Uchenye Zapiski Kazanskogo Universiteta. Seriya Gumanitarnye Nauki | 2021

Assuming the Role of an Orientalist: Alexander Mishulin’s Articles about the History of the Ancient East

 

Abstract


The popular articles written by A.V. Mishulin (1901–1948), a Soviet historian of antiquity, were analyzed. These articles are focused on the history and culture of the Ancient East states (Egypt, India, and China) with account of their impact on the establishment of Soviet historical science. Their role in A.V. Mishulin’s research activity is very important, because they were used in his school textbook of ancient history. A.V. Mishulin consistently adhered to the idea that slavery was a common basis of all ancient states, but he also believed that the slave-owning systems in the Ancient East and Greco-Roman world were different. Through a brief description of the Ancient East states, he emphasized the following two main aspects: all ancient societies exploited slaves, which inevitably resulted in the mass uprisings as a consequence of exhaustion of the slave-owning mode of production. To prove the validity of his ideas, A.V. Mishulin used historical material (such as the Papyrus Leiden). Therefore, the history of the Ancient East and Greco-Roman world more or less correlated with each other in A.V. Mishulin’s school textbook, which influenced the subsequent organization of school textbooks of history in the Soviet Union.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.26907/2541-7738.2021.3.41-54
Language English
Journal Uchenye Zapiski Kazanskogo Universiteta. Seriya Gumanitarnye Nauki

Full Text