- The
Hypatian Codex (also
known as
Hypatian Letopis or
Ipatiev Letopis; Belarusian: Іпацьеўскі летапіс; Russian: Ипатьевская летопись; Ukrainian: Іпатіївський...
- монастырь; also
Ipatievsky Monastery),
sometimes translated into
English as
Hypatian Monastery, is a male
monastery situated on the bank of the
Kostroma River...
-
Byzantine affairs. This
revision of Nestor's work is
preserved in the
Hypatian codex (see § Surviving m****cripts).[citation needed] The organization...
- The
oldest known copy is part of the
early 15th-century
Hypatian Codex,
discovered in the
Hypatian Monastery of
Kostroma by the
Russian historian and essayist...
- Chronicle,
states that
Rurik first settled in
Novgorod ("newtown"),
while the
Hypatian Codex of the 1420s
states that
Rurik first settled in Ladoga,
before moving...
-
which resulted in his
healing from sickness. In
gratitude for his healing,
Hypatian Monastery was
established there.
According to the
Russian historian Stepan...
-
Novgorod First Chronicle and the
Laurentian and
Hypatian Codices.
There is one exception: the
Hypatian Codex writes Volodimir knyaz velikii ("Volodimir...
- include: The Galician–Volhynian
Chronicle (GVC, as
transmitted in the
Hypatian Codex,
Khlebnikov Codex, and
other m****cripts). This
account 'gives the...
- Prince. The
Hypatian Chronicle and the
Novgorod Chronicle disagree on
which princes replaced each
other in Kiev
between 1235 and 1236. The
Hypatian Chronicle...
- or recognised, as 'm****acres'.
Holodomor Perfecky,
George (1973). The
Hypatian Codex. Munich, Germany:
Wilhelm Fink
Publishing House. pp. 43–49. Davison...