Trinity Chronicle
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The ''Trinity Chronicle'' (russian: Троицкая летопись, Troitskaya letopis , abbreviated TL, Tro, or T) is a
Rus' chronicle , author(s) = chroniclers, who were mainly churchmen , language = Old Church Slavonic and Old East Slavic , date = 11–18th centuries , provenance = , genre = History , image ...
written in
Church Slavonic Church Slavonic (, , literally "Church-Slavonic language"), also known as Church Slavic, New Church Slavonic or New Church Slavic, is the conservative Slavic liturgical language used by the Eastern Orthodox Church in Belarus, Bosnia and Herzeg ...
, probably at the
Trinity Lavra The Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius (russian: Тро́ице-Се́ргиева ла́вра) is the most important Russian monastery and the spiritual centre of the Russian Orthodox Church. The monastery is situated in the town of Sergiyev Pos ...
near Moscow by Epiphanius the Wise (died 1420).Michel De Dobbeleer and Timofei Valentinovich Guimon
"Trinity Chronicle"
in Graeme Dunphy and Cristian Bratu (eds.), '' Encyclopedia of the Medieval Chronicle'' (Brill Online, 2016).


Manuscript

The manuscript of the ''Trinity Chronicle'' may or may not to have contained a 'Short Redaction' of the Kulikovo ''Chronicle Tale''. The ''Chronicle'' ended with Edigu's invasion of 1408. Its
tendenz In higher criticism, the ''Tendenz'' of a literary work is its drift or bias, sometimes also the actual authorial intent. ''Tendenzkritic'' is the analysis of a work to determine its aim or purpose.Richard N. Soulen, R. Kendall Soulen (eds.), ''Ha ...
has been tentatively described as pro- Muscovite and pro- Cyprian. The text appears to have been an early 15th-century copy of a text that was close to the '' Laurentian Codex'' of 1377. The ''Trinity Chronicle'' was often cited by 18th-century historians. The only known manuscript was lost in the fire of Moscow in 1812.


Priselkov reconstruction

After its destruction in 1812, the text was partially reconstructed by (posthumously published in 1950) from quotations in Nikolay Karamzin's ''History of the Russian State'' (1816–1826) and in the 1804 critical edition of the '' Laurentian Codex'' by Chebotarev and Cherepanov, which only reached the year 906. The published reconstruction, however, contains much speculative borrowing from other chronicles and is not entirely reliable. Especially
Aleksey Shakhmatov Alexei Alexandrovich Shakhmatov (russian: link=no, Алексе́й Алекса́ндрович Ша́хматов, – 16 August 1920) was a Russian Imperial philologist and historian credited with laying foundations for the science of tex ...
's assumption that 'the ''Simeon Chronicle'' was identical to the ''Trinity Chronicle'' through 1390' turned out to be a great flaw in Priselkov's efforts, as was the assumption that it had to have been similar to the ''Rogozh Chronicle'' in other places. Priselkov acknowledged as much himself by indicating his 'reconstruction' was not really a 'restoration', but an 'approximation'; the material with a higher degree of 'probability' was printed in a larger
font In metal typesetting, a font is a particular size, weight and style of a typeface. Each font is a matched set of type, with a piece (a "sort") for each glyph. A typeface consists of a range of such fonts that shared an overall design. In mod ...
size, and less reliable readings called 'conjectured segments' in a smaller font.


Value for historical and textual criticism

The reconstructed text of the ''Trinity Chronicle'' is considered by some scholars to be one of the six main copies that are of greatest importance for textual criticism of the ''Primary Chronicle'' (PVL), 'which aims to reconstruct the original
ext Ext, ext or EXT may refer to: * Ext functor, used in the mathematical field of homological algebra * Ext (JavaScript library), a programming library used to build interactive web applications * Exeter Airport (IATA airport code), in Devon, England ...
by comparing extant witnesses.' Because the original is lost and its text can only be indirectly reconstructed, as Priselkov attempted in 1950, it is considered the least reliable of the six main witnesses, and is sometimes excluded (reducing the total number of "main witnesses" to five).
Dmitry Likhachev Dmitry Sergeyevich Likhachov (russian: Дми́трий Серге́евич Лихачёв, also ''Dmitri Likhachev'' or ''Likhachyov''; – 30 September 1999) was a Russian medievalist, linguist, and a former inmate of Gulag. During his lifet ...
(1957) criticised 'inattentive scholars' who carelessly utilised Priselkov's 'reconstruction', treating all parts of it as equally reliable and running with it. Similarly, Iakov Lur'e (1976) rebuked uncritical readers for not understanding the differences in probability as expressed by Priselkov in the two font sizes, and treating it as if it were a 'text'. Charles J. Halperin (2001) accused Lur'e of doing precisely what he told others not to do, namely, using Priselkov's tentative reconstruction of the ''Trinity Chronicle'' as a source. He also argued that, although her chronology was widely accepted by Soviet and Western scholars alike, Marina A. Salmina's 1960s–1970s textual analysis of the ''Trinity Chronicle'' should equally be considered invalidated by the fact that Priselkov's reconstruction was far from the reliability required to make such bold claims. He concluded that the reconstructed ''Trinity Chronicle'' was useless for dating purposes. Margaret Cecelia Ziolkowski (1978) had voiced similar arguments against Salmina's poor use of sources. Noting that in earlier publications of 1976 and 1981, Halperin himself had also tried to draw untenable historical conclusions from Priselkov's reconstruction before shifting his position by 2001 and criticising others for doing so,
Serhii Plokhy Serhii Plokhy, or Plokhii ( uk, Сергій Миколайович Плохій, russian: Серге́й Никола́евич Пло́хий; born 23 May 1957) is the Mykhailo Hrushevsky professor of Ukrainian history at Harvard University, whe ...
(2006) argued that these earlier works 'are clearly in need of reexamination, given the hypothetical nature of Priselkov's reconstruction of the Trinity Chronicle'. In a 2010 review of Plokhy's book, which he generally praised, Halperin acknowledged using the reconstruction 'without much precision' for dating the '' translatio'' of the "Rus' land" concept, which he hadn't yet 'revised following the reclassification of the Trinity Chronicle as a invalid source because it is a reconstruction, not a "text."' Plokhy and Halperin agreed that of the three passages mentioning the "Rus' land" in the reconstruction, those under the years 1308 and 1328 were Priselkov's interpolations, while the ''sub anno'' 1332 passage – known from Karamzin's notes – appeared authentic, but too weak by itself to count as conclusive evidence of the ''translatio''. In 2022, Halperin 'replaced citations to the ''Trinity Chronicle'' with references to the ''Simeonov Chronicle''.' Ostrowski (1981) remarked: 'Priselkov's reconstruction must be used cautiously because we do not know whether he always checked his readings against the manuscripts.' In their 2003 interlinear collation of the entire PVL, Ostrowski et al. 'included readings from Priselkov's reconstruction only up to the entry for 906. These readings are based on the plates of the early nineteenth-century attempt by Chebotarev and Cherepanov to publish the chronicle while the manuscript was still extant. ince theyworked directly from the manuscript, the readings they present have a high probability of actually having been in the Trinity Chronicle, in contrast to the readings Priselkov has after 906, which, because they are conjectural, have a lower probability.' Halperin 2022 invoked Priselkov's reconstruction only one more time for an entry ''sub anno 955'', commenting that 'This passage appears in large type, meaning it was quoted verbatim by Karamzin.'


Notes


References


Bibliography


Primary sources

* (assoc. ed. David J. Birnbaum (Harvard Library of Early Ukrainian Literature, vol. 10, parts 1–3) – This 2003 Ostrowski et al. edition includes an ''interlinear collation'' including the ''five main manuscript witnesses'', as well as a new ''paradosis'' ("a proposed best reading"). * *


Literature

* * * * * * * * **{{Cite journal , last1=Halperin , first1=Charles J. , date=2010 , title=Review Article. "National Identity in Premodern Rus'" , url=https://brill.com/view/journals/ruhi/37/3/article-p275_5.xml , journal=
Russian History (Brill journal) ''Russian History'' is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering research on the history of Russia, Slavic studies, and Eurasian studies published by Brill Publications under its imprint Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh. It was established in ...
, publisher=Brill Publishers , volume=37 , issue=3 , pages=275–294 , doi=10.1163/187633110X510446 , access-date=2 February 2023 , archive-date=26 March 2023 , archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230326162800/https://brill.com/view/journals/ruhi/37/3/article-p275_5.xml , url-status=live (review of Plokhy 2006, and a response to criticism) Old East Slavic chronicles 15th-century history books Primary Chronicle textual witnesses