Унiяцкiя цэрквы Вялiкага Княства Лiтоўскага XVII ст.
Матэрыялы генеральных вiзiтацый
(
Серия Святынi Вялiкага Княства Лiтоўскага
)
85 USD
Стоимость доставки:
29 USD
Добавить в
Добавить в
The National Historical Archive of Belarus is the country's largest repository of documentary sources on the history of all confessions of the former Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 15th - early 20th centuries. From the middle of the XIX century. these sources, preserved at that time mainly in the Vilna and Vitebsk central archives of ancient acts, as well as in the family and consistory archives, repeatedly found themselves in the focus of attention of the publishers of a number of archeographic publishing series. Archaeologists of the Russian Empire, with the help of selective publications, emphasized the “Russian” component of the cultural and religious life of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and tried to identify the local “Russianness” of the 16th-17th centuries. with "Russian" and "Russian" in the realities of the nineteenth century. However, a significant part of the documents on the history of confessions generally remained outside the field of view of the scientific community. Only at the end of the twentieth century. with the growing interest in genealogy and family history, these sources began to be actively used by researchers. Therefore, a collection of pieces of a kind of documentary mosaic under one cover is of particular value, with which a new publishing series of the National Historical Archives of Belarus “Sacred Things of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania” begins. The first book of the series contains all known materials of common visits to Uniate churches and monasteries of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 17th century. The National Historical Archive of Belarus continues to prepare the next books of the series, which will include descriptions of the Calvinist collections of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the 17th–18th centuries, as well as materials of general visits to the churches of the Kiev-Vilna diocese in 1763–1766.