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Juraj Križanić: A Precursor of Pan-Slavism (CA. 1618–83)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2017
Extract
In 1659 a Roman Catholic priest of Croatian birth, Juraj Križanić, came to the Muscovy of Tsar Alexis under an assumed identity. His secret mission was to lay the groundwork for the unification of the Slavs under the patronage of the Monomakh crown and papal tiara. For reasons Križanić himself never knew, or never chose to tell, he was exiled to Siberia where he spent nearly all the rest of his life. During those fifteen years he wrote some nine works on religion, philosophy, and politics in a Slavic language of his own invention. These manuscripts were read by practically nobody for two centuries.
Probably Križanić would have long remained unknown had his ideas not engaged the special interest of certain Russian scholars who were inspired largely by the tenets of late nineteenth-century pan-Slavism. The plea of this seventeenth-century Croat for Slavic unity under the aegis of the Great Russian people was well suited to the purposes of Russian Slavophilism. Thanks to these scholars who saw in Križanić an early precursor of pan-Slavism, this remarkable Slav's life and works were slowly retrieved, beginning in the 1850s, from the darkness of the past.
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- Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 1947
References
Bibliography
The following bibliography is intended to include as many works directly concerned with Križanić as possible. Standard reference works and general histories of the period in which Križanić figures have been omitted unless referred to in the preceding study. The works which have been consulted in the writing of the preceding essay are marked with asterisks. In the case of some unavailable works, the evaluation of authorities in the field has been included wherever possible.
I. Works about Križanić