Preview

Nauchnyi dialog

Advanced search

Oath in Legal Tradition as a Reflection of Value System of Russian Peasantry (Mid-19th to Early 20th Century)

https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2024-13-3-170-189

Abstract

This article examines oaths functioning within customary law during the post-reform period, reflecting the system of basic values of the peasant society. The relevance of the study is justified by the urgent task of preserving ethnocultural identity, as well as the practical needs of the modern legal system, demonstrating a disconnect from the value orientations of traditional culture. The sphere and peculiarities of oath application in customary legal tradition are identified, and the main elements of the ritual are described. The verbal component of oaths is identified and characterized. The attitudes of peasants towards oaths are explored, and beliefs about the consequences of false oaths are analyzed. The system of values relevant to peasant society is reconstructed, highlighting justice, life (including a “righteous” life after death), health, reputation, honor, prosperity, various social ties including familial connections uniting ancestors and descendants as well as intra-community bonds, and spiritual values such as the connection with God, the rupture of which was perceived as spiritual death. It is concluded that despite the declining popularity of informal oaths, they remain relevant in the post-reform period as a means of conflict neutralization and an effective mechanism for uncovering truth, precisely because they appeal to significant categories and values for ethnocultural consciousness.

About the Author

T. V. Bauer
Institute of Linguistics, Literature and History of the Karelian Research Centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences
Russian Federation

Tatiana V. Bauer, PhD of History, Senior Researcher, Ethnology

Petrozavodsk



References

1. Almazov, A. I. (1904). The ordeal of consecrated bread (a kind of “God’s judgment” to convict a thief): the Greek statute for its commission according to the manuscript of the XVII century, with a brief historical sketch. Odessa : Ekonomicheskaya printing house. 28 p. (In Russ.).

2. Astrov, P. I. (1889). On the participation of supernatural forces in the people’s legal proceedings of the peasants of the Yelatomsky district, Tambov province. In: Collection of information for the study of the life of the peasant population of Russia, 1. Moscow: A. Levenson and Co. Printing House. 130—150. (In Russ.).

3. Bauer, T. V. (2019). Representations and practices related to theft in peasant culture (according to Russian, Belarusian and Ukrainian materials from the middle of the XIX — early XX century. PhD Diss. St. Petersburg. 315 p. (In Russ.).

4. Bezgin, V. B. (2004). Peasant everyday life (traditions of the late XIX — early XX century). Moscow, Tambov: Publishing house of Tambov State Technical University. 304 p. (In Russ.).

5. Bocharov, V. V. (2010). Russia : “legal nihilism” and “unwritten law” (statement of the problem. In: Russian society in modern civilizational processes. St. Petersburg: Intersociety. 360—367. (In Russ.).

6. Bondarenko, V. (1890). Essays of Kirsanovsky district of Tambov province. Ethnographic review, 3: 62—89. (In Russ.).

7. Chesnokov, I. I., Chesnokova, P. (2017). Axiological parameters of the speech act “oath” in Russian and Czech linguistic cultures. Proceedings of the Volgograd State Pedagogical University, 6 (119): 110—115. (In Russ.).

8. Chistov, K. V. (2005). Folklore. Text. Tradition: collection of articles. Moscow: OGI. 272 p. (In Russ.).

9. Chubinsky, P. P. (1872). Proceedings of the ethnographic and statistical expedition to the Western Russian Territory, equipped by the Imperial Russian Geographical Society. Southwest Department: materials and research, 1. St. Petersburg: V. Bezobrazov’s Printing House and Company. XX, 467 p. (In Russ.).

10. Dal, V. I. (2016). On beliefs, superstitions and prejudices of the Russian people. Moscow: Arguments of the Week. 47 p. (In Russ.).

11. Donovan, J. M. (2008). Legal Anthropology. Lanham: Altamira Press. 286 p. ISBN 0759113505.

12. Efimenko, P. S. (1869). Collection of folk legal customs. Arkhangelsk: Gubernskaya tipografiya. 336 p. (In Russ.).

13. Kelley, T. A. (2022). Truth or Consequences (the Deadly Kind): Oath Swearing in Nigerien Customary Law. North Carolina Journal of International Law, 47 (3): 331—368.

14. Levenstim, A. A. (1901). The oath at the court of popular beliefs. Bulletin of the Law, 6: 3—28. (In Russ.).

15. Makarov, M. (1828). Ancient and new gods, oaths and oaths Russian. Proceedings and chronicles of the Society of History and Antiquities of Russia, 1 (4). Moscow: University Printing House. 184—219. (In Russ.).

16. Malinovich, Yu. M., Malinovich, M. V. (2011). Modes of the speech act of promise: oath in Indo-European cultures. In: Arutyunova, N. D. (ed.). Logical analysis of language. Linguistic futurism. Language’s look into the future. Moscow: Indrik. Pp. 220-230. (In Russ.).

17. Matveev, P. (1877). Essays on the national legal life of the Samara province. St. Petersburg: V. Kirshbaum Printing House. 38 p. (In Russ.).

18. Mironov, B. N. (2000). The social history of Russia during the Empire period (XVIII — early XX century.): The genesis of personality, democratic family, civil society and the rule of law, 2. St. Petersburg: D. Bulanin. 568 p. (In Russ.).

19. Miroshnichenko, O. I. (2013). Legal mentality as a means of overcoming formal legal nihilism in modern Russian society. Legal policy and legal life, 3: 36—41. (In Russ.).

20. Mitronov, I. A. (2020). Oath as a cultural concept: a definitional analysis of nominees. Izvestiya Volgogradskogo gosudarstvennogo pedagogicheskogo universiteta, 9 (152): 80—83. (In Russ.).

21. Mullov, P. A. (1867). A few words about materials for explaining the national legal life. In: Notes of the Imperial Russian Geographical Society on the department of Ethnography, 1. St. Petersburg: Printing house of Kukol-Yasnopolsky. 615—635. (In Russ.).

22. Nanzatov, B. Z. (2017). Oath and oath in the customary law of the Buryats — the phenomenon of Russian legislation of the XVIII — early XIX century. Bulletin of the Buryat Scientific Center of the Siberian branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 4: 17—21. (In Russ.).

23. Oba A. A. (2008). Juju Oaths in Customary Law Arbitration and Their Legal Validity in Nigerian Courts. Journal of African Law, 52 (1): 139—158. DOI: 10.1017/S0021855308000065.

24. Pakhman, S. V. (1851). On judicial evidence in ancient Russian law, mainly civil, in their historical development. Moscow: University Printing House. VI, 212 p. (In Russ.).

25. Rogachevsky, A. L. (2001). On the history of customary law in Russia in the XIX century (from the archive of the Russian Geographical Society). Oath and friendship. Legal thought, 3 (1): 12—16. (In Russ.).

26. Semenovsky, A. I. (2022). Institute of swearing (swearing in) as a measure to stimulate truthful testimony. Criminal justice, 20: 65—69. DOI: 10.17223/23088451/20/11. (In Russ.).

27. Shatkovskaya, T. V. (2009). Common law of Russian peasants of the second half of the 19th — early 20th centuries : historical and legal aspect : author’s abstract of Doct Diss. Rostov-on-Don. 59 p.

28. Shrag, I. (1877). Peasant courts of the Vladimir and Moscow provinces (continued). Legal Bulletin, 5—6: 52—101. (In Russ.).

29. Shteynholz, A. (2006). Russian Russian beliefs reflected in the Russian lexicon. PhD Diss. Tartu. 198 p. (In Russ.).

30. Sidorenko, A. V. (2016). Children's oath in the Soviet era: speech genre characteristics. Speech Genres, 2: 72-78. (In Russ.).

31. Skorobogaty, P. (1884). Evidence at the volost court (ending). Legal Bulletin, 5—6: 132—145. (In Russ.).

32. Tenishev, V. V. (1907). Justice in Russian peasant life: a set of data obtained by ethnographic materials of the late Prince V. N. Tenishev. Bryansk: Printing house of L. I. Itin and Co. 192 p. (In Russ.).

33. Tursunbayeva, N. S. (2015). Institute of the oath according to the norms of customary law of the Kyrgyz people in the Russian Empire. Bulletin of the Kyrgyz-Russian Slavic University, 1 (15): 63—65. (In Russ.).

34. Uspensky, B. A. (2008). Law and religion in Moscow Russia. Facts and signs: studies on the semiotics of history, 1. Moscow: Languages of Slavic Cultures. 122—179. (In Russ.).

35. Yakushkin, E. I. (1875). Customary law: materials for the bibliography of customary law, 1. Yaroslavl: Printing House of the provincial Government. XXXXVI, 249 p. (In Russ.).

36. Yasinskaya, M. V. (2013). “Not to see white light” (the theme of eyes and vision in the formulas of South Slavic curses). Slavic studies, 2: 79—89. (In Russ.).


Review

For citations:


Bauer T.V. Oath in Legal Tradition as a Reflection of Value System of Russian Peasantry (Mid-19th to Early 20th Century). Nauchnyi dialog. 2024;13(3):170-189. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2024-13-3-170-189

Views: 284


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2225-756X (Print)
ISSN 2227-1295 (Online)