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E-raamat: Three Centuries of Russian Influence in the Balkans

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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: South-East European History 17
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783034356305
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: South-East European History 17
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Feb-2026
  • Kirjastus: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783034356305

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The result of a research project by the Balkan Historical Association, this landmark edited collection explores various aspects of Russian influence in the Balkan region over the past three centuries. The concepts of Pan-Slavism and the Slavic brotherhood are well established due to long-established historical, religious and cultural ties. But relations between the Balkan countries and Russia have never been static. In this context, the authors of this volume aim to address Russias changing interests in the Balkans, and the responses from Balkan countries and other Great Power competitors. Perhaps most importantly, what might this long and complex historical engagement mean for the future of the area and for possible conflicts to come? The volume, which is a project initiated by the Balkan History Association brings together an impressive range of disciplinary expertise to address these questions and many others, and will be of interest to all those engaged in historical research on South-East Europe.
List of Figures - List of Acronyms and Abbreviations - Introduction: The
Slavic Brotherhood and Pan-Slavism: What You See Depends on Where You Sit -
Part I: The Russian Presence in the Balkans: Domains, Trends and Methods -
1.
Diverse Diplomacy: The Strengthening of Russian Influence in the Balkans
(1820s1830s), Katalin Schrek -
2. Russias Shifting Dynamic Between Bulgaria
and Serbia, Milo Petrovi -
3. Russian Foreign Policy and Military Presence
in Crete, 18971906, Georgios Limantzakis -
4. A Shifting Coalition or
Convenient Compromise: Romania and Russia in World War I, Hadrian Gorun -
Part II: Russias Great Competitors in the Balkans -
5. Tito and Anglo-Soviet
Competition in the Balkans: Yugoslav Territorial Ambitions in Venezia Giulia,
Chris Murray -
6. Propaganda Competition in the Middle of Chaos: Russian and
Austrian Narratives via Croatian News (19141920), Adrijan tivi -
7. A
Waning and Waxing Stage: The Balkans as Performing Ground for Franco-Russian
Relations, Kateina Koí and Marcela Hennlichová -
8. Junior or Equal
Partner? Chinese and Russian Engagement in the Balkans, Ion Marandici - Part
III: Serbia as a Case Study for Russian Influence in the Balkans -
9. Moving
Away from the Kremlin Winds: Serbia as Critical Case Study on Russian
Influence in the Balkans, Ana Jovi-Lazi -
10. A Complex Triangulation:
SovietYugoslavAlbanian Economic Relations (19451948), Boica Slavkovi
Miri -
11. Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The Influence of Soviet and
Yugoslav Intelligence Officers on Russian Émigrés in Yugoslavia (19441956),
eljko Oset -
12. Soviet-ish: The Unique History of Yugoslav Revisionism
(19561961), József Juhász and Bálint Mezei - Notes on Editors and
Contributors - Index
Matthew Crosston is Director for Academic Transformation at Bowie State University. His research interests are on Russian studies, terrorism and violent extremism, global and cyber security. His main publications are Shadow Separatism: Implications for Democratic Consolidation (2004) and Russia Reconsidered: Putin, Power, and Pragmatism (2018).



Mihaela Teodor is Senior Researcher in security studies and intelligence at the Romanian National Institute for Intelligence Studies and Editor-in-Chief of Romanian Intelligence Studies Review. Her academic interests include the history of propaganda and disinformation. She is coeditor of the volume Old and New Insights on the History of Intelligence and Diplomacy in the Balkans (Peter Lang, 2023).



Jordan Baev is a visiting professor in Intelligence History at Sofia University. Professor Baev has written more than 300 publications on diplomatic, military and intelligence history, international terrorism, peacekeeping, and civil-military relations. His most recent books are History of Bulgarian Military Intelligence (2019) and American Intelligence and Bulgaria (2021).



Bogdan Teodor is Associate Professor in security studies and intelligence studies at the Romanian National Intelligence Academy. His academic interests include the history of intelligence, hybrid threats and security studies. He is coeditor of the volume Old and New Insights on the History of Intelligence and Diplomacy in the Balkans (Peter Lang, 2023).