Muscovite (also known as common mica, isinglass, or potash mica) is a hydrated phyllosilicate mineral of aluminium and potassium with formula KAl2(AlSi3O10)(F...
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Principality of Moscow (redirect from Muscovite Russia)
also known as 'Muscovy', the 'Grand Principality of Moscow', 'Muscovite Rus', or 'Muscovite Russia'. The English names Moscow and Muscovy, for the city...
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Look up muscovite or Muscovite in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Muscovite is a mineral. Muscovite may also refer to: A demonym for an inhabitant of...
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1507-1508 Lithuanian-Muscovite War. To view all Muscovite-Lithuanian wars, see Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars. Lithuanian-Muscovite War (1507-1508) also known...
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The Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars (also known as the Russo-Lithuanian Wars or simply Muscovite Wars or Lithuanian Wars) were a series of wars between the Grand...
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Tsarist autocracy (redirect from Muscovite despotism)
autocracy,[d] Muscovite autocracy,[e] tsarist absolutism,[f] imperial absolutism,[g] Russian absolutism,[h] Muscovite absolutism,[i] Muscovite despotism,[j][k]...
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Polish–Russian War (1609–1618) (redirect from Polish-Muscovite War (1605 - 1618))
Sigismund refused to allow his son to become the new tsar unless the Muscovites agreed to convert from Eastern Orthodoxy to Catholicism, and the pro-Polish...
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Tsardom of Russia (redirect from Muscovite Tsardom)
a result of traditional habit and the need to distinguish between the Muscovite and the Lithuanian part of Rus', as well as of the political interests...
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Polish–Muscovite War can refer to: Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars Polish–Muscovite War (1605–18) Smolensk War (1631–34) Russo-Polish War (1654–67) This disambiguation...
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character of mica crystals. The short-range order of K+ ions on cleaved muscovite mica has been resolved. View of tetrahedral sheet structure of mica. The...
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The Muscovite War of Succession, or Muscovite Civil War, was a war of succession in the Grand Duchy of Moscow (Muscovy) from 1425 to 1453. The two warring...
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Notes on Muscovite Affairs (Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii) (1549) was a Latin book by Baron Sigismund von Herberstein on the geography, history and...
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Battle of Orsha (section Size of the Muscovite army)
The Battle of Orsha was part of a long series of Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars conducted by Muscovite rulers striving to gather all the former Kievan Rus'...
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Smolensk War (redirect from Polish-Muscovite War (1632-1634))
times during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries (from the days of the Muscovite–Lithuanian Wars). A major supporter of the war was the Tsar's father,...
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Russia) on 14 July 1500, during the Second Muscovite–Lithuanian War (1500–1503). In the battle of Vedrosha, Muscovite forces defeated outnumbered Lithuanian...
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Moscovia Detention Centre (redirect from Al-Muscovite Detention Centre)
The Al-Moskobiya, Moscobiyeh, Muscovite or Moscovia Detention Centre is an Israeli detention and interrogation facility and prison in the Russian Compound...
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The Lithuanian–Muscovite War (1500–1503) also known as the Second Lithuanian–Muscovite War was a war between the Grand Duchy of Lithuania led by Alexander...
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Russo-Polish War (1654–1667) (redirect from Polish-Muscovite War (1654-1667))
The Russo-Polish War of 1654–1667, also called the Thirteen Years' War, Muscovite War of 1654–1667 and the First Northern War, was a major conflict between...
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Naryshkin Baroque (redirect from Muscovite baroque)
Naryshkin Baroque, also referred to as Moscow Baroque or Muscovite Baroque, is a particular style of Baroque architecture and decoration that was fashionable...
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Lithuanian-Muscovite War (1534–1537), also known as the Fifth Lithuanian-Muscovite War and the War of Starodub, was a war that lasted from August 1534...
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Russo-Swedish War (1495–1497) (redirect from Muscovite-Swedish War (1495–1497))
1495-6 Muscovite forces under Vasily Kosoy and Andrey Chelyadnin devastated the country around Tavastehus (Finnish: Hämeenlinna), while other Muscovite raiding...
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Moscow Oblast (redirect from Muscovite Oblast)
Moscow Oblast (Russian: Московская область, romanized: Moskovskaya oblast, IPA: [mɐˈskofskəjə ˈobləsʲtʲ], informally known as Подмосковье, Podmoskovye...
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Muscovy, and Dmitry Konstantinovich of Nizhny Novgorod-Suzdal. The combined Muscovite–Suzdalian army was led by Moscow Governor Dmitry Mikhailovich Bobrok Volynskyy...
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by its inhabitants as Rus', the Russian land (Russkaia zemlia), or the Muscovite state (Moskovskoe gosudarstvo), among other variations. In 1721, Peter...
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means "Russian", literally "Muscovite", in Ukrainian, Polish, and Belarusian. Moskal may also refer to: Moskal (Muscovite), stock character of the traditional...
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Moscow–Constantinople schism (redirect from Muscovite schism)
The Moscow–Constantinople schism refers to any of three schisms within the Eastern Orthodox Church wherein the Russian Orthodox Church (or one of its preceding...
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Livonian campaign of Stephen Báthory (redirect from Polish-Muscovite War (1577-1582))
contemplated taking part in the Polish royal election (see Polish-Lithuanian-Muscovite Commonwealth), but eventually the Commonwealth elected Stephen Báthory...
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known as chrome mica, is a chromium (Cr)-rich variety of the mineral muscovite, belonging to the mica group of phyllosilicate minerals, with the chemical...
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The Lithuanian–Muscovite War, known in the Rogozh Chronicle as Litovschina (Russian: Литовщина), encompasses three raids by Algirdas, Grand Duke of Lithuania...
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The Polish–Lithuanian–Muscovite Commonwealth was a proposed state that would have been based on a personal union between the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth...
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