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