Authors: Philip Longworth
Schlitte, Hans,
90
Schonberg, Nicholas,
85
Sea of Okhotsk,
161
Second Turkish War (1787-
92
),
185
,
187
-
8
Second World War,
2
,
8
,
253
-
60
,
261
,
262
-
3
,
274
,
279
Secret Police
sec
Cheka; Federal Security
Service (FSB); KGB; NKVD
Selim II, Sultan,
95
Semen (great-grandson of Ivan ‘Money-Bag’),
63
Semino, Dr O.,
6
Serbia, Serbs,
9
,
157
,
204
,
220
,
221
,
222
,
313
Sergius of Radonezh, St,
50
,
58
-
61
,
64
,
319
settlements, societies: and beginnings of
serfdom,
106
; Bronze Age,
12
; burial
practices,
11
-
12
; cluster developments,
18-
19
; defensive,
110
-
11
; defensive
and governmental,
110
; distribution of,
52; effect of climate on,
5
-
6
,
15
-
17
,
18; ethnographic studies on,
8
-
9
; food
preparation,
11
; hill
(gorodishche),
24
;
hunter-gatherers,
7
-
8
,
1
0 - n ; Iron
Age,
12
-
13
; and language,
14
-
15
;
patriarchal tendencies,
12
;
religious
beliefs,
12
; and river trade,
24
-
5
; and
serfdom,
129
-
30
; Stone Age,
5
,
6
,
8
,
9—
10
; swidden agriculture,
13
—
14
;
Tnpolye type,
10
; (un)conscious
adaptations,
8
; Viking,
23
,
24
;
sec also
economy
Sevastopol,
179
,
206
,
209
,
210
,
257
Seven Years War (1756-
63
),
168
,
178
Severiane (tribal association),
22
Seymour, H.D,
209
Shahin Girey, Crimean Khan,
178
Shamyl (imam; Murid leader of
Shanghai Forum,
326
Shaposhnikov, Marshal (Chief of Staff),
255
Shatalin, Stanislav,
294
Shchelkalov, Andrei and Vasilii,
109
,
111
Shcherbatov, Prince Mikhail,
79
Shevkal (shamkal of Tarku),
112
Shostakovich, Dmitrii,
198
;
Cheriomushki,
272
Shuiskii, Prince Andrei,
90
Shuiskii, Vasilii, Boyar,
then
Tatar
see
Vasilii IV
Siberia, Siberians,
5
,
66
,
69
,
166
,
197
,
244
,
251
,
256
,
316
; administration of,
l22
160
-
1
,
176
-
7
; communications in,
223
; conquest of,
97
,
129
,
132
—
3
; difficulties of adjustment/absorption,
280
; effect of climate on,
6
; illness in,
176
; introduction of law in,
198
-
9
; mapping of,
133
; mineral wealth of,
279
-
80
; native peoples of,
134
; population movements into,
130
; railways in,
223
-
5
; a n d religious conversion,
135
; settlement programmes for,
130
-
1
; strategic importance of,
133
; strategic
Siberia Office,
132
Sigismund, King of Poland,
122
,
123
Silk Road,
158
Silvestr (monk),
91
Simeon the Proud, Grand Prince
51
Sinkiang,
263
Sinope,
210
Sisak, Prince,
92
Six-Day War (1967),
278
Skrynnikov, Ruslan,
111
Skuratov (post-communist prosecutorgeneral),
312
Skyger, Lieut.-Col.,
137
Slansky, Rudolf,
267
slaves,
23
,
30
,
33
,
42
,
93
,
173
,
200
,
202
Slavonic Benevolent Committee,
221
Smolensk,
24
,
33
52
,
55
,
62
,
84
,
110
,
123
,
124
,
128
,
129
,
136
,
141
,
144
,
194
Sobieski, Jan, King of Poland,
147
Social Democrats,
237
‘Socialism in One Country’,
239
Sofia (daughter of Tsar Alexis; regent during minority of Ivan V and Peter I),
147
,
148
,
151
Sofia (city),
222
Sokhma river,
48
Sokolovskii, Marshal V.D.,
257
Solari, Pietro Antonio,
82
Solomonia, Grand Princess,
85
Soloviev, Vladimir,
112
Solzhenitsyn, Alexander,
283
South Vietnam,
278
South-East Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO),
269
Soviet Academy of Science,
8
Soviet Union,
2
,
320
—
1
; 500-day regeneration plan for,
294
—
5
; acquisition of territories,
261
; apparent stability of,
283
-
4
; Autonomous Provinces,
245
; Autonomous Republics,
244
-
5
; censorship, propaganda and public relations in,
150
,
252
; collapse of,
281
,
324
; collectivization programmes,
252
-
3
,
268
-
9
,
274
-
5
; constitution for,
244
-
6
; continuities with old regime,
238
,
239
; and demobilization,
264
-
5
; demographic/economic changes
271
—
4
; deportations in,
256
,
271
; and detente,
278
-
9
; deteriorating standard of living in,
292
; disastrous aftermath of collapse,
301
-
2
; dissidents in,
283
; easing
of
foreign and domestic attitudes,
268
; and East-West relations,
286
—
7
; economic problems in,
240
—
2
; enlightened attitudes of,
245
—
6
; events leading to collapse of,
282
-
6
; as a Federation of National Republics,
242
—
6
; final disintegration of,
298
—
300
; and freedom for satellite countries,
290
—
6
; Gorbachev reforms in,
284
—
8
; increasing influence of,
270
-
1
; introduction of democratic practices,
287
; judicious use of repression/concession,
269
; labour camps in,
253
; management of,
271
—
2
; military disasters/victories,
255
-
60
; mineral wealth of,
285
; nationalist sentiments in,
273
-
4
; Nazi-Soviet Pact,
254
,
261
,
292
; New Economic Policy,
242
,
246
; new security agency in,
239
—
40
; nuclear weapons in,
269
,
277
-
8
; political coup in,
296
-
8
; and political/constitutional reform,
289
; and post-war territorial divisions,
262
-
3
; presence/influence in Eastern Europe,
265
—
7
,
274
-
7
; prestige/world influence,
261
—
2
,
280
—
1
; reasons for collapse,
298
-
300
; and removal of conservative elements,
290
; science/technology in,
279
—
80
; social/economic crisis in,
246
-
8
; space missions,
269
,
270
; succession of disasters in,
286
—
8
; trade agreements,
269
; trials, executions and purges in,
252
,
267
; urban/industrial building projects,
250
—
2
;
uskorenie, glasnost
and
perestroika
in,
285
,
287
,
288
; war casualties,
264
; Western attempts to curtail,
269
; withdrawal of troops and non-interference policies,
288
—
9
Spafarius (Romanian in Tsar’s service),
148
Speranskii, Mikhail,
198
Spiridonov, Admiral,
172
Sprengtporten, Colonel G.M.,
192
Stakhanov (a miner),
250
Stalin, Joseph,
246
,
261
,
271
,
273
,
321
; adherence to post-war agreements,
264
; character of,
252
—
3
; Communist ideology,
264
; death of,
267
; and Georgian independence,
244
; and issue of
Declaration of Rights of the Peoples of Russia,
242
; and management of war,
255
,
257
,
258
; patriotic speech by,
247
—
8
; and the ‘percentage agreement’,
263
; popularity of,
268
; and Nazi-Soviet pact,
254
; and war against Japan,
264
Stalingrad,
110
; battle of,
257
—
60
;
see also
Tsaritsyn
Stefan, abbot,
59
Stiglitz, J.,
311
Stolypin, Petr, Premier,
231
-
2
,
272
Strabo,
17
Strategic Arms Limitation,
277
Strategic Defense Initiative (‘Star Wars’),
282
Strobel, Lieut.-Col. van,
137
Stroganov, Grigorii,
96
—
7
,
110
,
173
Stroganov venture,
130
Sungir archaeological site,
5
Sunzha,
180
Suvurov, Generalissimo Aleksandr,
179
Sviatopolk (son of Iziaslav),
42
Sviatoslav the resentful,
27
Sviatoslav (son of laroslav),
41
,
42
Sviatoslav (son of Olga/Helen),
37
-
8
Svoboda, Colonel
(later
President of Czechoslovakia),
262
Sweden,
1
,
4
,
49
,
55
,
79
,
98
,
108
,
122
,
142
,
143
,
146
,
188
; war with,
152
—
6
,
168
Tabriz,
204
Taiwan,
326
Tajiks,
217
Taliban,
308
Tallin,
104
Taman (Tmutorakhan),
41
Tamara, Queen of Georgia,
44
Tamerlane the Great,
63
Tannenberg,
234
Tara,
110
Tatars,
46
-
7
,
48
,
52
,
70
,
78
,
96
,
140
,
146
,
158
,
164
,
176
,
187
,
199
,
216
,
245
,
248
,
319
; alliance with Ivan the Great,
79
; arrival of,
46
—
7
; attacks on Moscow,
62
-
3
,
66
; baskak
(officials),
49
; defeats of,
57
,
92
; exploitation of Russian assets by,
49
—
50
; imposition of power by,
49
; relationship with princes,
49
—
50
,
53
—
5
; religious toleration of,
51
; uprising against,
54
;
see also
Mongols