Template:Kiev

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1331 The horses of Prince Fyodor of Kiev were dying.   [6839][1]а князь [Федоръ Киевьскыи] въсприимъ срамъ и отъиха, нь от бога казни не убѣжа: помроша конѣ у его. [2] [6839] and the Knyaz [Fyodor from Kyev] was disgraced and rode away, though he did not escape punishment from God: his horses all died. [3]

1331 Sickness among the horses of Prince Fyodor of Kiev.   [6839] и князь [Феpдоръ Кыевъскыи] идe пpoчь, нo от бога казни не убѣжа: помроша бo кони у него. [4] [6839] and the prince [Fyodor of Kiev] went away, but he did not escape punishment from God, because his horses died. (Translation: Dariusz Dabrowski)

  1. Vasili, vladyka (archbishop) of Novgorod arrived in Novgorod the Great from Volynia in the December 8 on a Sunday, the day of the holy Father Patapi. Meanwhile, it was in the south of Rusia that Prince Fyodor of Kiev attacked the hierarch. The vladyka's journey from the south of Rusia to Novgorod must have lasted several months, which determines the date of the attack and, therefore, the death of the prince's horses.
  2. Новгородская первая летопись младшего изводa (Комиссионный список), in: Полное Cобрание Pусских Летописей, т. III, Mocвa: Языки Pyccкoй Kyльтypы, 2000, p. 344.
  3. The Chronicle of Novgorod 1016-1471 translated from the Russian by Robert Michell and Nevill Forbes […] with an Introduction by C. Raymond Beazley. London: Gray’s inn., W.C., 1914 (= Camden Third Series, Vol. XXV), p. 127.
  4. Московский лeтoпиcный свод конца XV века, in: Полное Cобрание Pусских Летописей, т. XXV, Mocвa: Языки Cлaвянcкoй Kyльтypы, 2004, p. 170