Vol 23, No 1 (2023)
Articles
Russian travelers of the XVII century about the osteries of Italian cities
Abstract
“Without division, it’s faster, but you will take a lot of sin on your soul”. A complex peasant family in the Russian Empire in the 19th century: Main development trends
Abstract
Alexei Sergeyevich Bartenev: The Becoming a Medievalist in the development context of the Soviet Dissertation Culture
Abstract
Military command and inertia of consciousness: The Roman warlords in the face of emperor’s power
Abstract
Political and gender aspects of Mary Tudor’s rise to power and rule
Abstract
The Battle on the River Boyne in 1690 (based on the English, the Scottish and the Irish Sourses)
Abstract
Emigration of British minors to Canada: Reasons for resettlement from Great Britain
Abstract
How to build Jerusalem? In search of the evolution of ways to privatize the sacred and the secular
Abstract
The conspiracy of Denmark Vesey: Causes and prerequisites
Abstract
The image of Cu Chulainn in the Irish historical memory in the Gaelic revival in the 19th–20th centuries
Abstract
The factor of the Canarian archipelago in the contexts of pacification Francoist Spain and hegemonic competition (1940–1942)
Abstract
Governor of Saratov Vasily Vasilyevich Neledinsky (1655–1657)
Abstract
At the origins of the Saratov zemstvo statistics: L. S. Lichkov
Abstract
Missionary activity of the co-religionist clergy of the Samara province in the second half of the 19th – early 20th century
Abstract
Public education in Tsaritsyn–Stalingrad in 1917–1929: Formation, difficulties, results N
Abstract
Construction of defensive fortifications on the territory of the Saratov region during the Great Patriotic War
Abstract
M. E. Belyaeva: The main milestones of life and scientific and pedagogical activity
Abstract
On the role of the Czechoslovak Corps in the Expansion of the Civil War in Russia
Abstract
The book by M. A. Vasilchenko reveals the degree of participation of soldiers and officers of the Czechoslovak Corps at the initial stage of the Civil War in the Volga region. The monograph traces the process of transformation of Czech units from an integral part of the Russian army into a national military formation pursuing narrow national interests in the conditions of Civil War. The author introduces the concept of “autonomization” into scientific circulation, which is successful enough to describe this process. Vasilchenko attracts a wide range of sources that have not been introduced into scientific circulation, explores the interaction of the corps command with anti-Bolshevik forces. The monograph significantly complements not only the history of the Czechoslovak Corps, but also reveals little-known aspects of the Civil War in the Volga region. The review comments on the need to more clearly outline the author’s attitude to the object and subject of research, as well as the need for a more extended generalization, as well as wishes for further development of the scientific direction.