Moscow, 1843. Chlenov, A.
Sviatoslav appears in the 1913 poem of Velimir Khlebnikov Written before the war (#70.
Cambridge, Mass.: Medieval Academy of America, 1953. Dunlop, D.
Press, 1954. Franklin, Simon and Jonathan Shepard.
Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1959 Kendrick, Thomas D.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1959. Medieval child rulers Murdered Russian monarchs Grand Princes of Kiev Rurikids Rurik dynasty 940s births 972 deaths 10th-century conflicts 10th-century princes in Kievan Rus' 10th-century murdered monarchs Slavic pagans
Leningrad, 1962. Barthold, W..
Членов.) "K Voprosu ob Imeni Sviatoslava." Lichnye Imena v proshlom, Nastoyaschem i Buduschem Antroponomiki ("К вопросу об имени Святослава." Личные имена в прошлом, настоящем и будущем: проблемы антропонимики) (Moscow, 1970). Christian, David.
Moscow: Nauka, 1982.
Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1988.
Polovtsy Moscow: Nauka, 1990.
Brill, 1996. Chertkov A.
London: Longman, 1996.
Blackwell, 1999. Cross, S.
Moscow, Russian Academy of Sciences, World History Institute, 2001.
Courier Dover Publications, 2004.
The Slavic warrior figures in a more positive context in the story "Chernye Strely Vyaticha" by Vadim Viktorovich Kargalov; the story is included in his book Istoricheskie povesti. In 2005, reports circulated that a village in the Belgorod region had erected a monument to Sviatoslav's victory over the Khazars by the Russian sculptor Vyacheslav Klykov.
Brill, 2006. Grekov, Boris.
The adult prince Sviatoslav is played by Les Serdyuk. On 7 November 2011, a Ukrainian fisherman found a one metre long sword in the waters of the Dnieper on Khortytsia near where Sviatoslav is believed to have been killed in 972.
All text is taken from Wikipedia. Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License .
Page generated on 2021-08-05