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Ivan The Terrible, The Orthodox Church And The Printing Press

30 November 2017, 6:30 pm–8:00 pm

Christ the Savior cathedral in Moscow

A lecture by The Great Britain - Russia Society, co-sponsored by the UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies.

Event Information

Open to

UCL staff | UCL students

Availability

Yes

Organiser

UCL SSEES

Location

Masaryk SCR, 4th Floor, UCL SSEES, 16 Taviton Street, London, WC1H 0BW

Dr. Sergei Bogatyrev, UCL SSEES

A lecture by , co-sponsored by the UCL School of Slavonic & East European Studies.

Print shops appeared in Russia during the reign of Tsar Ivan the Terrible (1547-1584). The most famous among them was the press of Ivan Fedorov, whose books set standards for many subsequent editions. However the overall number of books printed in Russia before Peter the Great remained disappointingly small in comparison with the West. Is this a sign of Russia’s technological backwardness? Did Ivan the Terrible and the Orthodox church persecute Ivan Fedorov, who had to leave Moscow for the territory of modern Ukraine? In this illustrated talk Dr. Sergei Bogatyrev will discuss the relationship between the printer, the Tsar and the church. Ivan the Terrible and Orthodox hierarchs acted as patrons of printing. The Tsar and the church had different attitudes to the printing press, but there was no hate towards the printed book in Muscovy. On the basis of his study of Ivan Fedorov’s unique editions held in British collections, Dr. Bogatyrev will offer a new explanation for Ivan Fedorov’s departure from Moscow and for the uneven development of printing in Russia.

Dr. Sergei Bogatyrev is Senior Lecturer in Early Russian History at the School of Slavonic & East European Studies, University College London . He was granted a core fellowship by the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies in 2014-2015. Bogatyrev is a leading specialist on early Russian culture, with particular focus on Ivan the Terrible. His publications includeThe Sovereign and His Counsellors (2000),a chapter on Ivan the Terrible inThe Cambridge History of Russiaand a chapter on medieval Novgorod inEurope. A Literary History 1348-1418(Oxford University Press, 2016). Bogatyrev is the editor ofIvan Vasil’evich Receives a Profession: Studies of Ivan the Terrible in Post-Soviet Russia (2014).Bogatyrev acted as the principal investigator in the international project“Revisiting Ivan Fedorov’s Legacy in Early Modern Europe”and edited“The Journeys of Ivan Fedorov: New Perspectives on EarlyCyrillicPrinting(special issue of Canadian-American Slavic Studies, 2017, vol.51, issue 2-3). He is also one of the editors of“History and Literature in 18th Century Russia”(2013) and the author of numerous articles in leading international journals.

We have a limited number of free tickets available for SSEES staff and students for that event. Please contact the Director’s Office for more information.