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novgorod_city

From [http://mem­ber­s.n­bci.­com/_XM­CM/ni­co­laa/nov­gor.htm­l| Nico­laa’s ar­ti­cle] of the same name, from her [http://mem­ber­s.n­bci.­com/_XM­CM/ni­co­laa/rus­in­tro.htm­l|Nov­gorod Hand­book]

====== Me­dieval Rus­sia — Ge­og­ra­phy ====== ===== The City of Nov­gorod =====

==== Ge­og­ra­phy and Cli­mate ====

Most of Rus­si­a, as it is well known, suf­fers from a fair­ly se­vere con­ti­nen­tal cli­mate. In the north­ern reach­es, the ground is frozen 8 months of the year, and rivers usu­al­ly freeze all the way to the Black Sea. Sum­mer­s, though brief, are of­ten quite hot. Nov­gorod is on about the same lat­i­tude as south-­cen­tral Alaska; how­ev­er, its cli­mate is some­what mod­er­at­ed by the fact that it is close to the Gulf of Fin­land and the Baltic Sea. This mod­er­a­tion in tem­per­a­tures al­lows a mixed de­cid­u­ous (pri­mar­i­ly oak, maple, elm, and ash) and conif­er­ous (pine and fir) for­est to grow in the fer­tile soil of the Il­men Basin in the vicin­i­ty of Nov­gorod.

==== The City ====

The me­dieval town of Nov­gorod was sit­u­at­ed in a fair­ly marshy area on the Volkhov River, two or three miles north of where that riv­er meets Lake Lado­ga, about 100 miles south of pre­sen­t-­day St. Pe­ters­burg and about 320 miles north­west of Mos­cow. From there one may trav­el up the Ne­va Riv­er and thence in­to the Gulf of Fin­land. A num­ber of oth­er wa­ter­ways al­so flow through the area and in­to Lake Lado­ga, thus con­nect­ing this area with a vast hin­ter­land and aid­ed in nav­i­ga­tion and trade. Nov­gorod is al­so eas­i­ly reach­able from the up­per por­tions of the Vol­ga Riv­er.

Ac­cord­ing to the Pri­ma­ry Chron­i­cle, Nov­gorod was sup­pos­ed­ly found­ed in 862 by Rurik, epony­mous founder of the Rurikid dy­nasty which pro­vid­ed the Rus’ with their rul­ing house un­til the de­struc­tion of Kiev by the Mon­gols in the thir­teenth cen­tu­ry. Ar­chae­o­log­i­cal ev­i­dence seems to sup­port this date, though it is prob­a­bly true that small­er set­tle­ments may have an­te­dat­ed the birth of the large town. These were like­ly lo­cat­ed in what this ev­i­dence re­veals to be the three old­est “end­s” or bor­ough­s—Slavno End, Nerev End, and Lyudin End. Grad­u­al­ly, with­in this tri­an­gle of set­tle­men­t, a cen­tral citadel (detinet­s) and sur­round­ing ter­ri­to­ry (gorod) was built and grew. By the late tenth cen­tu­ry, wood­en streets had been laid and the town was tak­ing on a tru­ly ur­ban char­ac­ter as its im­por­tance on the trade route from Scan­di­navia down to Con­stantino­ple grew.

Nov­gorod had an eth­ni­cal­ly mixed pop­u­la­tion from very ear­ly in its his­to­ry. Slavno end seems to have ini­tial­ly at­tract­ed set­tlers of Slove­ni­an orig­in, where­as Finns and an­oth­er Slav­ic peo­ple, the Krivichi, set­tled in Lyudin End. Nerev End may have been first set­tled by Finns as well. Scan­di­na­vians or “Varangian­s”, when they ar­rived in the tenth cen­tu­ry, tend­ed to con­cen­trate in Slavno End; Varangian mer­ce­nar­ies were known to be quar­tered on the right bank of the Volkhov. The Slavno dis­trict was al­so known as Kholm (“Hill”), from whence the Viking name from Nov­gorod, Holm­gar?r , may have arisen. By the eleventh cen­tu­ry, with Nov­gorod form­ing the main en­try point for Scan­di­na­vian trades­men, mer­ce­nar­ies, and trav­el­er­s, the town had as­sumed a rather pro­nounced Scan­di­na­vian flavour, which prob­a­bly gave rise to state­ments by chron­i­clers that the in­hab­i­tants of Nov­gorod were of Varangian stock. Ar­chae­o­log­i­cal finds show a mix­ture of Scan­di­na­vian, Finnic, and Slav­ic set­tle­men­t.

As I men­tioned a mo­ment ago, Nov­gorod grew from three sep­a­rate set­tle­ments. It has been pos­tu­lat­ed that Nov­gorod prop­er (whose name means “New Town”) was con­sti­tut­ed when these three com­mu­ni­ties found­ed a joint as­sem­bly, the veche , as well as a joint place of wor­ship (a pa­gan tem­ple at that point). At some point, a citadel (detinet­s) was erect­ed on some of the high­er ground. This then be­came the cen­tre of town, the gorod, and the ad­join­ing ar­eas be­came fo­cus of ad­min­is­tra­tive and busi­ness ac­tiv­i­ty, the posad and tor­gorvis­che

This town cen­tre was split in half by the Volkhov Riv­er. The two sides of town were called Sophia Side (after St. Sophi­a’s Cathe­dral, first erect­ed in 989 and re­built of stone in the eleventh cen­tu­ry) and Mer­chant Side. The detinets and the gorod were to be found on Sophia Side, ex­tend­ing from Lyudin (Pot­ter’s) End up to Nerev End along the riv­er. On the Mer­chant side were to be found the mar­ket (tor­gorvis­che) and Iaroslav’s Yard, the meet­ing place of the veche. Most peo­ple in the eleventh cen­tu­ry were con­cen­trat­ed on Sophia Side, in the detinets and the sur­round­ing area.

Nov­gorod was huge com­pared to most West­ern Eu­ro­pean cities of the pe­ri­od. Its pop­u­la­tion in the ear­ly eleventh cen­tu­ry has been es­ti­mat­ed at 10-15,000; by the thir­teenth cen­tu­ry, it had prob­a­bly risen to 20-30,000. Of Rus­sian town­s, on­ly Kiev was larg­er.

What would the city have looked like to a vis­i­tor pass­ing through in 1036? First, one would have not­ed the damp­ness. Nov­gorod’s sit­u­a­tion on clay soils in a marshy area close by a riv­er have been a boon to ar­chae­ol­o­gist­s, who have found ex­ten­sive re­mains of ob­jects made of wood, leather, and oth­er or­gan­ic ma­te­ri­al very well pre­served as a re­sult. An out­sider, how­ev­er, in 1036 would prob­a­bly have found the city un­usu­al­ly damp. He or she would have not­ed the streets paved in wood—a ne­ces­si­ty, to pre­vent carts and feet from be­com­ing mired in the clay. Look­ing around, our vis­i­tor would see wood ev­ery­where—not sur­pris­ing in a city famed for its car­pen­ters (Kiev’s de­ri­sive com­ments about Nov­gorod’s car­pen­ters is prob­a­bly root­ed in the fact that stone build­ings were be­com­ing more com­mon there). Wood, be­sides be­ing cheap­er and more easy to ob­tain in North­ern Rus­si­a, is al­so bet­ter suit­ed to cold cli­mates than is stone. En­ter­ing the city, he or she would have passed in­to the detinet­s—the for­ti­fied area—through earth­en ram­parts re­in­forced by wood, through a wood­en gate­house. In 1036, these ram­parts would have been fair­ly sim­ple—the “re­al” for­ti­fi­ca­tion—one us­ing sig­nif­i­cant amounts of stone and in­cor­po­rat­ing a siz­able citadel or krem­lin—of Nov­gorod did not oc­cur un­til the next decade.

Our vis­i­tor’s eye would have been drawn to the prince’s res­i­dence, at this point still with­in the city wall­s, the largest build­ing in the city. It would have tak­en the form of a dvor or “court”—a num­ber of build­ings (iz­ba or kleti ), of­ten at least two sto­ries high, sit­u­at­ed close to each oth­er, some­times linked by gal­leries. Be­tween the kleti was the seni , the main hall in which the prince held ban­quets and placed his throne. The up­per lev­els of the kleti were the more pri­vate ar­eas, and in­clud­ed the terem, or wom­en’s quar­ter­s. At this stage in the his­to­ry of the Rus’, the wom­en were not yet so re­strict­ed to this area as they would be in sub­se­quent cen­turies. The liv­ing quar­ters would have been lit by oil lamps in the evening and fur­nished with elab­o­rate­ly carved wood­en bed­s, chairs, ta­bles with lace table­cloth­s, bench­es, and wash­stands with cop­per ew­ers and bowl­s, and per­haps a splen­did icon or two. The build­ings them­selves would have been made pri­mar­i­ly of wood, bright­ly paint­ed and elab­o­rate­ly carved, though the eleventh cen­tu­ry sees an in­creas­ing shift to­wards use of store for prince­ly palaces and bo­yar res­i­dences, which were built sim­i­lar­ly to the prince’s res­i­dence, though not so large. Our vis­i­tor would prob­a­bly note a num­ber of such bo­yar res­i­dences scat­tered through the gorod.

The ma­jor­i­ty of peo­ple lived in much sim­pler dwellings. Rather than mul­ti­ple kleti linked by gal­leries, they lived in sin­gle iz­ba or kleti, or in a khoromy—a house with mul­ti­ple room­s. Even the most sim­ple of these had three part­s: the main room, a hal­l, and an ex­tra room, used for stor­age in the win­ter and as an ex­tra room in the sum­mer. Fur­ni­ture was sim­i­lar to that used by princes and bo­yars, on­ly not so elab­o­rate. Ev­ery­one, from princes on down, al­so had a ba­ni­a, or bath­house, built out in the yard. Most crafts­men’s homes served as their shops as well. In Nov­gorod these dwellings were not dug in­to the ground as in Kiev, but due to the wa­ter­logged soil were built com­plete­ly above­ground. In­sid­e, the fo­cus of the home was the hearth, or lat­er, the stove, which was lo­cat­ed in the cen­tre of the main room.These hous­es were sit­u­at­ed in a yard sur­round­ed by ei­ther pal­ing or a wat­tle fence. As the res­i­dent be­came richer, so did the com­plex­i­ty of his home: he could link sev­er­al kleti in­to one com­plex, add more carv­ing and paint­ing, add sto­ries on­to his build­ings, add win­dow­panes of mi­ca, or build in stone.

Our vis­i­tor would al­so have not­ed a num­ber of church­es—s­mall wood­en struc­tures, per­haps topped by a sin­gle dome (not yet in the fa­mil­iar Rus­sian onion-­dome shape)—­dot­ting the city, and would have not­ed with in­ter­est the stone foun­da­tions be­ing laid for a great cathe­dral to re­place the old­er St. Sophi­a’s in­side the krem­lin. This stone church still stands in Nov­gorod to­day. Church­es be­came not on­ly cen­tres for Rus­sian spir­i­tu­al life, but al­so served as li­braries, ware­hous­es, guild trea­suries, and even cen­tres for de­fence in times of war.

Since Nov­gorod (like most ma­jor Rus’ towns of this er­a) was sit­u­at­ed on a wa­ter­way, res­i­dents would have point­ed with pride to the vy­mols or land­ings, where trad­ing ships from far and wide would come to un­load their wares. They al­so would have point­ed out the mar­ket across the riv­er from the detinet­s, the great open space where the Varangian mer­ce­nar­ies made their cam­p, and the oth­er, small­er open space, next to the church of St. Nicholas, where the veche held its meet­ings. We shal­l, of course, be­come quite fa­mil­iar with these ar­eas..

//­Copy­right 1997 Su­san Car­rol­l-Clark. All rights re­served//

The bib­li­og­ra­phy for this ar­ti­cle can be found at http://mem­ber­s.n­bci.­com/_XM­CM/ni­co­laa/bib­lio.html