Document Name: | Russkaya Pravda |
Date Created: | From the beginning of the 11th century |
Purpose: | Guidance for the princely court |
The Russkaya Pravda (sometimes translated as Rus' Justice, Rus' Truth,[1] or Russian Justice)[2] was the legal code of Kievan Rus' and its principalities during the period of feudal fragmentation. It was written at the beginning of the 12th century and remade during many centuries. The basis of the Russkaya Pravda, the Pravda of Yaroslav, was written at the beginning of the 11th century. The Russkaya Pravda was a main source of the law of Kievan Rus'.[3] [4]
In spite of great influence of Byzantine legislation on the contemporary world, and in spite of great cultural and commercial ties between Byzantium and Kievan Rus', the Russkaya Pravda bore no similarity whatsoever to the law of the Byzantine Empire. The absence of capital and corporal punishment rather reflects Norse jurisprudence.[5] [6]
Three recensions of Russkaya Pravda are known: the Short Edition (Kratkaya), the Extensive Edition (Prostrannaya), and the Abridged Edition (Sokrashchyonnaya). Over 110 extant copies dating from the 13th to the 18th centuries are preserved, included in various manuscripts: chronicles and compilations. Of these, over 100 copies, including the oldest preserved, are of the Extensive Edition.
This code was discovered by the historian Vasily Tatischev in the text of one of the Novgorod chronicles and brought to the attention of the Russian Academy of Sciences in 1738. The first commented edition of the text was published by August Ludwig von Schlözer in 1767.
The legal regulations of the Russkaya Pravda reflected the evolution of the social relations in Rus' of the 11th–13th centuries. Common law, knyaz legislation, and legal proceedings represented the basis of the Russkaya Pravda.
The Short Edition of the Russkaya Pravda contains two apparently distinct parts, called by researchers Pravda Yaroslava (Yaroslavs Law, ca. 1017), otherwise known as Drevneyshaya Pravda ("Oldest Justice") of Yaroslav the Wise, and Pravda Yaroslavichey ("The Law by Yaroslavs sons", ca. 1054). Some indicate other distinct components of the text, possibly added later.
Yaroslavs Law comprised legal regulations of feudal law along with the archaic regulations that could be traced back to the primitive communal system. According to a popular theory, it was promulgated in order to settle a conflict between Konstantin Dobrynich, a posadnik of Novgorod, and the Varangian population of the city.
Subsequent development and improvement of the Russkaya Pravda took place in times of Yaroslav's sons and his grandson Vladimir Monomakh. New provisions are believed to have been added to the Russkaya Pravda after the revolts in Kiev, Novgorod, and Rostov-Suzdal province in 1068–1071.
In the arising Russian state, the Russkaya Pravda was replaced in 1497 by the Sudebnik, the Code of Law. Several centuries earlier, new legal codes were promulgated in Pskov and Novgorod (the Pskov Judicial Charter and Novgorod Judicial Charter).
Pravda Yaroslavichey increased responsibility of a given community for killing soldiers of a knyaz, ("", a privileged servant of knyazs or boyars), starostas ("starosta", a representative from the low-ranking administration of a knyaz), ("", a low-ranking soldier in the army of a knyaz) and other servants on their own territory. The Pravda Yaroslavichey provided severe punishment for arson, deliberate cattle mutilation, and collective encroachment on rich people's property. After the 1113 Riot in Kiev, an exorbitant interest law was introduced that limited financial operations of moneylenders.
The Pravda stabilized the system of feudal relations and social inequality. During the 11th–13th centuries, it made new laws for the smerds ("smerd" - a feudal-dependent peasant), ("" - a feudal-dependent peasant, who could become free after paying off his "", a feudal loan), ("" - a feudal-dependent peasant, who could be killed or sold like a slave) etc. The Vast Edition of Pravda contains special regulations regarding the status of and . It also reflects the role of the court of a knyaz, by increasing and giving various forms of punishment and penalties. It instituted fines that benefited the knyaz or his administration with diminished compensation to the victims.
In an attempt to abolish the blood feud (that was quite common at that time), the Pravda narrowed its "usage" and limited the number of avengers to the closest relatives of the dead. If there were no avengers on the victim's side, the killer had to pay a fine (called vyra) in favour of the knyaz and partial compensation to the relatives of the victim (the killer's community had to help him pay his fine). If a woman was killed, one would have to pay half of the regular fine (called poluvir'ye, half of vyra). The Pravda also protected the health and honor of the free members of the feudal society and provided financial compensation for mutilation or insult by word or deed. The Pravda had a comprehensive system of punishments and penalties for larceny in a city or countryside, deliberate damage to forests, hunting grounds or lands, trespassing etc. It also regulated debt between individuals and contained articles of liability and hereditary law. The Pravda made use of witnesses, oaths and of the trial by water or iron, a kind of a last-resort test used to prove defendant's innocence or guilt in legal proceedings. The legal process also included testimony witnesses, evidence, collecting or hot pursuit. Investigators had to check for false accusations, as well.