Descript |
xi, 255 p. : ill., maps |
Contents |
Introduction; 1. Beyond borders, between worlds: Russian Empire and the making of the Don Steppe Frontier; 2. People and power on the frontier: liberty, diversity, and de-centralization in the Don region to 1700; 3. A middle ground between autonomy and dependence: the raiding economy of the Don Steppe Frontier to 1700; 4. Boundaries of integration or exclusion? Migration, mobility, and state sovereignty on the southern Frontier to 1700; 5. Testing the boundaries of imperial alliance: co-operation, negotiation and resistance in the era of Razin (1667-81); 6. Between Rus' and Rossiia: realigning the boundaries of Cossack communities in a time of migration and transition (1681-95); 7. The era of Raskol: religion and rebellion (1681-95); 8. Incorporation without integration: the Azov Interlude (1695-1711); 9. From frontier to borderland: the demarcation of the Steppe and the delegitimation of raiding (1696-1710); 10. Boundaries of land, liberty, and identity: making the Don region legible to imperial officials (1696-1706); 11. The Bulavin uprising: the last stand of the old Steppe (1706-9); 12. Reshaping the Don in the imperial image: power, privilege, and patronage in the post-Bulavin era (1708-39); 13. Closing the Cossack community: recording and policing the boundaries of group identity (1708-39); 14. A borderline state of mind: the closing of the Don Steppe frontier (1708-39); Afterword. |
Note |
325 annual accesses. UkHlHU |
ISBN |
9781107190238 (e-book) |
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