Daily life of townspeople of the 10th - 13th centuries. Daily life in ancient Rus'

ancient Rus', culture, everyday culture, structure of everyday life

Annotation:

The article discusses the features of everyday culture of Ancient Rus'

Article text:

Old Russian state - state of the 9th - early 12th centuries. in Eastern Europe, which arose in the last quarter of the 9th century. as a result of the unification under the rule of the princes of the Rurik dynasty of the two main centers of the Eastern Slavs - Novgorod and Kiev, as well as lands (settlements in the area of ​​​​Staraya Ladoga, Gnezdov) located along the route “from the Varangians to the Greeks”. In its heyday, the Old Russian state covered the territory from the Taman Peninsula in the south, the Dniester and the headwaters of the Vistula in the west, to the headwaters of the Northern Dvina in the north. The formation of the state was preceded by a long period (from the 6th century) of the maturation of its prerequisites in the depths of military democracy. During the existence of the Old Russian state, the East Slavic tribes formed into the Old Russian nationality.

Power in Rus' belonged to the prince of Kyiv, who was surrounded by a squad that depended on him and fed mainly from his campaigns. The veche also played a certain role. The government was carried out with the help of thousand and sotskys, i.e., on the basis of a military organization. The prince's income came from various sources. In the 10th - early 11th centuries. These are basically “polyudye”, “lessons” (tribute) received annually from the field.

In the 11th - early 12th centuries. In connection with the emergence of large land ownership with various types of rent, the functions of the prince expanded. Owning his own large domain, the prince was forced to manage a complex economy, appoint posadniks, volostels, tiuns, and manage a numerous administration.

Palace officials emerged who were in charge of individual branches of government. The cities were headed by the urban patriciate, formed in the 11th century. from large local landowners - “elders” and warriors. The merchants enjoyed great influence in the city. The need to protect goods during transportation led to the appearance of armed merchant guards; among the city militia, merchants occupied first place. The largest part of the urban population were artisans, both free and dependent. A special place was occupied by the clergy, divided into black (monastic) and white (secular).

The rural population consisted of free communal peasants (their number was decreasing) and already enslaved peasants. There was a group of peasants, cut off from the community, deprived of the means of production and who were the labor force within the estate.

During the era of the formation of the Old Russian state, arable farming with harnessed tillage tools gradually replaced hoe tillage everywhere (in the north somewhat later). A three-field farming system emerged; Wheat, oats, millet, rye, and barley were grown. Chronicles mention spring and winter bread. The population was also engaged in cattle breeding, hunting, fishing and beekeeping. Village craft was of secondary importance. The first to emerge was iron production, based on local bog ore. The metal was obtained by the cheese blowing method. Written sources give several terms to designate a rural settlement: “pogost” (“peace”), “freedom” (“sloboda”), “village”, “village”.

The main trend in the development of the social system of Ancient Rus' was the formation of feudal ownership of land, with the gradual enslavement of free community members. The result of the enslavement of the village was its inclusion in the system of feudal economy, based on labor and food rent. Along with this, there were also elements of slavery (servitude).

In the 6th-7th centuries. in the forest belt, places of settlement of a clan or a small family (fortified settlements) disappear, and they are replaced by unfortified village settlements and fortified estates of the nobility. A patrimonial economy begins to take shape. The center of the patrimony is the “prince’s yard”, in which the prince lived from time to time, where, in addition to his mansion, there were houses of his servants - boyars-warriors, homes of serfs, serfs. The estate was ruled by a boyar - a fireman who disposed of the princely tiuns. Representatives of the patrimonial administration had both economic and political functions. Crafts developed on the patrimonial farm. With the complication of the patrimonial system, the estate isolation of unfree artisans begins to disappear, a connection with the market and competition with urban crafts arise.

The development of crafts and trade led to the emergence of cities. The most ancient of them are Kyiv, Chernigov, Pereyaslavl, Smolensk, Rostov, Ladoga, Pskov, Polotsk. The center of the city was a market where handicraft products were sold. Various types of crafts developed in the city: blacksmithing, weapons, jewelry (forging and chasing, embossing and stamping of silver and gold, filigree, granulation), pottery, leatherworking, tailoring.

Everyday culture of Ancient Rus'.

Lifestyle. Since ancient times, the Slavs have been distinguished by their respectful attitude towards elders. The head of the family was both his father and his boss; and everyone else: wife, children, relatives and servants obeyed him unquestioningly. Russians were meek and quiet, their modesty simplified marriage life, calmness and chastity reigned in families.

Our ancestors were distinguished by moderation, being content with what nature produced; enjoyed longevity, were strong and cheerful, loved dancing, music, round dances and songs. Tireless in their work and tied to agriculture, they were rewarded with a bountiful harvest, meat, milk and skins, which served as cover from the weather. Kindness of heart, shown everywhere by hospitality and hospitality, was a distinctive feature of our ancestors.

There was a custom to invite a traveler or passer-by to your house, feed him and greet him. The hosts greet the guest with joy, serve everything they have on the table, and do not take any payment from him, thinking that taking money from a passerby for bread and salt is a great sin.

Russians did not like to find fault with words; they were very simple in their manners and said “you” to everyone.

For a long time in Rus', people got up before sunrise and immediately prayed to God, asking for his holy help for good deeds; without praying they did nothing. Whether they were going on a journey, building a house, or sowing a field, first of all they went to church to pray. Before dangerous enterprises, they confessed and received communion. Faith strengthened the people during the greatest adversity. Before setting out on a campaign, no regiment will move forward without serving a prayer service and without being sprinkled with sacred water.

Whether someone sat down at the table or stood up from it, he crossed his forehead with the sign of the cross.

Holidays were celebrated with reverent rituals. During the festivities, everyone forgot their enmity and formed a single society.

Every person who met an acquaintance or passed by someone unfamiliar, but distinguished in some way, greeted him by removing his hat and bowing his head. A stranger who entered a hut or a magnificent chamber first turned his gaze to the icon and prayed; then he bowed and said hello.

Nobles and rich people were arrogant towards the poor, but hospitable and polite among themselves. The guest was greeted with hugs and asked to sit down, but the guest, upon entering the room, looked for icons with his eyes, approached them, crossed himself and first made three prostrations, then addressed the hosts with greetings. Having given each other their hand, they kissed and bowed several times, and the lower, the more respectful it was considered; then they sat down and talked. The guest sat down facing the images. Here he was treated to honey, beer, and cherries. At the end of the conversation, the guest, taking the hat, approached the images, crossed himself, made the same bows and said goodbye to the owner, wishing him health. The owner responded with a reciprocal wish and accompanied him without a hat to the porch; the beloved guest was escorted all the way to the gate, and the honored guest was escorted even further, a few steps from the gate.

Clothes, suit (regular, festive) . Finds from the layers of ancient Russian cities, tombs and rural burials tell about the whole variety of locally produced fabrics from which clothes were made. These include woolen fabrics, woven mainly from sheep wool and fabrics from plant fibers of different structures (flax, hemp). Among woolen and half-woolen fabrics there are checkered and striped fabrics. Patterned fabrics are also known. Common for the 10th – 12th centuries are patterned and unpatterned ribbons, braids, laces and fringes made of woolen yarn. Cloth and felt items were widespread. Some of the fabrics were woven from wool in natural brown, black, and gray colors. Mineral dyes were also used - ocher, red iron ore, etc.

The main types of clothing were a shirt and ports, and among the nobility it was underwear, among the people it was the main one. The richer the person, the more layered his suit was. We can say that a shirt is the oldest of clothes, for its name goes back to the ancient word “rub”, i.e. "the rudest" The length of the shirt, the material from which it was made, and the nature of the ornaments were determined by social class and age. Long shirts were worn by noble and elderly people, shorter ones by other classes, since, unlike the measured and leisurely life of princes and boyars, the everyday life of the working people was filled with hard work and clothing should not hinder movements. A shirt was worn for graduation and always with a belt (if a person did not put on a belt, they said that he had loosened his belt). The fabrics were woven narrow (30-40 cm), and therefore shirts were made with one-piece sleeves or a rectangular armhole. For ease of movement, gussets were inserted; for strength, they were placed on a lining made of another fabric (this is what it means to “know the background of the matter”). Festive shirts for the nobility were made from expensive thin linens or silks in bright colors and decorated with embroidery. Despite the conventionality of the pattern of the ornament, many of its elements were of a symbolic nature; they seemed to protect a person from other evil eyes and misfortunes. The decorations were “hanging” - removable: collars, necklaces and sleeves - cuffs, richly embroidered with gold, precious stones and pearls.

Portas, narrowed at the ankle, were made of canvas; noble men wore another one on top - silk or cloth. They were tied together at the waist with a cord called a cup (hence the expression “to keep something in a stash”). The ports were tucked into boots made of colored leather, often embroidered with patterns or wrapped with onuchi (pieces of linen 2.5 meters long), and bast shoes were put on them, with strings pulled through the ears - frills, and the onuchi were wrapped with them. In our minds, all bast shoes are the same. But that's not true. The bast shoes were thick and thin. Dark and light, simple and woven with patterns, there were also elegant ones - made of tinted multi-colored bast.

Outerwear was a retinue, caftan and fur coat. Vita was put on over the head. It was made of cloth, with narrow long sleeves, the knees were necessarily covered, and girded with a wide belt. Caftans were of the most varied types and purposes: everyday, for riding, festive - sewn from expensive fabrics, intricately decorated. A mandatory part of a man's costume was a headdress, in summer - a leather strap, and in winter - a wide variety of hats - leather, felt, fur. Portas, narrowed at the ankle, were made of canvas; noble men wore another one on top - silk or cloth. They were tied together at the waist with a cord called a cup (hence the expression “to keep something in a stash”). The ports were tucked into boots made of colored leather, often embroidered with patterns or wrapped with onuchi (pieces of linen 2.5 meters long), and bast shoes were put on them, with strings pulled through the ears - frills, and the onuchi were wrapped with them. In our minds, all bast shoes are the same. But that's not true. The bast shoes were thick and thin. Dark and light, simple and woven with patterns, there were also elegant ones - made of tinted multi-colored bast.

In Rus', women always covered their heads with a warrior; tearing off a headdress was considered a terrible insult (to lose your hair means to disgrace yourself). Girls braided their hair or wore it loose, secured with a ribbon, braid or hoop made of leather, birch bark, covered with multi-colored fabric.

A festive suit was made for Sundays and patronal feasts, an everyday suit for work at home, in the field and in the forest; Ritual ones were divided into pre-wedding, wedding and funeral - “miserable”. In addition, clothing differed according to age and marital status: girlish and for a young woman (before the birth of her first child), for a mature woman and an old woman. They also dressed smartly on labor holidays: the day of the first furrow, the day of pasture of livestock, the day of the beginning of haymaking and stubble.

One of the most characteristic features of Russian folk clothing is its multi-layered design, which gives the female figure a sculptural monumentality.

In the old days, bright, elegant embroideries played the role of a talisman, so their locations were clearly defined: the collar and wrist trims, the shoulder and bottom of the shirt, and the field of the sleeves. Intensively embroidered, these places seemed to protect a person from evil forces. For embroidery they used flax, hemp, wool, dyed with decoctions of herbs and roots, in addition, multi-colored silks, gold and silver threads. Ancient seams: painting, casting, satin stitch, half cross determined the nature of the embroidery pattern and its connection with the structure of the fabric. The ornaments reflected phenomena closely related to the life of peasants: the change of seasons, bountiful harvests, flowering trees and plants, figures of a woman - the progenitor of all living things, horses, birds, heavenly bodies - the sun and stars. From generation to generation, under the hands of skilled craftswomen, ancient simple patterns were enriched with new technical techniques, and at the same time they conveyed a range of patterns used only in a given area. To decorate shirts, pieces of various fabrics were also used, especially red, which were also filled with embroidery, like the main one. textile. This ancient method of decorating clothes was used in boyar costume, when pieces of precious overseas fabrics, left over from cutting large clothes, or already worn out, were sewn as decoration onto a newly sewn dress. In addition to woven and embroidered patterns and fabric inlays, multi-colored “grass” ribbons, bindweed, lace, sequins, gold and silver braids and braids were used. All this decorative wealth was transformed into a precious work of art by the hands of talented embroiderers.

Even “miserable” shirts were decorated, and here, too, the canons in the use of patterns and colors were observed. So, when mourning for parents, they wore white shirts with white embroidery, and for children - with black ones, made with a cross and a set. Only widowed women had shirts without any “decoration,” which they wore when performing the “plowing” ritual. Widow women were collected from all over the village, and barefoot, bare-haired, dressed only in linen shirts, they had to plow the land around the village with a plow to prevent it from cholera and livestock deaths.

The shirt was used on all occasions in the life of a Russian woman and, having stood the test of time, passing through centuries, freely entered our wardrobe in the form of a variety of one-piece dresses and blouses.

But in the ancient costume, the shirt was rarely worn separately; most often in the northern and central regions of Russia a sundress was worn on top, and in the southern regions - a poneva. Poneva is a type of skirt consisting of three panels of woolen or half-woolen fabric, tied at the waist with a woven narrow belt - gashnik: it was worn only by married women. Poneva was round, that is, sewn, or swinging, consisting of separate canvases. Mostly ponevs were dark blue, dark red, and less often black. Its dark field was divided by squares, and their color and size depended on the traditions of the province, village or hamlet in which the ponevs were woven. Ponevas, like shirts, were divided into festive and everyday. Everyday ones were trimmed along the bottom with a narrow homespun strip of braid or strips of red tape. In the festive ponevs, much attention was paid to the “cludge” - the so-called patch along the hem, in which all the richness of decoration was used to the maximum: multi-color embroidery, braid, tinsel lace made of gilded and silver threads, grass ribbons, bindweed, sequins, glass beads and beads. In round ponies, the seams served not only to connect individual parts, but also as an additional finish. The belt - the “edge” - was woven on a loom from multi-colored woolen threads, its ends fluffed out and threads of beads were woven among the threads.

Over the shirt and blanket they put on an apron - a “curtain”, tied at the back with ribbons - “mutozkas”. The intensity of color and decorativeness of the ornament gradually intensified from top to bottom, it was created through inserts of bright chintz, stripes of patterned weaving and embroidery, ribbons, lace, fringe and sequin.

The ensemble was completed with a shushpan made of wool, half-woolen or canvas fabric with very delicate decoration: mainly connecting seams and edging with embroidery in a red pattern. The costume was complemented by a complex headdress. The entire territory of Russia is characterized by two sharply different categories of headdresses. Girls' dresses, leaving the hair and crown of the head open, had the shape of a wreath-hoop or headband. Women's headdresses were varied, but they all completely hid their hair, which, according to popular belief, had witchcraft powers and could bring misfortune.

The basis of all varieties of South Russian headdresses of the “Magpie” type was a hard forehead piece sewn from quilted canvas, compacted with hemp or birch bark, and worn directly on the hair. Depending on its shape, flat or imitating horns extending back, it was called a kichka or a horned kichka. It was this detail that gave its entire structure one form or another, which was completed with the help of the upper part - a kind of cover made of calico, calico or velvet - Soroka; The back of the head was covered with a rectangular strip of fabric - the back of the head. A complex and multi-layered headdress was created around these three elements. Sometimes it included up to twelve parts, and its weight reached up to five kilograms.

Numerous buttons, metal openwork and with a pattern, glass and simple, were used not only for fastening, but were also included in the decorative row of decorations.

Colored wide belts were also a necessary part of the costume. The girls hung elegant handbags “for gifts” sewn from various scraps to their belts.

The legs were wrapped in onuchas made of white “Svei” cloth or canvas and put on bast shoes woven from elm or linden bast, or white wool stockings “knitted in one needle and leather shoes - cats, which were figuratively punched with copper wire in front and back for decoration. The last place in the costume was occupied by various decorations. Necklaces made of pearls, garnets and gaitanas were worn around the neck in large quantities - stringed beads, amber beads, which, according to legend, brought health and happiness, necklaces made of chains. Large “stuffed cabbage” earrings and smaller, graceful ones were very popular. Delicate, easily movable “guns” - balls woven from goose down, which were worn along with earrings, were also a kind of decoration.

Despite the picturesque multicolor, the integrity of the entire ensemble was achieved mainly by finding color combinations and relationships.

Color, ornament, and symbolism acquired a special meaning in ritual and wedding costumes.

Family hierarchy. Family and marriage relations before the Baptism of Rus' were regulated by customary norms, and the state did not interfere in this area at all. The marriage was concluded by abducting the bride by the groom (“smart”). In the Tale of Bygone Years, this pagan method of marriage is attributed to the Drevlyans, Radimichs and some other tribes. Young people from different villages gathered on the banks of rivers and lakes for games with songs and dances, and there the grooms “kidnapped” the brides. The author of the chronicle - a monk - of course, had a negative attitude towards all pagan customs, but even he did not hide the fact that the “snatch” was carried out by prior agreement of the bride and groom, so the word “kidnapping” here, in general, does not fit. The head of the family, the husband, was a slave in relation to the sovereign, but a sovereign in his own home. All household members, not to mention servants and slaves in the literal sense of the word, were under his complete subordination.

The duties of the husband and father included “educating” the family, which consisted of systematic beatings to which the children and wife were to be subjected. Widows were highly respected in society. In addition, they became full-fledged mistresses of the house. In fact, from the moment of the death of the spouse, the role of head of the family passed to them.

Baptism brought many norms of Byzantine law to Rus', including those relating to family and marriage relations. The family was under the protection of the Orthodox Church, which is why family and marriage relations were regulated mainly by the norms of church law. The marriageable age was set by Byzantine law at 14-15 years for men and 12-13 years for women.

Christianity prohibited polygamy, which was practiced in Rus'. Marital status becomes an obstacle to entering into a new marriage. The charter of Prince Yaroslav threatened a church home (imprisonment in a monastery) for a young wife, because of whom the man’s previous marriage could be shaken. The latter was ordered to live with the old one.

The obstacles to marriage were kinship and property. In an effort to strengthen marriage bonds, church charters prohibited hidden forms of violation of marriage laws: adultery, sexual intercourse between relatives and in-laws. The Church viewed marriage not only as a carnal union, but also as a spiritual one, therefore marriages were allowed only between Christians. Marriage after the Baptism of Rus' should have taken place in the form of a church wedding. Practice also knew the preservation of previous, pagan forms of marriage, which was condemned by law. When an unmarried man and an unmarried woman lived together before marriage, the man was obliged to pay the ransom and marry the girl.

The list of reasons for divorce was almost entirely borrowed from Byzantine laws, in particular from Prochiron, but taking into account Russian traditions. So, the marriage was touched when:
1) it was discovered that the wife had heard from other people about the impending attack on the power and life of the prince, but hid it from her husband;
2) the husband caught his wife with an adulterer or this was proven by hearsay evidence;
3) the wife hatched a plan to poison her husband with a potion or knew about the murder of her husband being prepared by other people, but did not tell him;
4) the wife, without her husband’s permission, attended feasts with strangers and stayed overnight without her husband;
5) the wife attended the games day or night (it didn’t matter) despite her husband’s prohibitions;
6) the wife gave a tip to the thief to steal her husband’s property or she herself stole something or committed theft from the church.

Personal and property relations between parents and children were built on the basis of traditional rules, with changes made by canonical norms. The father's power was unquestionable; he had the right to resolve intra-family disputes and punish children. The law is quite lenient towards illegitimate children. The Church Charter of Yaroslav, of course, punishes a girl who, while living in the house of her father and mother, gave birth to a premarital child. The Charter also punishes a wife who gave birth to an illegitimate child. However, leaving a baby or disposing of a fetus by an unmarried girl is also condemned. The main idea of ​​the legislator is clear: children must be born in marriage, but if an unmarried woman conceives, she must give birth to the baby.

Parenting. The pre-Christian era is characterized by various educational forms. In the 6th century, elements of mentoring activities began to emerge among the ancient Slavic tribes. Under matriarchy, children of both sexes were raised in the mother's house, then the boys moved to the men's house, where they learned practical skills. The upbringing of children was entrusted to mentors who taught worldly wisdom in “youth houses.” Later, the closest relatives (uncles) were involved in raising and educating children. In the absence of such, these functions were performed by the closest neighbors (“nepotism”). Thus, in the VI - VII centuries. among the Eastern Slavs, priority was given to out-of-family education. Since the 8th century, parents stopped giving their children to strangers. From this time on, we can talk about the emergence of an educational function in the family. The main methods of public education were nursery rhymes, ditties, riddles, fairy tales, epics, and lullabies. They revealed the best features of the Slavic folk character: respect for elders, kindness, fortitude, courage, hard work, mutual assistance. They reflected the rich and original history of the Slavic people, strengthening and accompanying it from the first years of life. In the studies of S.D. Babishina, B.A. Rybakov shows a fairly high general cultural level, the original national character of education in pre-Christian Rus'. It is concluded that neither the pedagogical thought nor the education system in Ancient Rus' was a Byzantine copy, and “the general culture of the Russian people was highly pedagogical.”

The Christian era in folk pedagogy began with the illumination of the Baptism of Rus' by the holy Equal-to-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir.

The upbringing of children of the princely family had its own characteristics. Children of the princely family were transferred to another family for upbringing. This form of education is called “feeding”. Feeding is a socio-pedagogical phenomenon in Rus' in the 10th-12th centuries. - characterized as mentoring and responsibility for the moral, spiritual and physical education of young princes. They received their first knowledge at court - at the school of “book learning”, where they studied with the children of boyars and warriors. The first school of “book learning” was opened in Kyiv in 988, then in Novgorod in 1030 and other cities.

In the folk practice of family education in Russia, the main emphasis was on obedience as the main element of honoring God. The logic of reasoning justified it as follows: the husband, as the head of the family, must honor God, and the wife must humble herself before her husband, and children must honor their parents. There was an opinion that the falling away of people from the faith leads to the fact that the husband ceases to honor God, to live according to His will, and the wife disobeys her husband. And as a result, two naughty people grow up with a naughty child.

The main pedagogical principle of this period was the reproduction (transfer) of the way of life into the education system, enshrined in the first literary monuments of Ancient Rus'.

A feature of the educational system in Ancient Rus' with the advent of Christianity was the performance of this function by clergy, which passed to them from respectable neighbors. When the baby was baptized, the godfather was called “godfather” and from then on was considered the second father, revered and respected by the godson. Before God and people, he was responsible for the future of his pupil, his deeds and actions, and in the event of the loss of parents, he replaced them, taking the godson into his house as his own son. But the most important thing that a godfather had to do was to tirelessly pray for his godfather and monitor his spiritual life and spiritual maturity. We can conclude that Christianity contains the prevention of social orphanhood, which is spreading on such a scale in societies that are based on lack of faith and responsibility before God.

Christianity, as a methodology, has significantly influenced the overall spread of knowledge and literacy. The clergy, fulfilling God's will, actively influenced these processes. Thus, Holy Metropolitan Michael of Kiev blessed teachers and gave instructions on how to properly teach. In Novgorod, Smolensk and other cities, schools and colleges were organized at the bishops' departments to teach children to read and write. Gradually, in different cities of Rus', priests began to teach literacy in churches, schools and colleges to children of all classes. Over time, not only priests, but also people of non-church rank - “masters of literacy” - began to teach children. Boys received education from priests or “masters”; women’s education was concentrated mainly in women’s monasteries, of which there were about 10 before the Tatar-Mongol invasion. The daughter of Chernigov Prince Mikhail Vsevolodovich, Efrosinya, opened a women’s school at the monastery, in which she taught children of all classes literacy, writing and singing prayers.

A special place in the system of family education in Ancient Rus' was given to women. A woman was recognized with the right to care for children and raise them in good manners. A woman was supposed to be educated, since she was not only the keeper of the home, but also the first teacher of children in good and righteous deeds.

Home and its organization. Initially, the dwellings were log houses, which were usually located randomly. Inside there was one common room, and adjacent to it were outbuildings for livestock and poultry, for storing agricultural implements, bread, hay, etc. Barns or threshing floors stood not far from the huts.

The desire to create maximum comfort using minimal means determined the laconicism of the interior, the main elements of which were a stove, fixed furniture (benches, beds), movable furniture (table, bench) and various arrangements (chests, boxes).

The ancient Russian stove, entirely included in the hut, was both literally and figuratively a home - a source of warmth and comfort.

Judging by the prostate customs of that time, it can be assumed that huts and mansions were erected without decorations, built of wood. The living quarters were located inside the courtyard and were surrounded by wooden fences with or without bars and a palisade. Of course, the rich did it; and the rest surrounded their homes with fences or left them open. In the middle of the 10th century, stone buildings appeared.

Rural huts built in those days were almost no different from each other: they were low, covered with boards and straw. The townspeople built tall houses and usually lived at the top. The lower part of the house was then allocated for cellars, called medushas, ​​since honey was stored in them, and for storerooms. The house was divided into cages (rooms). It was divided in half by a vestibule, sometimes called a platform. At a distance from the house, special resting rooms, or odrins, were built, whose name indicates that there were beds here that served not only for night sleep, but also for afternoon sleep.

The reception rooms in the grand ducal chambers were called gridnitsa. Boyars, gridniks, centurions, tens' officers and all deliberate people were treated there. In the yard they built towers and huts for pigeons (golubnitsy). Mansions were tall wooden houses, and towers were chambers or rooms located in the upper tier.

The living quarters were illuminated by candles and lanterns. Wax candles burned in the grand ducal and boyar mansions, because wax was in abundance. People of modest means burned ordinary oil, poured into round clay vessels - kaganets or zhirnik.

The walls of the rooms were not decorated with anything, only the rich had oak tables and benches; they stood along the walls and were often covered with carpets. In those days there were no chairs or armchairs. When receiving ambassadors, the Grand Dukes sat on an elevated round seat that replaced the throne; during lunch - on ordinary benches covered with fabrics - silk and velvet. The decorations of the rooms usually consisted of images of holy martyrs and saints, inserted into icon cases and hung in the corner. A lamp glowed in front of them, and on holidays the images were illuminated with wax candles. There was a place of honor under the icons; There was a table covered with a white cloth right there.

Much later, such types of buildings as log huts, mud huts, huts and stone buildings appeared in Rus'.

Food intake standards. Our ancestors, living in patriarchal simplicity, were content with little: half-raw food, meat, roots. In the 11th century they also ate millet, buckwheat and milk; then we learned to cook food. They spared nothing for the guests, showing their hospitality with abundant food.

Honey was boiling at the table - the oldest and favorite drink of all Slavic tribes. Honey was our first drink, and it was made very strong. They didn’t breed bees back then; they lived in the forests themselves. There were honeys: cherry, currant, juniper, mixed, raspberry, princely, boyar, etc.

Our ancestors began to grow grain, and then they began to bake bread and make kvass. In the 10th century it was already in general use, and they even doused themselves with kvass in the bathhouse.

Beer was formerly called “olui”. It was made strong, had different names and colors (light or dark).

In Ancient Rus' there was no shortage of fruits or dishes: fish, game and meat were in abundance.

Feasts were then common, and it was customary for the rich to treat the poor. The grand dukes themselves treated the guests; ate and drank with them.

Pepper came to us from Constantinople and Bulgaria. From there we received almonds, coriander, anise, ginger, cinnamon, bay leaves, cloves, cardamom and other spices that served as seasoning for dishes.

Flour for baking bread was prepared in mills or in millstones by hand.

The common people ate rather poorly: bread, kvass, salt, garlic and onions constituted their main food. Cabbage soup, porridge and oatmeal jelly were being prepared everywhere. Cabbage soup was prepared with a piece of lard or beef. They were a favorite food at court.

Delicious bread, fish - fresh and salted, eggs, garden vegetables: cabbage, cucumbers - pickled, vinegared and fresh, turnips, onions and garlic were considered the best foods.

Since ancient times, our ancestors did not eat veal, hares, pigeons, crayfish and the meat of those animals that were slaughtered by the hands of a woman, considering them defiled.

Domestic servants did the cooking. But if a woman needed to kill a bird for the table, and none of the men were at home, she would go out the gate with a knife and ask the first passerby to do it.

Our ancestors strictly observed fasting: on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and even Saturdays. Even seriously ill people did not dare to eat meat.

Baking bread required knowledge and experience, and a housewife who did not possess this skill was not valued, because it was believed: whose house has good bread is a good housewife. Wheat and coarse breads were baked on sweets, with different images.

Pies were baked with various fillings: eggs, cabbage, fish, mushrooms, rice, etc. Sweet pies prepared with sugar, raisins, jam and spices were called left-handed pies.

They ate several times a day, but usually had breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack and dinner. After a hearty lunch we rested for several hours.

They had breakfast early in the morning, lunch around noon, lunch around four or five o'clock, and dinner after sunset. Then, an hour later, they prayed to God and went to bed.

Family rituals and ceremonies.

BAPTISM. Childbirth and raising children in Rus' have long been surrounded by various beliefs, rituals and traditions. Many centuries ago, as now, expectant mothers sought to be easily relieved of their burden; parents wanted to protect their children from the evil eye, raise them to be hardworking and polite, and teach them to read and write.

Even during pregnancy, women learned from the midwives an ancient spell, which they then read to their children in the womb: “From you, my light, my little drop, I myself will take away all trouble. My love will be your dome, all your patience will be your cradle, and your prayer will be consolation. I’m waiting for you, my light, like the land of dawn, like the grass of dew, like the flowers of rain.” The sound of these gentle words had a beneficial effect on the child, and created the right mood for the mother before giving birth.

The birth of a person has always been considered a great sacrament, for which a woman began to prepare long before the event itself. Already at the wedding, it was customary to wish the newlyweds: “God grant you, Ivan Ivanovich, to get rich, and for you, Marya Petrovna, to be hunchbacked in front.” Midwives who mastered the art of obstetrics enjoyed special honor in Rus'. Not every woman could become a midwife; for example, this was prohibited for those whose own children suffered from some kind of illness. And, of course, great attention was paid to the purity of the midwife’s thoughts, because the lives of both the woman in labor and the new person directly depended on her.

As soon as a woman's contractions began, the midwife took her away from her home (childbirth often took place in a bathhouse). It was believed that one should be wary of “dashing people” or the “evil eye”, which could harm the newborn. Therefore, the presence of anyone, even the closest family members, during childbirth was prohibited. The child's father was ordered to pray fervently in front of the icon and fast.

The day of baptism was chosen randomly. If the child was weak or was in danger of imminent death, he was immediately baptized.

In ancient times, people were named at birth by the name of the saint who fell on the eighth day after birth. Our ancestors had two names, one given at birth, the other (secret) at baptism.

The custom of having godparents has existed in the Christian Church since ancient times. Baptism was immersive. The priest reads incantatory prayers. Then follows the renunciation of the catechumen, or in the case of his youth, his godfather, from Satan. Moreover, when they say “I deny,” they blow and spit three times, turning back; and then, turning to the east, they assure of unity with Christ and read the “Creed.” Then the priest, having anointed him with oil, immerses the catechumen three times in lukewarm, as if summer water, reads a prayer and puts white clothes and a cross on the baptized person.

When putting on white clothes, the troparion is sung. After baptism, chrismation follows; the forehead, eyes, nostrils, lips, ears, chest, hands and soles of the feet are anointed with myrrh.

Then the priest, having walked around the font three times with the person being baptized and his godparents, having read the Gospel and washed the members of the body anointed with myrrh, cuts his hair in a cross shape while reading the prayer; Having sealed them in wax, he gives them to his godfather, who throws them into the font; the water is then poured into a place that cannot be trampled underfoot.

When a baby is baptized, the recipient (godmother) provides him with a shirt and a headdress, and the recipient with a cross; each of them gives the mother and the child a generous gift, which is called “to the tooth”: material, money, whatever they can.

The parents of the person being baptized are not present at the baptism of their child. After baptism, the priest instructs the godparents to take care of the instruction of the godson or goddaughter in the Orthodox faith and in everything that a Christian needs.

In addition to weddings and christenings, in Ancient Rus' there were many rituals and celebrations, both Orthodox and pagan: name day, Red Hill, Radonitsa, Yarilo, Easter, Rusal Week, Trinity Day, Christmastide, Maslenitsa and many others. Each holiday had a certain providential algorithm and was celebrated on a special scale.

Literature

  1. "Archeology. Ancient Rus'. Life and culture”, ed. B. A. Rybakova. M. - 1997
  2. Belovinsky L.V. “History of Russian material culture”, M. – 2008
  3. Ovsyannikov Yu. M. “Pictures of Russian life”, M. - 2000.
  4. Rabinovich M. G. “Essays on the material culture of a Russian feudal city,” M. - 1990.
  5. Semyonova M. “Life and beliefs of the ancient Slavs”, St. Petersburg. – 2001
  6. Tereshchenko A. V. “History of the culture of the Russian people.” M. - 2007

Life in Ancient Rus' was always closely connected with nature and depended on it. Any type of occupation, be it agriculture, cattle breeding or handicrafts, was tied to natural gifts and to the natural conditions that ensured the life of the ancient Russian people. To find out what the life of people was like in Ancient Rus', let's look into their houses. The dwellings of rich people were called mansions (the same as towers). Usually this is a tall wooden structure of two or three floors, or even more, with several domes on the roof in the form of a barrel, tent, wedge or bell, and even decorated with wooden roosters, horses, dogs, and suns on the very top. The middle floor of the tower is surrounded by a balcony, which was called a walkway. From the walkway you can get into any cell (i.e. room) on this floor. Behind the mansions, in the depths of the courtyard, there are other buildings: barns, storerooms, cellars, a bathhouse, a well, a stable and others. The staircase leading to the porch is covered. From the porch we will find ourselves in the entryway, and from there the doors go straight, and up, and to the right, and to the left. On the middle floor there is a room - this is the most spacious, front room. And on the lower tier there is a kitchen and other utility rooms, and from here there is a separate passage to the courtyard. And above the upper room are the light rooms, these are individual rooms for the inhabitants of the house and guests. The ceilings in the rooms are low, the windows are small, mica (glass is very expensive) to conserve heat.

In the upper room there are built-in benches along all the walls, against the door there is a large table, and above it there is a shrine (a shelf with icons). To the left of the door, in the corner, there is a beautiful stove, which was laid out with multi-colored patterned tiles, on each of which there are various convex designs. In the simple and small huts of the poor people it is dark, they have only two small windows covered with a fish bladder. In the hut to the left of the entrance there is a huge stove. They cooked food in it, slept on it, dried shoes, clothes and firewood. From a different setting: benches along the wall, shelves above them, shelves, in the right corner there is a shrine and a small table. And in the closet there is a small bast chest, and in it are all the family valuables: a green caftan, a worm-like flyer, a fur coat and a pair of earrings. If in spring, summer and autumn people were busy with household chores, then in winter they could do crafts.

Gradually, some people's craft became their main occupation and source of income. Craftsmen often lived in cities, closer to the bazaar. The products of the masters were not just necessary household items, they were beautiful things created with inspiration, taste and a sense of beauty. The materials for the folk artist were stone, metal, clay, bone, fabric and wood - everything that was around in nature. The most accessible material for craftsmen was wood. Dwellings were built from it, tools, vehicles, dishes, furniture, and toys were made. And every thing amazed with its thoughtfulness, perfection of forms, and expressiveness of the silhouette. Folk craftsmen turned even the most ordinary objects made of wood into a work of art: a ladle was turned into a swimming swan, a child’s cradle was decorated with delicate delicate carvings, and winter sleighs looked luxurious with fancy and colorful patterns. Everything made from wood by Russian craftsmen is colored with talent, imagination, a joyful attitude, and a desire for beauty and perfection. Unfortunately, few wooden relics of antiquity have been preserved by time. After all, this is a short-lived material. Wood deteriorates quickly and burns easily. Frequent fires found their prey in wooden architecture and in the products of master woodworkers. In addition, wood was cheap, and wooden things were not particularly taken care of. What for? After all, you can make new things, even better, more convenient, more beautiful. Fantasy is inexhaustible, hands are golden, the soul cries for beauty. Thus, the life of the ancient Russian people speaks of their original culture, nurtured by talented craftsmen and folk craftsmen of the era.

Slide 2

According to the degree of greater or lesser respect for work and the ability to evaluate work, respectively

its true value - you can find out the degree of civilization of the people. N. A. Dobrolyubov

Slide 3

  • Everyday life - everyday life.
  • Mores - customs, way of social life.
  • Slide 4

    The culture of a people is inextricably linked with its way of life, everyday life, and the life of the people, determined by the level of development of the country’s economy, is closely connected with cultural processes.

    People lived both in large cities for their time, numbering tens of thousands of people, and in villages with several dozen households, and villages in which two or three households were grouped.

    Kyiv was considered the largest city. In terms of its scale and many stone buildings - temples, palaces - it competed with other European capitals of that time.

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    Saint Sophia Cathedral

  • Slide 7

    Golden Gate

  • Slide 8

    In the palaces, rich boyar mansions, a complex life went on - warriors, servants were located here, and servants crowded around. From here the administration of principalities, cities, and villages took place; here they judged and tried, and here tributes and taxes were brought. Feasts often took place in the vestibules and spacious rooms. Women sat at the table equally with men. Also, women took an active part in management, housekeeping, and other matters.

    Slide 9

    The favorite pastimes of rich people were falconry and hound hunting. For the common people they arranged

    races, tournaments, various games.

    Slide 10

    Below, on the banks of the Dnieper, the cheerful Kiev trade was noisy, where goods and products were sold.

    only from all over Rus', but also from all over the world.

    Slide 11

    The life of the population of different regions of Kievan Rus was different. The peasants lived in small

    houses. In the south, these were semi-dugouts, which even had earthen roofs. In the north, log buildings with wooden floors were built along the forests. The stoves everywhere were made of adobe or stone, but they were heated using black. Small windows were closed with wooden shutters and covered with bubble wrap or leather. Glass was used only in churches, among lords and the city's rich. Instead of a chimney, there was often a hole in the ceiling, and when they burned, smoke filled the room. During the cold season, often both the peasant’s family and his livestock lived nearby - in the same hut.

    Slide 12

    The townspeople had other dwellings. Half-dugouts were almost never found in cities. There were also two-story houses consisting of several rooms. The estates of boyars, warriors and clergy were far superior to the homes of commoners in size and wealth; they included a whole complex of buildings: quarters for servants, artisans, outbuildings. The princely mansions were real palaces, some of them were built of stone.

    Slide 13

    Different sections of society dressed differently.

    Peasants and artisans - both men and women - wore shirts made of homespun linen. In addition to a shirt, men wore pants, and women wore skirts. Both men and women wore scrolls as outerwear. They also wore different cloaks. In winter they wore ordinary fur coats.

    The shoes of townspeople, peasants and nobility were also different. Peasant bast shoes did not differ from those worn in the 19th century; city dwellers more often wore boots or pistons (shoes)

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    The clothing of the nobility was similar in shape to that of the peasants, but the quality, of course, was different: cloaks were often made of expensive oriental materials, brocade, and embroidered with gold. The cloaks were fastened at one shoulder with gold clasps; winter coats were made from expensive furs. They wore boots, often decorated with inlay.

    Slide 16

    Decorations

    Rich women decorated themselves with gold and silver chains, necklaces made of beads, which were very loved in Rus', earrings, jewelry made of gold and silver, trimmed with enamel, and niello. But there were also simpler, cheaper jewelry, made from inexpensive stones and simple metal - copper, bronze. Poor people wore them with pleasure.

    Slide 17

    Slide 18

    His life, full of work and anxiety, flowed in Russian villages and hamlets, in log huts, in half-dugouts with stoves in the corner. There people persistently fought for existence, plowed new lands, raised livestock, beekeepers, hunted, defended themselves from “dashing” people, and in the south - from nomads, and again and again rebuilt wooden dwellings that had been burned after enemy raids. Moreover, plowmen often went out into the field armed with spears, clubs, bows and arrows to fight off the Polovtsian patrol. On long winter evenings, in the light of splinters, women spun yarn, men drank intoxicating drinks, honey, remembered the days gone by, composed and sang songs, listened to the storytellers and storytellers of epics.

    View all slides

    The harmonious development of ancient Russian culture was interrupted by the Mongol invasion in the middle of the 13th century. Therefore, historians separate the initial period of its evolution (IX-XIII centuries) from all subsequent ones. An inseparable part of culture was everyday life - everything that surrounded the daily life of ordinary members and nobility of East Slavic society.

    Architecture

    Like the entire culture of pre-Mongol Rus', the architecture of the country changed greatly after the adoption of Christianity and the layering of Byzantine traditions with ancient Russian ones. Since ancient times, residential buildings of the Eastern Slavs were half-dugouts and log houses. In the north, rich traditions of carpentry have developed in the forest zone.

    Stone buildings appeared at the end of the 10th century, when Greek architects arrived in the country at the invitation of Prince Vladimir. The most important cultural monuments of pre-Mongol Rus' were built in Kyiv - “the mother of Russian cities.” In 989, construction began on the stone Church of the Tithes, which became a cathedral located next to the princely court.

    Subsequently, ancient Russian monumental architecture spread throughout all East Slavic lands. For example, in the 11th century the St. Sophia Cathedral was consecrated in Novgorod - today it is the main attraction of the city. This building is also considered the oldest church built by the Slavs and preserved in Russia. Kyiv also had its own St. Sophia Cathedral. An outstanding architectural monument is the one built in the Vladimir Principality in the 12th century.

    Fortress structures most often consisted of city walls assembled from wooden frames (they were also called gorodnitsa). At the top there were platforms for the garrison and gaps from which they fired at the enemy. Additional fortifications were towers (vezhi). Large cities consisted of external walls, a detinets and an internal fortress. The walls of princely capitals could be built of stone. Outside their borders, suburbs grew, where artisans and other ordinary people settled.

    Painting

    Thanks to the influence of Byzantine Orthodoxy, the culture of pre-Mongol Rus' was enriched not only by the traditions of building stone churches, but also by new trends in painting. Genres such as fresco, mosaic and icon painting became an integral part of the life of the Eastern Slavs. In painting, the Greek influence turned out to be more durable than in architecture, where a distinctive ancient Russian style soon emerged. This was due to the fact that, for example, in iconography there was a strict Christian canon, from which the masters did not deviate for several centuries.

    In addition to religious painting, there was also secular painting. A striking example of this genre were the wall paintings created in the towers of the Kyiv Sofia. The drawings depicted the family of Grand Duke Yaroslav the Wise, scenes from the daily life of the monarch, fantastic birds and animals. Several icons created in the Vladimir-Suzdal land in the 12th century have survived to this day. These artifacts demonstrate in the best possible way what the culture of Rus' was like in the pre-Mongol period. Another unique monument, a medieval fresco, which is the main attraction of the Dmitrievsky Cathedral, depicts scenes of the Last Judgment.

    The golden age of the culture of pre-Mongol Rus' dates back to the 12th century, when the feudal fragmentation of a previously unified country became the reason for the emergence of regional “schools” in many areas of creative activity. This trend also affected the fine arts. For example, in Novgorod, paintings were created that were imbued with a unique gloomy and harsh spirit. The drawings of formidable archangels and figures of saints are unlike any other example of ancient Russian painting.

    Music

    Music is another form of art that clearly shows what history was like. The Pre-Mongol period left behind a lot of evidence about the song preferences of the Eastern Slavs. Music is characterized by the fact that at all times it existed inseparably from the life of both the nobility and ordinary people. Family celebrations, “games,” could not be imagined without songs, dances and playing instruments. Folk works were of a very different nature. These were wedding laments, spring play melodies, laments for deceased relatives.

    The most gifted performers became professional musicians. Singers of solemn epics and storytellers specialized in the epic genre. Parallel to them, there was a whole world of traveling troupes consisting of buffoons who performed in city squares and feasts. The culture of pre-Mongol Rus' was multifaceted, and music in this sense was no different from other types of art. Many buffoons not only sang, but also tried themselves as acrobats, dancers, jugglers and actors, that is, they became actors. It is interesting that the princely authorities often fought against such amateur activities, since the ancient “demonic” songs bore the stamp of long-standing pagan traditions.

    The Russians included balalaikas, tambourines, harps, rattles, and domras. And horns and trumpets were used not only to sing songs, but also to signal during hunting or military operations. The squads had their own kind of “orchestras”. For example, such a team raised the morale of the troops during the sieges of the cities of the Volga Bulgarians in 1220.

    Like the rest of the culture of pre-Mongol Rus', music received its own Orthodox niche. The texts of church hymns were Byzantine (translated into Slavic). Rus' borrowed liturgical ritual from the Greeks. In the same way, chant techniques appeared.

    Folklore

    Old Russian culture is best known for its folklore, which is distinguished by its outstanding diversity and richness. Songs, epics, spells, poetry were its integral components. Paganism gave rise to mythological tales that survived even after the adoption of Christianity. Folklore ideas merged with Orthodoxy, which was most reflected in calendar holidays and superstitions.

    The epic heroic epic is the pinnacle of oral folk art. The main characters of such works were heroes. Heroes such as Ilya Muromets, Dobrynya Nikitich and Alyosha Popovich are known to every child from collections of fairy tales. The epics reflected the wealth that is the culture of Rus' in the pre-Mongol period. Bogatyrs could be either real historical characters or generalized images. In the tales of fearless heroes, an entire medieval era with its characteristic features (the fight against steppe nomads, “dashing people”, etc.) was deposited.

    Writing

    The opposite of oral folk art was written creativity. However, such literature could not appear without the alphabet. That, in turn, leaked into Rus' along with Christianity. The Byzantine enlighteners Cyril and Methodius created a special alphabet for the Slavs, which became the foundation for a variety of writing systems: Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian, Macedonian, etc.

    The work of the Greek preachers from Thessalonica had the most far-reaching consequences. Without the Cyrillic alphabet, the entire pre-Mongol alphabet would not have developed. This alphabet was used for the complete translation of Orthodox texts. The first schools teaching literacy were founded by Prince Vladimir Svyatoslavich.

    Unique monuments of ancient Russian writing are Novgorod birch bark letters. Most of them were discovered by archaeologists in the 20th century. Birch bark letters indicate that literacy in Rus' was not considered the exclusive domain of the aristocracy. Many ordinary citizens knew how to write, as medieval Novgorod artifacts recorded.

    The ancient Cyrillic alphabet was somewhat different from the modern one. It had superscripts and some extra letters. A radical reform of the old alphabet took place under Peter I, and it took its final present form after the 1917 revolution.

    Literature

    Along with writing, Rus' adopted book culture from Byzantium. The first independent works were religious teachings or sermons. This can be considered the “Sermon on Law and Grace,” written by Metropolitan Hilarion in the middle of the 11th century.

    The chronicle has become a much more widespread genre. They are not only chronicles of events, but also a source of knowledge about what the culture of Ancient Rus' was like in the pre-Mongol period. Nestor is considered the main chronicler of Kievan Rus. At the beginning of the 12th century he compiled The Tale of Bygone Years. This collection described the main events of Russian history from the emergence of statehood to 1117. Nestor focused his attention on political events: princely disputes, wars and alliances. The chronicler also left behind “Reading,” in which he dwelled in detail on the biography of the two martyred princes Boris and Gleb.

    Prince Vladimir Monomakh was remembered not only as a wise politician and talented commander, but also as an extraordinary writer. The ruler of Kyiv left his heirs “Instruction” - a political treatise in which the author explained what an ideal state and effective government should be like. In the book, Monomakh reminded future princes that the personal interests of politicians should not harm the unity of the state, which was necessary, among other things, to fight the nomadic Polovtsians.

    The “Instruction” was written at the beginning of the 12th century. At the end of the same century, the main work of ancient Russian literature appeared - “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign.” It was also dedicated to the theme of the fight against the Polovtsians. At the center of the narrative of the poem is the unsuccessful campaign to the steppe of Prince Igor Svyatoslavich, who ruled in Novgorod-Seversky.

    The threat to peaceful life posed by nomads largely influenced what the culture and life of pre-Mongol Rus' became. In the Lay, an unidentified author showed better than anyone how destructive the pagan raids were. Like Monomakh in his “Instructions,” he emphasized the importance of the unity of the Russian lands in the face of a common danger.

    Applied arts

    Since ancient times, Russian craftsmen have been famous for their unique techniques for making jewelry (enamel, filigree, etc.). Similar products were made to order for the boyar and princely nobility. Foreigners admired the Russian silversmiths. A variety of products were treated with this mixture: bracelets, crosses, rings, etc.

    Kyiv masters preferred gilded and silver figures on a black background. Vladimir artisans more often made a pure silver background and golden figures. Galicia had its own school of contour rabble. Using these examples, applied art once again demonstrates how diverse the culture and life of pre-Mongol Rus' were.

    The crafts of the village were very different from the crafts of the city. In rural areas, craftsmen have long used pagan motifs of evil spirits in their ornaments. Charms and amulets were popular. Most of them were made from the most accessible material - wood. If at first the incantatory elements in applied art had a clear magical purpose, then gradually they lost this meaning and became simple patterns. The culture of Rus' in the pre-Mongol period, in short, evolved. With each generation it gradually changed and became more complex.

    Life and housing

    Early Slavic semi-dugouts consisted of a stove, benches and bunks. Each such room became a home for a separate married couple. The prevalence of half-dugouts among the southern tribal unions of the Eastern Slavs was noted by Arab geographers. Such dwellings began to disappear in the 10th century. This process was associated with the breaking of patriarchal ties of a small family and the withering away of tribal remnants.

    For example, in Kyiv, in addition to half-dugouts, there were log and log dwellings. Wood was a relatively cheap material; almost every urban or rural resident could get it. Accessibility helped to quickly restore settlements in case of fires. Fires always led to severe destruction, which, on the other hand, was a noticeable disadvantage of wood.

    An important part of the princely palaces was the gridnitsa - a spacious room where the squad gathered at feasts. Studying the structure of an aristocratic home is another interesting way to understand what the culture of pre-Mongol Rus' was like. Architecture was an indicator of the social status, the position on the social ladder of the owner of the building. It is interesting that in the 12th century, when the state finally collapsed, the former grand ducal gridnitsa disappeared - their premises began to be used as prisons.

    Cloth

    Ordinary peasants, or smerds, dressed in belted shirts, tucked into trousers, and high boots. In winter, inexpensive furs were used. At the same time, bear coats were considered common. The belts were narrow and leather, the buckles were made of copper. Women, as a rule, wore jewelry (necklaces, beads).

    A characteristic feature of druzhina, boyar and princely clothing was a cloak. If peasants wore coarse linen shirts, then aristocrats wore silk shirts. Princely boots were made of morocco. A mandatory attribute of the monarch was a hat with a fur band. The jewelry of noble people was made of precious stones and gold. For example, Prince Svyatoslav Igorevich wore a characteristic pearl earring. The life and culture of pre-Mongol Rus' (10-13 centuries) surprised many foreigners. Winter clothing of the Russian nobility was made from sable furs, which were the most valuable commodity in all European markets.

    Food

    Since the basis of Russian agriculture was arable farming, the diet of ordinary people consisted mainly of bread itself and various cereals (barley, wheat, rye and millet). Their importance for the life of the Eastern Slavs was fundamental. Bread was so dependent that archaeologists have found children's toys shaped like bread. Crop failure was considered the greatest disaster, the inevitable consequence of which was widespread pestilence.

    The meat food of the townspeople consisted of poultry and livestock. The ancient tradition of eating horse meat has been preserved in the village for a long time. Dairy products, including cottage cheese, were an important part of the home table. The ideological war of the church against paganism also affected the diet. For example, the same cottage cheese was considered a ritual dish. The priests tried to regulate the diet of their flock through various fasts.

    Sturgeon was especially prized among the fish on the table (it is known that the Novgorod princes had “sturgeon fishers” who collected taxes from fishing grounds using sturgeon). The key vegetables were turnips and cabbage. The food culture of pre-Mongol Rus', in short, changed more slowly than all other spheres of Slavic life. Traditional seasonings were cinnamon, vinegar, nuts, anise, mint, and pepper. A lack of salt could turn into a real national disaster. This product was a favorite object of speculation among traders.

    It is impossible to understand an era without referring to the conditions of everyday life. The historian I.E. Zabelin wrote that a person’s home life “is the environment in which lie the germs and beginnings of all the so-called great events of history.”

    A person's daily life is centered in the family. In Ancient Rus', families were usually large. The grandfather, his sons and wives, grandchildren, etc. lived in one family. Childhood was spent in very harsh conditions, which is reflected even in the terms applied to children: youth– “non-speaking”, not having the right to speak; lad– “servant”; servants - younger members of the clan. Spanking was considered the main method of education. Beatings for educational purposes were the norm. Babies were sometimes sold into slavery by their own parents due to hunger.

    However, one should not exaggerate the negative impact of cruel upbringing. As V.V. Dolgov rightly noted, preventive cruelty was the only way to save the life of a child in situations where a parent could not control his child 24 hours a day (due to being busy at work, work, etc.). Of course, there were no nurseries, kindergartens or regular secondary schools then. The rich could still assign a nanny to the child, but the poor? How can you prevent your child from interfering where he shouldn’t if he is left to his own devices most of the time? There is only one answer: to intimidate, to protect his life with prohibitions and punishments that may turn out to be life-saving. He will not go into the forest with the wolves, will not swim away along the river, will not set fire to the house, etc. Moreover, the cruelty of upbringing did not cancel parental love, albeit in peculiar forms.

    However, childhood, even such a harsh one, did not last long, especially among the lower classes.

    “The social milestone of final maturation throughout the entire ancient Russian period was considered marriage. Another, no less important indicator of adulthood was the acquisition of one’s own household. According to V.V. Kolesov, “children in Russia were called even for fifty years men living in their father’s house, since such the kid did not begin to live independently." It seems that the property criterion was even more important, since adulthood is generally independence, and while remaining in the parental home, children could not have the right to a decisive vote - all power belonged to the head of the family. That is why in the chronicles there are cases of princely weddings are always celebrated and described as very significant events, but the prince becomes an active political figure only after he takes possession of the volost...<...>

    All this led to the fact that the society of the early Russian Middle Ages did not know a clearly defined age until which a person could, had the right and opportunity to remain a child. There was no age for the onset of legal capacity, there was no clearly defined period during which education should be received, all this appeared much later. For a long time, the marriageable age limit remained the only institutionalized boundary that existed in official culture."

    Among the peasantry, there were cases of eight- or nine-year-old boys marrying adult girls. This was done in order to get an extra worker into the family. Representatives of the noble classes married later, but weddings at 12–15 years of age were the norm. The adult head of the family - the husband - was full sovereign among their households. The spouse was considered only an addition to the “strong half”, so almost no proper names of ancient Russian women have reached us: they were called either by their father or by their husband (for example, Yaroslavna, Glebovna, etc.).

    The attitude towards the weaker sex is illustrated by a well-known parable in the Middle Ages: “The owl is not a bird among birds, nor a hedgehog among beasts, nor a fish among fishes, a cancer, nor a cattle among cattle, a goat, nor a slave among slaves, nor a husband among husbands, who listens to his wife?

    Without the permission of the husband, the wife had no right to leave the house and eat at the same table with him. Only in rare cases did women receive some rights. Before getting married, a daughter could inherit her father's property. A slave who lived with her master as a wife gained freedom after his death. Widows had all the rights of the head of the family and mistress.

    However, for husbands, family life was not always carefree. Due to unequal marriages and age misalliances, the problem of the “evil wife” was acute in medieval society. A special article was even introduced into the legislation: “If a wife beats her husband, the fine is 3 hryvnia” (as for stealing a prince’s horse). The same fine was punished when a wife steals property from her husband and tries to poison him. If a woman persisted in her desire to destroy her husband and repeatedly sent a hired killer to him, she was allowed to divorce her.

    People of Ancient Rus' were called mainly by their names, but often they also had various nicknames. Patronymic names were rarely used. A person who was called by his patronymic (with the addition of the suffix -vich, for example Igorevich, Olgovich), was noble; This was the name given to princes and later to major boyars. Personally, free representatives of the middle classes enjoyed "half patronymics"(suffixes were added to their names -ov, -ev, -in, for example "Ivanov Petrov's son", i.e. his father was named Peter). The lower strata of society did not have patronymics at all, they only had first names. Also in Ancient Rus' there were no surnames. They appear only in the 15th–16th centuries, initially among feudal lords.

    To describe the main features of the life of Ancient Rus', let's start with the home. In the Middle Ages, living quarters were small, consisting of one or several rooms (for the rich). In the houses, the main furniture was benches and benches, on which they sat and slept. The rich had wooden beds, carpets, tables, and chairs. Household property was stored in chests or bags, which were tucked under benches. In the dark, the rooms were illuminated with burning wood chips - torch or clay oil lamps, candles.

    We can only partially restore the appearance of ancient Russian residential buildings based on archaeological data. The main type was hut It was a wooden quadrangular log frame, placed either directly on the ground or on stands (stones, logs). The floor could be earthen or wooden, made of smooth-hewn boards. There must have been a stove; actually, the word hut and means “dwelling with a stove” (from istba, source, source). However, chimneys and pipes were rare; stoves were fired “black,” i.e. all the smoke went into the hut. Light entered the houses through small windows cut into the walls. As a rule, they were “volokovye”: a narrow oblong gap in the wall, which was closed (“covered”) with a board.

    The poor lived in half-dugouts. A rectangular hole was dug in the ground, the walls were reinforced with a wooden frame, which was coated with clay. Then, above)" they built a plank or log roof, sometimes raising it above the surface on a small frame. Since it is impossible to exist without heating in the Russian winter, domed adobe stoves that were heated "in black" were also installed in semi-dugouts. In peasant houses, together with the family, under On one roof, behind partitions, livestock could be kept.

    The richer a person was, the more complex the structure of his home was: a canopy and a cold cage, which served as a storage room, were attached to the hut (warm living space). Among wealthy people, log cabins were combined into entire galleries, which were sometimes built up to several floors on special support pillars. A similar residential complex was called mansions, and if it was decorated with rounded gable roofs, six- or octagonal log houses, then it was called tower. Princes, boyars, and leaders of the city administration lived in the towers. Most of the buildings were wooden. Some churches and civil buildings (towers) were built from stone, but the latter are extremely few in number. In addition, in the yard of wealthy people there were various outbuildings: cellars, bathhouses, cowsheds, barns, storerooms, etc.

    The main clothing was shirt-shirt from canvas, for the rich - from thin linen. It was fastened with wooden, bone or metal buttons and girded with a narrow leather belt or sash. Wide trousers were usually tucked into boots or wrapped in onuchi. The bulk of the population wore bast shoes or porschi(the leg was wrapped in a single piece of soft leather and tied up), in winter - felt boots. In winter they wore sheepskin coats and warm clothes made of coarse wool.

    The nobility dressed richer. An aristocrat could be distinguished by the fact that he had a disgustingly- a cloak made of expensive fabric. Outerwear was decorated with embroidery, furs, gold and precious stones mantles(gate cutout), on the floor(clothing floors) and wrists(sleeves at the hands). The dress was made from expensive fabrics: Aksamita(velvet), pavoloki(silks). The princes and boyars wore high boots made of colored morocco (red, blue, and yellow colors were popular). The headdresses were round, soft, and trimmed with fur. Winter coats were made from sable, beaver, and marten fur.

    Food products were made mainly from cereals (rye, oats, millet, less often wheat) and vegetables. These were bread, various cereals, jelly, stews, decoctions, etc. Meat was eaten by macho people and more often pork than beef and lamb. But river fish was widely popular, which was explained both by its cheapness and the large number of Orthodox fasts. They drank bread kvass, honey, and fruit infusions. The utensils used were mainly wooden; in rich houses - iron, copper, and silver.

    The life and customs of Ancient Rus' show us a medieval society that had recently adopted Christianity, with gradually growing social differentiation.



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