Bibliographic Information

The Poveštʹ vremennykh lět : an interlinear collation and paradosis

compiled and edited by Donald Ostrowski ; associate editor David Birnbaum ; senior consultant Horace G. Lunt

(Harvard library of early Ukrainian literature, Texts ; v. 10, pts. 1-3)

Distributed by Harvard University Press for the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute, c2003

  • pt. 1
  • pt. 2
  • pt. 3

Other Title

Повість временних літ : міжрядкове співставлення і парадосис

Uniform Title

Povestʹ vremennykh let

Available at  / 4 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Introductory matter in English and/or Ukrainian with text predominantly in Old Russian/Old Ukrainian

"The present interlinear collation includes the five main manuscript witnesses to the PVL, three published versions of the PVL, the corresponding passages from the published version of the Novgorod I Chronicle, and the corresponding passages from the Trinity Chronicle. It also includes a paradosis, that is, a proposed best reading"--V. 1, p. xix

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Tale of Bygone Years (Povest' vremennykh let) is the most important source for the history of early Rus'. Full of stories of grand princes and saints, monks, and knightly retinues, this chronicle compilation has been the bedrock of modern interpretations of the history, ethos, and religious traditions of Ukrainians, Russians, and Belarusians alike. It also has been a source of controversy, with competing redactions and interpretations of the Old East Slavic language in which it was written. This massive undertaking provides scholars and general readers with the first fully legible text that includes all of the known redactions of the Povest'. The text consists of an intercollation of the five oldest redactions, three more modern redactions, three later interpolations, and Donald Ostrowski's own final interpretation. The intercollated texts are nested line-by-line. This three-part set will be of fundamental importance to Slavic philologists and historians of early Rus'.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top