Ivan Semyonovich Peresvetov (also transliterated as Peresvietov; Russian: Ива́н Семёнович Пересве́тов; died 1550s or 1560s) was a Russian political thinker and progressive social critic,[1] who wrote during the reign of Ivan the Terrible. Among the works he is most known for is The Tale of Mehmet the Sultan, a political allegory prescribing strong autocratic governance.[2][3]
^'Ivan Semenovich Peresvetov' in Encyclopædia Britannica, retrieved 2020-07-24
^"И.С. Пересветов-публицист XVI века". www.directmedia.ru. Retrieved 2020-12-20.
^Zimin, Aleksandr; Likhachev, Dmitry (1956). Sochineniya I. Peresvetova. Moscow: Izdatel'stvo Akademii nauk SSSR.
Ivan Semyonovich Peresvetov (also transliterated as Peresvietov; Russian: Ива́н Семёнович Пересве́тов; died 1550s or 1560s) was a Russian political thinker...
Hegelians. The true Hegelianism is IvanPeresvetov – the man who in 16th century invented the oprichnina for Ivan the Terrible. He was the true creator...
legacy of Ivan the Terrible and Prince Kurbsky, in "The Lay of Voivode Dracula" by Fyodor Kuritsyn, as well as in the message of IvanPeresvetov. In addition...
born on July 25 (or August 7) 1901 in Moscow in the family of Ippolit Peresvetov and Valentina Timokhina. Her mother worked as a senior cashier at the...
Enters Life (1957) as Sasha Komelev The Variegateds Case (1958) as Igor Peresvetov People on the Bridge (1960) as Viktor Bulygin Probation (1960) as Sasha...
currently lives and works in Santa Cruz, California. 2016 — Herbarium, Peresvetov Lane Gallery, Moscow 2013 – 2016 — Forest Journal, online research project...
of Youth: An Artists' Society of the Russian Avant-garde. Manchester University Press. pp. 69–. ISBN 978-0-7190-3731-3. 2015 "Peresvetov Lane - INFO"...