The great British historian and philosopher Arnold Joseph Toynbee (1889–1975) considered the Russian civilization as one of the autonomous units of the universal historical process in his monumental work "A Study of History." The key to understanding it for him was the concept of "Byzantine heritage" or "Byzantinism," which defined Russia's unique path, its institutions, mentality, and place in the world.
By analyzing the genesis of civilizations through the mechanism of "Challenge and Response," Toynbee saw the adoption of Christianity from Constantinople (988) as a fundamental choice that predetermined the fate of Rus. This choice was not just religious but also civilizationally-cultural. By accepting baptism from Byzantium, Rus consciously entered the orbit of the Second Rome, inheriting:
Political model: the idea of a symphony of powers (cooperation between secular and spiritual authorities) and the sacralization of the ruler's figure as the "external bishop" and the anointed tsar. Moscow princes, and then tsars, inherited the Byzantine concept of autocratic, divinely-established power.
Cultural and religious code: liturgical language (Church Slavonic), iconographic aesthetics, literary and legal canons. Russia became part of the Orthodox world, which for centuries separated it from the Latin West.
Geopolitical mission: after the fall of Constantinople in 1453, Moscow realized itself as the "Third Rome" – the only legitimate heir and guardian of true Christianity. This messianic idea, formulated by the monk Philotheos, became, according to Toynbee, the spiritual pillar of Russian expansion and imperial identity.
Toynbee classified Russia as a "daughter society" of the Byzantine civilization, but with a critical reservation. It grew on the periphery of two worlds – settled Christian and nomadic steppe. This imposed a deep imprint on the Byzantine foundation, creating a hybrid phenomenon.
Byzantine challenge: The need to protect vast borders from steppe nomads (Pechenegs, Polovtsians, Mongols) formed a militarized society with a strong central authority. This "steppe border" became for Rus the same "challenge" that the Arabs and Turks were for Byzantium.
Mongol yoke (1240–1480): Toynbee considered it a catastrophic but formative event. It further strengthened the authoritarian tendencies (borrowing the fiscal system, the principle of universal service to the state), isolated Rus from Europe, and solidified its distinction from the West. The Moscow Tsardom, in essence, became the heir not only of Byzantium but also partially of the Horde in terms of management methods.
Toynbee interpreted Peter I's reforms as a dramatic attempt to change civilization's belonging – to reorient Russia from Byzantine heritage to a Western model. This led to a deep schism ("schism") in the soul of Russia, which he described in terms of opposition:
"Zeitgeist" (Spirit of the Age): The Westernizing elite, importing technology, ideas, fashion, and institutions from the West.
"Volksgeist" (Spirit of the People): The mass population, remaining faithful to Orthodoxy, communal way of life, and patriarchal values of the Byzantine-Muscovite type.
This schism, according to Toynbee, gave rise to the phenomenon of the intelligentsia as a layer separated from the people and torn between admiration for the West and love for "the soil." It also explained the internal instability of the Russian Empire and its subsequent collapse.
In Toynbee's interpretation, the communist experiment was not a negation but a secular transformation of Byzantine foundations. He used the term "pseudomorphosis" (borrowed from Spengler), meaning the imposition of a new ideology on old deep structures:
Marxist ideology became a secular eschatology and dogma, replacing Orthodox faith.
The Communist Party – the new "order of the faithful," analogous to the church hierarchy.
Cult of leaders (Lenin, Stalin) – the secular sacralization of power, inheriting the cult of the tsar-father.
The idea of "a bright future" (communism) – the messianic goal, inheriting the idea of the "Third Rome" and "Moscow – the Third International."
Thus, the USSR, fighting against religion, inadvertently reproduced many socio-cultural patterns inherited from Byzantium through the Moscow Tsardom.
Interesting fact: Toynbee personally visited the USSR in 1930 and met with Stalin. This meeting strengthened his belief in the deep continuity between imperial and Soviet models of governance. He noted that even the Stalinist Stalinist architecture with its gigantomania and monumentality reminded him of Byzantine imperial projects.
For Toynbee, "Byzantinism" is not just a historical fact but a living, dynamic force in Russian history. He saw it not as weakness but as a source of uniqueness and resilience of the Russian civilization in the face of external pressures – both from the West and from the East.
In his opinion, the main challenge for Russia lay in finding a creative "Response" to this heritage: to be able to synthesize it with modernization impulses, avoiding both painful schism and isolationism. Toynbee's analysis remains relevant, as questions of civilization identity, relations with the West, and internal unity, formed by the Byzantine choice a thousand years ago, continue to define Russia's historical trajectory.
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