Read articles on history. Story

  • 07.00.00 Historical sciences and archeology
  • 07.00.02 Domestic history
  • 07.00.03 General history (corresponding period)
  • 07.00.06 Archeology
  • 07.00.07 Ethnography, ethnology and anthropology
  • 07.00.09 Historiography, source studies and methods of historical research
  • 07.00.10 History of science and technology

Journals from the VAC list in which it is possible to publish a scientific article

  1. Archeology, ethnography and anthropology of Eurasia ▲
  2. Archaeological news
  3. Archaeographic Yearbook
  4. Bulletin of Bryansk State University. Series History/Literary Studies/Law/Linguistics
  5. Bulletin of Volgograd State University. Episode 4 History. Regional studies. International relationships
  6. Bulletin of Leningrad State University named after A.S. Pushkin. Series History
  7. Bulletin of Moscow State Regional University. Series “History and Political Sciences”
  8. Bulletin of Moscow University. Episode 8. History
  9. Bulletin of Moscow University. Episode 23. Anthropology
  10. Bulletin of Novosibirsk State University Series: History, Philology
  11. Bulletin of Perm University. Series "History"
  12. Bulletin of the Orthodox St. Tikhon's Humanitarian University. Series History of the Russian Orthodox Church
  13. Bulletin of the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia. Series History of Russia
  14. Bulletin of the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia. Series General History
  15. Bulletin of St. Petersburg University. Episode 2. History
  16. Bulletin of Tver State University. Series: History
  17. Bulletin of Udmurt University. Series History and Philology
  18. Bulletin of Chelyabinsk State University. Series History
  19. East. Afro-Asian societies: history and modernity
  20. News of Altai State University. Series History. Political science.
  21. News of Saratov University. New episode. Series History. International relationships
  22. News of the Southwestern State University. Series History and Law
  23. Historical and philosophical yearbook
  24. Historical psychology and sociology of history
  25. Historical and socio-educational thought
  26. Historical, philosophical, political and legal sciences, cultural studies and art history. Questions of theory and practice
  27. Historical archive
  28. History of state and law
  29. History and historians: Historiographical Bulletin
  30. History and pedagogy of natural sciences
  31. History of science and technology
  32. History of Earth Sciences
  33. History of philosophy
  34. Scientific bulletins of Belgorod State University. Series History, economics, political science, computer science
  35. New and recent history
  36. Religions of the world: history and modernity
  37. Russian archeology
  38. Russian history (Old name: Domestic history) ▲
  39. Electronic scientific and educational journal “History”
  40. Hyperboreus: Classical Philology and History

After reading this section of our website, you will receive all the necessary information regarding the history procedure.

Unfortunately, it is quite difficult to independently choose a publication for publishing a scientific article and prepare the article for publication. This requires knowledge of all the nuances associated with this procedure (deadlines, requirements of the Higher Attestation Commission for the preparation of articles, and much more).

What should I do? We are ready to help you urgently publish your scientific publication on history! We are confident in the result, because “Higher Attestation Commission Without Problems” has been successfully cooperating for a long time with a number of Russian history journals included in the Higher Attestation Commission list!

“HAC Without Problems” will provide students and graduate students with all the necessary assistance in publishing scientific articles. Candidates of historical sciences will prepare a review of your article. Our specialists will design and format an article on history in accordance with the requirements of the Higher Attestation Commission, which are set by the scientific journal chosen for publication. And most importantly: we guarantee urgent publication of a scientific article - within 1-2 months!

Hello student! This text is for you. Your favorite department requires you to publish a scientific article, but you don’t even know where to start? “Young Scientist” has made simple and understandable instructions for you.

We will answer five questions:

  1. Why write?
  2. What to write about?
  3. When to write?
  4. How to write?
  5. How to publish?

Question one: “Why write?”

Everything is simple here. Students are divided into two types.

20% of students do science because they are interested in doing science. 80% of students do science because their boss wants them to. department, dean or thesis supervisor. Typically, the pressure on a student increases when a thesis defense or other important event approaches.

Another important scenario is future admission to a master’s program. That is, if you want to study for a couple more years and become a master, you can’t do without scientific publications.

Question two: “What to write about?”

If you are from the first 20%, then this question will not arise for you. You are interested in some projects, conduct research and get all sorts of interesting results. Your articles will be about these studies and results.

But for the remaining 80% the question is “What should I write an article about?!!!” – more than relevant. We give three win-win options.

First option: if you are already a graduate student, write on the topic of your diploma. There couldn't be a more convenient option. One way or another you will have to deal with the topic and prepare for your defense. In any case, you will write fifty, seventy or however many pages of your diploma. An additional five or ten page article on the same topic? Pfff.

Second option: if you are not yet a graduate student, but you already need an article. Remember the topic of some of your coursework - and write about it. Just please, DO NOT just tear out a piece of your coursework into a separate file and call it a scientific article! This is bad. Just use a familiar theme.

The third option is suitable if you have ever spoken at a student conference. Remember what you talked about there, find your presentation - and use it for inspiration.

Question three: “When to write?”

It's better, of course, in advance.

But, if it so happens that you have to write an article at the last minute, find a journal that can publish your scientific article as quickly as possible. For example, it is published weekly, and provides information about publication within a few seconds after payment.

Question four: “How to write?”

When you know what you will write about (at least roughly), you can start.

Firstly, you need collect material. If you took the topic of a diploma or coursework for an article, find and look through all the materials you collected. Surely you have some calculations, tables, graphs. If you are a humanist, then at least there should be quotes and excerpts. Start with what you already have.

Next, look for other articles on your topic. With a 146% probability, you are not the first who has undertaken to research this topic. On the Young Scientist website there is a search bar at the very bottom: use it. Look for articles in Cyberleninka.

Ordinary search engines will also help: Google and Yandex, but you need to be careful with them: separate serious sources from entertainment ones. [email protected] or a website with abstracts are not the best choice. Be careful with Wikipedia: you can read it to quickly understand something, but you shouldn’t quote it.

You can go to the library: even in the 21st century, good books have not been canceled. Search the catalog or ask a librarian for help.

Then, when the material is more or less selected, ask article structure. For example, this one:

  • Name
  • annotation (not necessary)
  • Keywords (not necessary)- try ours!
  • Introduction
  • Main part
  • conclusions
  • Literature

For convenience, you can take it as a basis.

Well, what did Gogol tell us? “Take a nice feather, clean it up well, put a piece of paper in front of you and begin...” So are you. Open Word and start writing.

Start with introduction. Determine the research problem - what your article will be about. Analyze how other scientists studied your problem: what definitions they gave, from what sides and in what aspects they studied the topic. Don’t be afraid to quote articles and books: without citation, there is no science.

Clearly understand the difference between quoting And copying. Be sure to put any fragment of someone else’s text in quotation marks and indicate the source number in square brackets. Someone else's text without quotation marks in your article is plagiarism. And plagiarism is very bad.

Then go to main part. Your results are described here. If you are a future IT specialist and have written a program, tell us about it and show screenshots and code fragments. If you are a sociologist and have conducted research, provide questions, graphs and tables. If you are studying to become an accountant and have had an internship in a company, provide an analysis of the statements. If you are preparing to become a teacher, tell us about a pedagogical experiment or an open lesson. The meaning should be clear: the main part is what you did, analyzed, studied, and understood.

Do not forget draw conclusions. Briefly, in just one or two paragraphs, tell us what results you came to.

When the text of the article is ready, come up with a suitable Name.

Question five: “How to publish?”

Within a few days, your article will be read by a specially trained person - a reviewer. If the article is really bad, it will be returned to you for revision. If you did a good job, then...

Interesting historical facts attract with their diversity. Thanks to them, humanity has a unique opportunity to understand what happened in a given period of development of a nation, society and states. Facts from history are not just what we were told at school. There is a lot that is classified in this area of ​​knowledge.

1. Peter the Great had his own method to combat alcoholism in the country. Drunkards were awarded medals that weighed approximately 7 kilograms and could not be removed.

2. In the times of Ancient Rus', grasshoppers were called dragonflies.

3.The anthem of Thailand was written by a Russian composer.

5.Those who urinated in the pond were executed during the time of Genghis Khan.

7. Braids were a sign of feudalism in China.

8.The virginity of English women in Tudor times was symbolized by bracelets on their arms and a tightly tightened corset.

9.Nero, who was an emperor in ancient Rome, married his male slave.

10. In ancient times in India, ear mutilation was used as a punishment.

11.Arabic numerals were not invented by Arabs, but by mathematicians from India.

13.Binding feet was considered an ancient tradition of the Chinese people. The essence of this was to make the foot smaller, and therefore more feminine and beautiful.

14.Morphine was once used to relieve cough.

15.The ancient Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun had a sister and brother.

16. Gaius Julius Caesar had the nickname “boots”.

17.Elizabeth the First covered her own face with lead white and vinegar. This is how she hid traces of smallpox.

18.The symbol of the Russian tsars was precisely the Monomakh cap.

19. Pre-revolutionary Russia was considered the most non-drinking country.

20.Until the 18th century, Russia did not have a flag.

21. Since November 1941, the Soviet Union had a tax on childlessness. It amounted to 6% of the entire salary.

22.Trained dogs provided assistance in clearing mines during World War II.

23. Almost no earthquakes were recorded during the large-scale nuclear tests of 1960-1990.

24. For Hitler, the main enemy was not Stalin, but Yuri Levitan. He even announced a reward of 250,000 marks for his head.

25.The Icelandic “Saga of Hakon Hakonarson” talked about Alexander Nevsky.

26. Fist fights have long been famous in Rus'.

27. Catherine the Second abolished flogging for the military for same-sex contacts.

28. Only Joan of Arc, who called herself a messenger of God, managed to expel the invaders from France.

29.The length of the Cossack seagull, which we remember from the history of the Zaporozhye Sich, reached approximately 18 meters.

30. Genghis Khan defeated the Keraits, Merkits and Naimans.

31. By order of Emperor Augustus, houses that were taller than 21 meters were not built in Ancient Rome. This minimized the risk of being buried alive.

32.The Colosseum is considered the bloodiest place in history.

33. Alexander Nevsky had the military rank of “khan”.

34.During the time of the Russian Empire, it was allowed to carry edged weapons.

35.Soldiers in Napoleon's army addressed the generals on a first name basis.

36. During the Roman war, soldiers lived in tents of 10 people.

37. Any touching of the emperor in Japan before World War II was blasphemy.

38.Boris and Gleb are the first Russian saints who were canonized in 1072.

39. A Red Army machine gunner named Semyon Konstantinovich Hitler, who was Jewish by nationality, took part in the Great Patriotic War.

40. In the old days in Rus', to clean pearls, they were given to a chicken to peck at them. After this, the chicken was slaughtered and the pearls were pulled out of its stomach.

41. From the very beginning, people who cannot speak Greek were called barbarians.

42. In pre-revolutionary Russia, name days for Orthodox people were a more important holiday than birthdays.

43.When England and Scotland came to a union, Great Britain was created.

44.After Alexander the Great brought cane sugar from one of his Indian campaigns to Greece, it immediately began to be called “Indian salt.”

45. In the 17th century, thermometers were filled not with mercury, but with cognac.

46.The first condom in the world was invented by the Aztecs. It was made from a fish bladder.

47. In 1983, not a single human birth was registered in the Vatican.

48.From the 9th to the 16th centuries in England there was a law that every man must practice archery daily.

49.When the Winter Palace was stormed, only 6 people died.

50.About 13,500 houses were destroyed during the great and famous fire of London in 1666.

Released numbers

about the project

Dear readers, we present to you the revived magazine "Historical Bulletin", which continues the well-known pre-revolutionary publication. However, stepping over almost a hundred years, we understand that the realities of the 21st century also determine the new content of the magazine. History today is largely updated by politics. It is the geopolitical situation in the world, which returns us to the issues of preserving existing borders, national and cultural values, moral and religious principles, that forms another dimension to the problem of the authentic historical existence of peoples and states. On the one hand, this is a question of the geographical areas of state entities, on the other, a topic associated with contact and interaction of processes, cultures and traditions. In many ways, we also face a major ethical problem. We must politely and persistently point out to our respected neighbors our historical rights, but we ourselves must avoid the temptation of artificially ancientizing our own history or appropriating someone else’s. And here His Majesty Historical Scientific Fact comes into the picture. He is our main censor and legislator. The editorial and scientific work of the Historical Bulletin will be built on this unshakable foundation.

Volume one

Volume one. The beginning of Russian statehood

Dear colleagues, we present to you the first issue of the Historical Bulletin, which is also designated the 148th volume, thereby continuing the pre-revolutionary publication. However, stepping over almost a hundred years, we understand that the realities of the 21st century also determine the new content of the magazine.

History today is largely updated by politics. It is the geopolitical situation in the world, which returns us to the issues of preserving existing borders, national and cultural values, moral and religious principles, that forms another dimension - the problem of the authentic historical existence of peoples and states. On the one hand, this is a question of the geographical areas of state entities, on the other, a topic associated with contact and interaction of processes, cultures and traditions.

In many ways, we also face a major ethical problem. We must not only politely and persistently point out to our respected neighbors our historical rights, but we ourselves must avoid the temptation to artificially ancientize our own history or appropriate someone else’s.

And here His Majesty Historical Scientific Fact comes into the picture. He is the chief censor and legislator. The editorial and scientific work of the Historical Bulletin will be built on this unshakable foundation.

Volume seven. Lithuania, Rus' and Poland XIII-XVI centuries.

The 13th–16th centuries fundamentally changed the map of Eastern Europe. The appearance of the ulus of the Mongol Empire - the Golden Horde - in its vastness launched the process of the emergence of new political centers. Moscow became one of them, but another Rus' grew up next to it - the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and Russia, most of the population of which were called “Russians” or “Rusyns” - but did not consider themselves “Muscovites”. In medieval Europe, Lithuania combined the warlike central power of the Gediminovich princes with broad autonomous rights of individual lands and gained a unique experience of confessional and national tolerance.

The issue contains the works of researchers who, from different angles, have studied the uniqueness of the Lithuanian model of statehood and the factors that contributed to the divergence of the systems of socio-political structure of the two largest states of Eastern Europe - the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Muscovy. The editors of the Historical Bulletin provided an opportunity to express their positions not only to Russian historians, but also to their colleagues from Ukraine, Belarus, Lithuania and Poland - those countries that consider themselves successors to the medieval power of the Gediminids.

A. Dubonis (Lithuania) showed how the predatory campaigns of Lithuanian squads turned into the conquest of neighboring lands, and identified two different models of Lithuanian expansion - military and peaceful. Article by S.V. Polekhova (Russia) is dedicated to the uprising in Smolensk in 1440 in the context of a generally successful process of integration of the Smolensk region: by the beginning of the 16th century. Smolensk boyars, townspeople and even “black people” strongly associated themselves with the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. E.V. Rusina (Ukraine) tried to assess how modern historiography answers the question: why did the great principalities of Moscow and Lithuania, so different from each other, which had different logics of historical development, simultaneously arise on the ruins of the Old Russian state? D. Schultz and R. Jaworski (Poland) presented an overview of the works of Polish historians devoted to the key events in Polish-Lithuanian relations - the Krevo Act of 1385 and the Union of Lublin of 1569.

A.I. Grusha (Belarus) tried to summarize the information and identify the specifics (decentralization and mobility) of various types of archives of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, now scattered across the archives of several states. A.V. Kazakov (Belarus) traced the fate of Moscow native of the 16th century I.T. Yurlov, whose life path can be considered an example of the successful integration of an emigrant into the society of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania in the conditions of the “sociocultural climate” of this state that is favorable for Muscovites. V.A. Voronin (Belarus) assessed how relations between Catholics and Orthodox Christians developed in the Grand Duchy at the end of the 14th - mid-16th centuries, and showed that the Catholic elite failed to achieve absolute superiority. It did not lead to serious conflicts on religious grounds - society had developed effective mechanisms for resolving contradictions that arose on confessional grounds. D. Schultz (Poland) studied the influence of the Moscow-Lithuanian wars on the process of unification of the Grand Duchy with the Kingdom of Poland.

The issue ends with a review by S.V. Polekhov on the latest edition of the documents of the Gorodel Union of Lithuania and Poland in 1413, dedicated to the assessment of real measures aimed at the integration of the eastern regions.

Volume six. History is a witness of times

The sixth issue of the “Historical Bulletin”, with which we conclude 2013, is compiled on a general historical principle. Nevertheless, a number of materials complement each other compositionally and thematically. In particular, this is an article by B.N. Flory, dedicated to the embassy of I.I. Chaadaev 1671 in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and research by J.A. Lazarev about the role of residents at the hetman’s court in Ukraine in the 10th of the 18th century. The general context is related to the demonstration of Moscow’s cautious, if not wary, policy in this region. In the first case, we see the most careful position of Russian diplomacy regarding the implementation of the 1667 agreement with the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth on counteracting the Ottoman Empire in Eastern Europe. Torn apart by various aristocratic parties and teetering on the brink of civil war, Poland was not considered a real ally in the Mother See. Moreover, the position of the Right Bank Cossacks, led by Hetman Doroshenko, who were ready to “be friends” with the Ottomans and Crimea against the Poles, was emphasized. The hetman's power was also assessed skeptically by Russian residents at the beginning of the 18th century. It was a kind of boring compromise that forced us to maintain the form of hetman’s governance of Little Russia, overshadowed, moreover, by the inescapable memories of Mazepa’s betrayal. It is significant that Moscow’s uncertainty about its current Eastern European partners has survived centuries, which influences Russia’s policy in this region to this day.
Another “eternal” topic is reflected in the article by M.A. Kiselev “Form of government and social hierarchy in Russian political thought of the 17th - first quarter of the 18th century.” The author raises the most important question for Russian reality and mentality about the filling of the concepts “sovereign - state” and “tsar - kingdom”. In the first case, the “sovereign” is meant as the sole ruler and the “state” as the territory on which he exercises his sole power. The signs are, of course, formal. But about what kind of sovereign this is, according to the fair remark of M.A. Kiselev, were judged, as a rule, using the categories “tsar and kingdom.” And here the question of a moral nature comes to the fore: after all, if the “sovereign” in Rus' is the personalized quintessence of law, then the “tsar” represents the degree of compliance with the obligations in relation to the kingdom entrusted to him and, accordingly, the people. “Tsar” is the ideal image that a ruler must live up to.

In a general historical context, the topic of the importance of the categories of care and justice for Russia is related to the study of D.O. Serov “Guardsmen and fiscal officers of Peter I in the fight against covetous people and embezzlers.” Fiscal is a word that at one time acquired a negative connotation. And here it is worth quoting from the article: “Today, however, the only documented case has been established in which a fiscal service official was convicted of unjustifiably initiating a criminal case. November 25, 1718 A special judicial presence, consisting of the heads and assessors of the “major’s” offices, sentenced to death with confiscation of the property of the fiscal I.D. Tarbeev, exposed in the presentation to Major General G.P. Chernyshev is falsely accused of bribery.” Let’s add to this: real bribe-takers who were in government positions were dealt with no less harshly. And this, too, was a direct royal matter. In this issue we publish material from the best domestic specialist in the field of faleristics V.A. Durov on the establishment of the Order of St. Catherine under Peter the Great. The history of this award is connected with the events of the Prut campaign of 1711, which almost became tragic for the Russian army and the tsar himself.

It is difficult, in the limited scope of an editorial, to note all the undoubtedly worthy materials published in the current issue of the Historical Bulletin. Moreover, it is necessary to tell readers about the editors’ plans for 2014. The first thematic block will be related to the history of interaction and mutual influence of Rus', Poland and Lithuania in the 15th–16th centuries. At this unique time, against the backdrop of emerging state interests, a social tradition continued to live, based on the common historical and cultural roots of the three peoples. The second theme of 2014 will be the history of the origin and development of the first stage of the global conflict, now called the First World War. And in conclusion, on the pages of the “Historical Bulletin” we will look at the history of the difficult relations between Rus' and the Golden Horde.

The issue will be published in December. And taking advantage of this pre-New Year occasion, the editors congratulate our comrades in the historical workshop, who provided us with invaluable creative assistance and moral support in the past year. We mentally raise a glass to our like-minded people and friends from the Runiverse ANO. We thank and congratulate the management and team of JSC AK Transneft. Without your faith and assistance, dear friends and colleagues, the “Historical Messenger” would have remained an attribute of second-hand book shelves.

Judgments about the chances of Nicholas II to prevent the revolution and about the origins of Stalin’s personality cult are adjacent to materials about symbolism and juvenile justice. Disputes about the Holocaust, pre-Christian Rus' and psychoanalysis of the personalities of dictators complement the lively and entertaining stories.

In the system of autocracy, the personality of the emperor played a large role. What was important was his ability, intelligence and determination to fulfill his destiny. The character of Nicholas II and his ability to find reliable advisers did not correspond to the dictates of that pre-revolutionary time.

The mystery of the Stalin cult has not been solved and excites inquiring minds to this day. Its origins lie in the phenomenon of power, as the providence of God, which has a strong position in the consciousness of the Russian nation. The formation of a cult is a process of hard work by all the country’s propagandists.

The triad of symbols of Russia opens with the coat of arms - a double-headed eagle, signifying succession from Byzantium and the unity of West and East in the state. The colors of the Russian flag contain encrypted symbols of peace, faith and strength. The anthem is a solemn ode to the Great State.

The essence of juvenile justice is to protect the rights of children in difficult situations. The problem has been solved by legislators for more than a century and a half, and its modern interpretation fits into Russian traditions. It is important to avoid possible excesses in the implementation of the law.

The prehistory of the Holocaust goes back centuries. It was not only Jews who suffered from genocide then. By the middle of the 20th century, a system of extermination of Jews and other inferior peoples called the “Holocaust” had developed in Germany. Preserving the memory of him, guaranteeing against relapse.

The Slavic peoples who settled across the East European Plain had common cultural and linguistic traditions. There is an opinion that there was a highly organized civilization here, but no sources have been found confirming the supposed high level of development of the Proto-Slavs.

Stalin's worn things and modest savings cannot characterize him as a political figure. His government activities demonstrated a number of dubious decisions. Many world problems, real and imaginary, are associated with his name.