Table of Contents:
PART I: Russian Origins and the Creation of the Derzhava
Chapter 1: Prelude to the Russian Historial: The Ancient Slavs
Chapter 2: The East Slavic Tribes and the Establishment of the State
Chapter 3: The Varangians: The Founding of the State
Chapter 4: Kievan Rus: The Golden Age
PART II: Differentials and Fragmentations
Chapter 5: The Poles of Rus: The Russian North
Chapter 6: The Russian East: The Origins of the Great Russians
Chapter 7: The Russian West: The Path to Eminence
Chapter 8: The Sources of White Rus
Chapter 9: Russian Balance: The Third Pole that Never Became Reality
Chapter 10: Kiev and the Kiev Region in the Era of Fragmentation
Chapter 11: The Russian Federation
Chapter 12: The Types of Russian Christianity in the Pre-Mongol Era
PART III: The Mongol Invasion, the Rise of Moscow, and the Decline of the Russian West
Chapter 13: The Mongol Period: The End as a Continuation and New Beginning
Chapter 14: Vladimir Rus in the Mongol Era
Chapter 15: Western Rus, Great Russia, Little Russia, and Belorussia: The Differentials of Russian Unity
Chapter 16: Russian Hesychasm and the First Heresies
PART IV: The Muscovite Kingdom: The Third Rome, Katechon, and the Schism
Chapter 17: The New Mission of Great Russia
Chapter 18: Ivan the Terrible: The Existential Eschatology of the First Russian Tsar
Chapter 19: The Time of Troubles and its Overcoming
Chapter 20: The Cossacks and the Birth of Ukraine
Chapter 21: The Schism: The Spiritual Tendencies of Rus in the Phase of Antagonism
Chapter 22: Moscow’s Final Accord
PART V: The Russian “Empire” and the Problem of the Antichrist: Peter and the Empresses
Chapter 23: The Discrepancy of the 18th Century
Chapter 24: The Structure of the 18th Century: The Curse of Archeomodernity
PART VI: The 19th Century: Towards Russian Identity
Chapter 25: The 19th Century Historial: The Beginning
Chapter 26: Alexander I: Political Eschatology and the Return of Katechon
Chapter 27: Russia in the “Golden Age” of Russian Culture: The Decembrists, Slavophiles, and Emancipation of the Peasantry
Chapter 28: Alexander II: Incomplete Emancipation
Chapter 29: Alexander III: Identity and Sovereignty
Chapter 30: The Late Slavophiles and Populists: The Dialectic of Archeomodernity
Chapter 31: The End of the Empire
Chapter 32: The Silver Age
PART VII: Soviet Rus
Chapter 33: The Catastrophe of the Russian Logos
Chapter 34: The Russian Church in the First Stage of Bolshevism
Chapter 35: Trotsky and Stalin: The Industrialization of Russia
Chapter 36: The Autumn of Sovietism
Chapter 37: The USSR: The Semantics of the End
PART VIII: After the End of Bolshevism
Chapter 38: The 1990s: The Catastrophe of Liberalism
Chapter 39: The 2000s: Towards an Unknown Goal (Correcting Liberalism)
Chapter 40: The Historial of the Russian Future