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- Rus_(name) abstract "Name of Russia redirects here. See Name of Russia (Russia TV) for the television programme.Originally, the name Rus’ (Русь, Rus) referred to the people, the region, and the medieval states (9th to 12th centuries) of the Kievan Rus' polities. In the Western culture it is better known as Ruthenia from the 11th century onwards. Its territories are today distributed among Belarus, Ukraine, and a part of the European section of the Russian Federation.One of the earliest written sources mentioning the people called Rus' (as Rhos) dates back to year 839 AD in a Royal Frankish chronicle Annales Bertiniani; the Frankish authorities identified them as a Germanic tribe called the Swedes. According to the Kievan Rus' Primary Chronicle, compiled in about 1113 AD, the Rus' were a group of Varangians, Norsemen who had relocated somewhere from the Baltic region (literally "from beyond the sea"), first to Northeastern Europe, then to the south where they created the medieval Kievan state.The modern name of Russia (Rossiya), which came into use in the 17th century, is derived from the Greek Ῥωσσία (transliterated Rossia, nowadays spelled Ρωσία and transliterated Rosia) which in turn derives from Ῥῶς (transliteration: Ros), an early Greek name for the people of Rus'. "Rus'" as a state had no proper name; by its inhabitants it was called "rusĭska zemlya".(русьска(я) земля) (with rusĭska alternatively spelled russka, rus'ka, and most often ruska[citation needed]), which might be translated as "Land of the Rus'". The word "rusĭska" is an adjective: the morpheme -ĭsk- is cognate with "-ish"; -a marks feminine adjectives (namely, zemlya, "land", is grammatically feminine in Slavic). In similar fashion, Poland is called Polska by its inhabitants, that is, Pol-sk-a, originally being the adjective Polish (land).To distinguish the medieval "Rus'" state from other states that derived from it, modern historiography calls it "Kievan Rus'." Its predecessor, the 9th century "Rus' Khaganate," is a somewhat hypothetical state whose existence is inferred from a handful of early medieval Byzantine and Persian/Arabic sources that mention that the Rus' people were governed by a khagan.".
- Rus_(name) thumbnail Scandinavia-12th_century.png?width=300.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 71400.htm%26text%3D%25F0%25F3%25F1%25FB%25E9%26reqtext%3D%25F0%25F3%25F1%25FB%25E9%253A%253A38260%26%26isu%3D2.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 50610.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 29376.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink catal.asp?id=7423&Session=110.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 16665.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 16665.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 50610.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageExternalLink 29376.
- Rus_(name) wikiPageID "21485670".
- Rus_(name) wikiPageRevisionID "606594039".
- Rus_(name) hasPhotoCollection Rus_(name).
- Rus_(name) subject Category:Country_name_etymology.
- Rus_(name) subject Category:History_of_Russia.
- Rus_(name) subject Category:History_of_Ukraine.
- Rus_(name) subject Category:Rus.
- Rus_(name) comment "Name of Russia redirects here. See Name of Russia (Russia TV) for the television programme.Originally, the name Rus’ (Русь, Rus) referred to the people, the region, and the medieval states (9th to 12th centuries) of the Kievan Rus' polities. In the Western culture it is better known as Ruthenia from the 11th century onwards.".
- Rus_(name) label "Rus (name)".
- Rus_(name) label "Rus (nome)".
- Rus_(name) label "Ruthénie (homonymie)".
- Rus_(name) label "Русь (название)".
- Rus_(name) sameAs Ruthénie_(homonymie).
- Rus_(name) sameAs Rus_(nome).
- Rus_(name) sameAs m.034699.
- Rus_(name) sameAs Q225435.
- Rus_(name) sameAs Q225435.
- Rus_(name) wasDerivedFrom Rus_(name)?oldid=606594039.
- Rus_(name) depiction Scandinavia-12th_century.png.
- Rus_(name) isPrimaryTopicOf Rus_(name).