Russia's Orient: Imperial Borderlands and Peoples, 1700–1917Daniel R. Brower, Edward J. Lazzerini Indiana University Press, 1997年6月22日 - 339 頁 " . . . the first study of the Russian Empire in English which attempts in a sophisticated way, using the latest developments in colonial studies, to deal not only with imperial rule but with the mutual encounter with the non-Russian peoples. . . . a new paradigm for looking at the imperial history of tsarist Russia." —Ronald Grigor Suny |
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... according to law " ) , " Slavs " ( " according to people " ) , or “ Russians " ( " according to territory " ) — which , among other things , meant that " we " did not exist before a certain people became attached to a certain territory ...
... according to their own customs , as long as these did not infringe upon the goals of the imperial regime and the rights of the Russian population . Thus , according to the 1822 Regulations , Kazakhs could try all civil and criminal ...
... according to customary law . Unfortunately , Russian legal usage does not necessarily help us identify what barïmta was in practice . For instance , by the late nineteenth century , observers were declaring both a decrease and an ...