ACADEMIC JOURNAL
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ISSN 2542-1077 (Print) ISSN 1994-5973 (Online) |
Russia, Finland, Karelia: pages of a common history |
Tolstikov A. V. | Petrozavodsk State University |
Keywords: Russia Finland Sweden diplomacy church Middle Ages early modern period |
Summary: The article analyzes clerics’ participation in Swedish diplomatic missions to Russia in the late Middle
Ages and the early modern period. It is demonstrated that until the 1530s clerics (mostly canons) were regularly included
in Swedish embassies to Russia. It was in keeping with the general level of diplomacy in Sweden, the rulers of which
often gave important diplomatic assignments to bishops. But the Swedish embassies to Russia, by contrast, started to
include bishops only in the second half of the sixteenth century, when this practice had almost disappeared in other
foreign policy directions. It is assumed that the reason for this might have been the attempt to utilize a person’s high
clerical status as an additional symbolic resource in difficult diplomatic situations (primarily in the cases of the missions of Laurentius Petri and Michael Agricola, as well as that of Paul Juusten). It is also confirmed that during the whole period under consideration most (although not all) clerics carrying out diplomatic missions to Russia were from Finland. |
Displays: 506; |