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| '''Dr Arkadiusz Siwko''' <br> A graduate of history within the Interfaculty Individual Studies in the Humanities programme at the Jagiellonian University, where he obtained a master's degree with distinction in 2020. In April 2025, he obtained his PhD at the University of Opole with a dissertation entitled ''The Borderlands ('Borders') of Rus' from the 10th to the end of the 13th century: narrative strategies, socio-political functions, terminology'' (defended with distinction), under the supervision of Professors Adrian Jusupović and Marcin Böhm. Since October 2025, he has been working as an adjunct at the Department of Source Criticism and Editing at the Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences. His research interests focus on Old Rusian source studies, the problem of borderlands in the Middle Ages, and the administrative systems of the Rurikids' domains. | | '''Dr Arkadiusz Siwko''' <br> A graduate of history within the Interfaculty Individual Studies in the Humanities programme at the Jagiellonian University, where he obtained a master's degree with distinction in 2020. In April 2025, he obtained his PhD at the University of Opole with a dissertation entitled ''The Borderlands ('Borders') of Rus' from the 10th to the end of the 13th century: narrative strategies, socio-political functions, terminology'' (defended with distinction), under the supervision of Professors Adrian Jusupović and Marcin Böhm. Since October 2025, he has been working as an adjunct at the Department of Source Criticism and Editing at the Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences. His research interests focus on Old Rusian source studies, the problem of borderlands in the Middle Ages, and the administrative systems of the Rurikids' domains. | ||
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| | | [[Plik:Angus Russell.jpg|frameless|100px]] | ||
| '''Dr Angus Russel''' <br> Research fellow at King's College, Cambridge, where he works as part of the college's Silk Roads Programme. His research focuses on the history of Mongol and post-Mongol Eurasia, with a particular focus on the politics, institutions, and culture of medieval Rus and Muscovy. His PhD thesis concerned the evolution of fiscal models in the regions conquered by the Mongol khans. | | '''Dr Angus Russel''' <br> Research fellow at King's College, Cambridge, where he works as part of the college's Silk Roads Programme. His research focuses on the history of Mongol and post-Mongol Eurasia, with a particular focus on the politics, institutions, and culture of medieval Rus and Muscovy. His PhD thesis concerned the evolution of fiscal models in the regions conquered by the Mongol khans. | ||
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Aktualna wersja na dzień 09:12, 3 cze 2026
About the project
LawRus Database is a scientific research project funded by the Polish National Science Centre (OPUS NCN project no. 2025/57/B/HS3/02198; project title: „Rus Chronicles as source of common law"), led by Prof. dr hab. Adrian Jusupović.
The main goal of the project is to conduct comparative analysis of the Rus common law (as precedential and customary norms) preserved in the Rus chronicles (letopisi) between the 10th and 13th centuries, and of how those legal precedents were used in later documents from the territory of Rus – that is, present-day Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania, and Poland. Existing research has, on the one hand, failed to reflect innovative scientific approaches to interrogating these sources and, on the other hand, incorporated only a fraction of the information available concerning the law and customs of Rus. Most researchers have instead concentrated their research on strictly defined legal texts (e.g. Russkaia Pravda, the so-called "Rus Truth"), while also mostly ignoring narrative sources. Moving beyond these earlier limitations, this project will unlock a whole new field of research.
The Database will use published editions of Cyrillic chronicles alongside Latin, Scandinavian, and Greek sources as comparators. In these texts we will explore attestations of both law (including, for example, international, civil, property, and religious law), as well as customary practices. Relevant extracts will subsequently be translated into English and Polish to make them more accessible to the international scholarly community. This research has three key objectives:
- An open-access LawRus Database (digital source edition), or digital repository of legal historical sources in a Mediawiki format, created in cooperation with IT specialists from the Institute of History of the Polish Academy of Sciences (IH PAS). The long-term preservation of this Database on a IH PAS server is another key objective. The Database will be made available for contributions from interested researchers at the end of the project funding period, but it will be available as a work-in-progress from the first year onwards.
- An international conference in 2028, bringing together specialists on Slavic law and customary practice to encourage further research on the legal history of the Middle Ages.
- Publications, including articles in English and other languages in leading European journals. We plan to publish our case studies on law and customary practice, and the project will likely result in more than one book publication.
Research team
Principal Investigator
Researchers
More information
- Database introduction — how the Database works, how to search, entry structure
- Database — browse and search entries
