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PSKOV

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 543 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PSKOV  , in

German, Pleskau, a
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town of Russia, capital of the government of the same name and an archiepiscopal see of the Orthodox Greek Church, situated on both banks of the Velikaya
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River, 9 M . S.E. from Lake Pskov and 170 M. by
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rail S.W. of St
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Petersburg . Pop . (1897), 30,424 . The chief
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part of the town, with its kremlin on a hill, occupies the right
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bank of the river, to which the ruins of its old walls (built in 1266) descend; the Zapskovye stretches along the same bank of the Velikaya below its confluence with the Pskova; and the Zavelichye occupies the
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left bank of the Velikaya—all three keeping their old
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historical names . The
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cathedral in the kremlin has been four times rebuilt since the 12th century, the
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present edifice dating from 1691-1699, and contains some very old shrines, as also the graves of the bishops of Pskov and of several Pskov princes, including those of Dovmont (d . 1299), and Vsevolod (d . 1138) . The church of Dmitriy Solunskiy
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dates originally from the 12th century; there are others belonging to the 14th and 15th . The Spaso-Mirozhskiy monastery, founded in 1156, and restored in 1890-1903, has many remarkable antiquities . The ruins of numerous rich and populous monasteries in or near the town attest its former
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wealth and greatness . The present town is
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ill-built, chiefly of wood, and shows traces of decay .

It has a cadets' school, a normal school for teachers, and a few

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lower technical
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schools, an archaeological museum (1903) and some scientific societies . The private collections (coins, antiquities,
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art
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works, &c.) of Messrs Pushkin and Sudhov are two of 'the most remarkable in Russia . The manufactures are unimportant . Since the completion of the St Petersburg and Warsaw railway the trade of Pskov has increased . Pskov has
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regular steam communication with Dorpat .
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History.—Pskov, formerly the
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sister republic of Novgorod, and one of the
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oldest cities of Russia, maintained its independence and its
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free institutions until the 16th century, being thus the last to be brought under the
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rule of Moscow . It already existed in the time of Rurik (9th century); and Nestor mentions under the
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year 914 that
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Olga, wife of Igor, prince of Novgorod, was brought from Pleskov (i.e . Pskov) . The Velikaya valley and river were from a remote antiquity a channel for the trade of the south of
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Europe with the Baltic coast . Pskov being an important strategic point, its possession was obstinately disputed between the Russians and the Germans and
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Lithuanians throughout the lrth and 12th centuries . At that time the place had its own
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independent institutions; but it became in the 12th century a prigorod of the Novgorod republic—that is a city having its own free institutions, but included in certain respects within the jurisdiction of the metropolis, and compelled in time of war to march against the
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common enemy . Pskov had, however, its own prince (defensor municipii); and in the second
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half of the 13th century Prince (
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Timotheus) Dovmont fortified it so strongly that the town asserted its independence of Novgorod, with which, in 1348, it concluded a treaty wherein the two republics were recognized as equals .

Its rule extended over the territory which now forms the districts of Pskov, Ostrov, Opochka, and Gdov (farther

north on the east side of Lake Peipus) . The vyeche or council of Pskov was
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sovereign, the
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councils of the subordinate towns being supreme in their own municipal affairs . The council was supreme in all affairs of general
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interest, as well as a supreme court of justice, and the princes were elected by it; these last had to defend the city and levied the taxes, which were assessed by twelve citizens . But while Novgorod constantly showed a tendency to become an oligarchy of the wealthier merchants, Pskov figured as a republic in which the influence of the poorer classes prevailed . Its trading associations, supported by those of the working classes, checked the influence of the wealthier merchants . This struggle continued throughout the 14th and 15th centuries . Nothwithstanding these conflicts Pskov was a very wealthy city . Its strong walls, its
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forty large and wealthy churches, built during this period, its numerous monasteries, and its extensive trade, bear testimony to the wealth of the inhabitants, who then numbered about 6o,000 . As early as the 13th century Pskov was an important station for the trade between Novgorod and Riga . A century later it became a member of the Hanseatic
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League . Its merchants and trading associations had factories at Narva, Reval and Riga, and ex-ported
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flax, corn, tallow, skins,
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tar, pitch, honey, and
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timber for
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ship-
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building . Silks, woollen stuffs, and all kinds of manufactured wares were brought back in
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exchange .

In 1399 the prince of Moscow claimed the

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privilege of confirming the elected prince of Pskov in his rights; and though, fifty years later, Pskov and Novgorod concluded defensive
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treaties against Moscow, the poorer classes continued to seek at Moscow a
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protection against the richer citizens . After the fall of Novgorod (1475) Pskov was taken (1510) by Basil Ivanovich, prince of Moscow, and a voyvode or deputy was nominated to govern the city . Moscow, at the end of the 17th century, abolished the last vestiges of self-government at Pskov, which thence-forward fell into rapid decay . Near this city the Teutonic knights inflicted a severe defeat upon the Russians in 1502 . Pskov became a stronghold of Russia against Poland, and was besieged (1581) for seven months by Stephen Bathory during the Livonian War, and in 1615 by Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden . Under Peter the
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Great it became a fortified camp . (P . A . K . ; J . T .

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