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Encyclopedia > Novgorod the Great
For other cities named Novgorod see Novgorod (disambiguation).

Novgorod (Но́вгород) is a city in North-Western Russia. Since 1998 the official name of the city has been Velikiy Novgorod (Great Novgorod). It is the capital of Novgorod Oblast. The city lies along the Volkhov River just below its outflow from Lake Ilmen. Population: ca. 290,000.


It is not to be confused with Nizhny Novgorod, on Volga River.


History

The exact year of foundation is not known. The written record is ambiguous: one record mentions it as an existing city as of 854, another as of 859.


The Varangian name of the city Holmgard (Holmgård, Holmegaard) is mentioned in Norse Sagas as existing substantially earlier, but the historical fact cannot be separated from myth. Later in history Holmgard referred only to the stronghold inside the city (Riurikovo Gorodische).

Enlarge
Cathedral of St. Sophia, the Holy Wisdom of God in Novgorod was built up in 1045

In medieval times Novgorod was one of the greatest cities of Ruthenia. During the Kievan Rus period it was the second most important center in the nation and the center of the lucrative fur trade. After the sacking of Kiev and many of the other Russian cities by the Mongols Novgorod's position was greatly enhanced and it became an independent city state of great power. It gained control of a vast swath of territory in Northern Russia and was a center of trade. The city was far less autocratic than the Ruthenian norm with the Prince elected by a council of nobles, also known of Novgorod veche, the ancient parliament, the democratic assembly of representatives of all city parts or all free people in most important cases. The term "veche" is being revived in modern Novgorod.


The city's downfall came about, however, because of its inability to feed its large population which made it dependent on the Vladimir-Suzdal area for grain. The main cities in this area, Moscow and Tver, used this dependence to control Novgorod. Eventually Ivan III annexed the city to Muscovy. It remained powerful, however, until being sacked and its inhabitants slaughtered by Ivan the Terrible.


See also

External links

  • Novgorod website (http://www.novgorod.ru/english.php)
  • Novgorod rulers (http://www.xenophongi.org/rushistory/rulers/novgorod.htm)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Novgorod the Great (341 words)
In the XII-XV centuries Novgorod was the capital of the Novgorod feudal republic, the largest state formation of medieval Europe.
Novgorod the Great was the most eastern settlement of the Hanseatic trade union.
In cafes and restaurants of Novgorod the Great they will offer to you dishes of the ancient Russian cuisine and original Russian drinks prepared according to the carefully saved ancient prescriptions.
About Russia (2227 words)
Novgorod the Great (Veliky Novgorod), an administrative centre of the Novgorod Oblast, is the oldest Russian city, mentioned in annals for the first time in 859.
For X-XV centuries Novgorod the Great was the political centre of vast land from the Baltic Sea and Finland in the West to Northern Urals in the East.
It is mainly concentrated in Novgorod the Great (Veliky Novgorod), Borovichi, Staraya Russa and Chudovo.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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