- The
kontsy (Russian: концы, IPA: [kɐnˈtsɨ], sg. конец, konets, lit. 'ends') were the five
boroughs into
which medieval Veliky Novgorod was divided. They...
- state. Like Novgorod,
Pskov was
divided into
several kontsy (lit. 'ends').
There were four
kontsy in the 14th century, as the city was
growing and a new...
- unit.[citation needed] The city of
Novgorod itself was
divided into five
kontsy (концы) or boroughs: Nerevsky, Zagorodsky, Lyudin,
Slavensky and Plotnitsky...
-
until 1478,
after Novgorod was
formally annexed by Ivan III. Each of the
kontsy (boroughs or "ends") of
Novgorod also had
their own
veche to
elect borough...
- Novgorod.
Traditional scholarship argues that they were
organized into five
kontsy ("ends" in Russian) – i.e., the
boroughs of the city they
lived in; each...
- from the
Slavonic konets, and
since then, the
Trade Side
consisted of two
kontsy. The
Trade Side
began to be po****ted
since the 10th
century and the marketplace...
-
There were also
posadniks for each of the city's
boroughs (called ends -
kontsy,
singular konets in Russian). The
multiplication of the
office dates to...
- чтения (34th : 2017 : Петропавловск-Камчатский, Россия) (2017). Vo vse
kont︠s︡y dostignet rossov slava : k 220-letii︠u︡ so dni︠a︡ rozhdenii︠a︡ Svi︠a︡titeli︠a︡...