Панеях, Виктор Моисеевич. Холопство в первой половине XVII в. / В. М. Панеях ; ответственный редактор Ю. Г. Алексеев ; Академия наук СССР, Институт истории СССР, Ленинградское отделение.
Ленинград : Наука, Ленинградское отделение, 1984. 262 с. ; 22 см.
Твёрдый переплёт. Тираж 2250 экз.
Состояние: хорошее.
***
Paneiakh, Viktor Moiseevich. Kholopstvo v pervoi polovine XVII v. [Bondage in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century] / V. M. Paneiakh ; responsible editor Iu. G. Alekseev ; USSR Academy of Sciences, Institute of History of the USSR, Leningrad Branch.
Leningrad : Nauka, Leningrad Branch, 1984. 262 pp. ; 22 cm.
Hardcover. Print run of 2,250 copies.
Condition: good.
Viktor Moiseevich Paneiakh (1930-2017) was the foremost Soviet and Russian specialist on the history of kholopstvo, a system of unfree service-dependency specific to Muscovite Russia, distinct from peasant serfdom, that shaped the social fabric of medieval and early modern Russian society from the late medieval period through its partial absorption into serfdom under the Sobornoye Ulozheniye of 1649. The present monograph is the third and concluding volume of Paneiakh's trilogy on the subject, completing the analysis begun in Kabalnoe kholopstvo na Rusi v XVI v. (1967) and continued in Kholopstvo v XVI-nachale XVII vv. (1975). Working from kabalnye knigy (bond books) - administrative registers of kholopstvo transactions that other historians of the period had largely passed over - Paneiakh examines the three main categories of kholopstvo in the first half of the seventeenth century: starinnoe (hereditary), kabalnoe (contractual bond-service), and dobrovolnoe (voluntary service-dependency), tracing their demographic composition, legal evolution, and transformation under the legislation of the 1610s through the Sobornoye Ulozheniye of 1649. The work belongs to the tradition of the Leningrad Branch of the Institute of History, the principal center of medieval Russian social and legal history in the Soviet period, where Paneiakh spent his entire career as a student of Boris Alexandrovich Romanov (1880-1957), the founder of the Leningrad school of Russian medieval studies. The responsible editor, Iurii Georgievich Alekseev (1926-2017), was himself a leading specialist in Russian medieval law and social history. With a print run of 2,250 copies, the volume reached primarily institutional library collections and is uncommon in clean copies on the international market.