Volyn Short ChronicleThe Volyn Short Chronicle (Ukrainian: Воли́нський коро́ткий літо́пис, romanized: Volynsjkyj korotkyj litopys) is the conventional name of a chronicle that is part of the Suprasl Chronicle of the early 16th century, found in the Supraśl Orthodox Monastery (Supraśl, now Białystok County in Poland).[1][2] It is currently kept in the Russian State Archive of Ancient Acts (РГАДА/RGADA) in Moscow (ф. 181, оп. 1, № 21, 26).[1][2] ContentsThe Volyn Short Chronicle has 74 folios (leaves, sheets).[1] Mikałaj Ułaščyk (1975, 1980) divided the chronicle into three parts:[1]
When Mikhail Andreevich Obolensky first published the text of the chronicle in 1836, he called it the "Abridged Kievan Chronicle".[1] But because the parts of the text that provide unique, original materials are entirely devoted to Volyn, subsequent scholars have renamed it Volyn Short Chronicle instead.[1] CompositionAccording to Mytsyk (2003), the chronicle was probably created by a priest of the cathedral in Volodymyr in Volyn, who was close to bishop Vassian of Volodymyr.[2][which?] The author's interests remain squarely focused on what happened in Volhynia and Podolia.[2] In the second part, the events of 1495 to 1497 stand out: the author used both his own impressions and the testimony of other eyewitnesses to write about the 1495 election of Macarius Chort as metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia and all Rus', and his subsequent death at the hands of the Tatars in 1497.[2] The praise to Ostrozhsky in the third part would not have been added until after his victory over the Muscovite troops in the Battle of Orsha (1514).[2] See also
ReferencesLiterature
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