikhail Pokrovsky 88:Nikolay Likhachov 38:Nikolay Ustryalov 187: 144: 136: 125: 123: 122: 195: 194: 190: 189: 188: 186: 185: 184: 175:Russian studies 150: 149: 131: 120: 118: 115: 84:Sergei Platonov 46:Imperial Russia 12: 11: 5: 193: 191: 183: 182: 177: 172: 167: 162: 152: 151: 146: 145: 114: 111: 80:Vladimir Titov 30:St. Petersburg 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 192: 181: 178: 176: 173: 171: 168: 166: 163: 161: 158: 157: 155: 148: 142: 141: 135: 129: 128:public domain 117: 116: 112: 110: 108: 104: 100: 95: 93: 89: 85: 81: 77: 72: 70: 66: 62: 58: 54: 49: 47: 43: 42:Pavel Stroyev 39: 35: 31: 27: 18: 160:Palaeography 147: 138: 113:Bibliography 96: 90:(1929), and 76:Avraam Norov 73: 50: 25: 23: 94:(1930–32). 86:(1918–29), 82:(1871–91), 78:(1850–69), 32:in 1834 by 154:Categories 130::  124:  69:Tiflis 67:, and 53:Moscow 40:, and 65:Vilna 61:Kiev 24:The 156:: 137:. 63:, 48:. 36:,

Index


St. Petersburg
Platon Shirinsky-Shikhmatov
Nikolay Ustryalov
Pavel Stroyev
Imperial Russia
Moscow
Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles
Kiev
Vilna
Tiflis
Avraam Norov
Vladimir Titov
Sergei Platonov
Nikolay Likhachov
Mikhail Pokrovsky
Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union
Saint Petersburg Institute of History
Mikhail Tikhomirov
public domain
"АрхСографичСскиС Коммиссии" 
Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary
Categories
Palaeography
Learned societies of Russia
Archives in Russia
Russian studies
1834 establishments in the Russian Empire

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑