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CURRICULUM VITAE:
Richard Hellie

Office: 1126 East 59th Street, Box 78, Chicago, IL 60637-1587
Phone: 773/702-8377  
FAX: 773/702-7550 
e-mail: hell@midway.uchicago.edu

Personal: Born in Waterloo, Iowa, on May 8, 1937.
Son Benjamin born on May 20, 1972. Son Michael born on September 8, 1999.

Higher education: University of Chicago, BA, 1958; MA, 1960; Ph.D., 1965.
Harvard University Russian Research Center, visitor, June 1962-June 1963.
Indiana University, summer 1963.
University of Moscow, September 1963-October 1964.

Employment (post-Ph.D.):
Rutgers University, Visiting Ass't Prof., 1965-66;
University of Chicago, Ass't Prof.,  1966-71; Assoc. Prof., 1971-80; Professor, 1980-2001; Thomas E. Donnelley Professor, July 1, 2001--

Scholarships, fellowships, grants:
University of Chicago Honor Entrance Scholarships, 1954-56.
Des Moines Register  & Tribune Scholarships, 1956-58.
University of Chicago fellowships, 1960-62.
Carnegie Non-Western Civilization Internship, 1961-62.
Ford Foundation Foreign Area Training Fellowships, 1962-65.
Inter-University Committee on Travel Grants Award, 1963-64.
Quantrell Grant for the Improvement of Teaching, 1969.
University of Chicago Social Science Divisional Research grants, 1970-88, 1991-94, 1996-97, 1998-99.
Guggenheim Fellowship, 1973-74.
National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship, 1978-79.            
National Endowment for the Humanities Grant (Translations), 1982-83.
NEH Grant (Summer), 1988.
NSF (Economics) Grant, 1988-90.
Bradley Foundation Grant, 1988-91.

Thesis, dissertation, books:
"Strikes and Russia, 1907-1914." MA Thesis, University of Chicago, 1960. 150 p.
"Muscovite Law and Society: The Ulozhenie of 1649 as a Reflection of the Political and Social Development of  Russia Since the Sudebnik of 1589." Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Chicago, 1965. 488 p.  [This has not been published.]
Muscovite Society. (Readings for Introduction to Russian Civilization.) Chicago: Syllabus Division, The College, The University of Chicago, 1967; reprinted 1970. 320 p. [A collection of annotated documents which I translated from Middle Russian.]
Enserfment and Military Change in Muscovy. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1971. 432 p. [Awarded the American Historical Association's Herbert Baxter Adams Prize in European history in 1972.]
Slavery in Russia, 1450-1725. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1982. xix + 776 p. [Selected by  Choice as "an outstanding academic book of 1982." Awarded                    "honorable mention" by the first Prize Committee of the American Association for                  the Advancement of Slavic Studies, October 1983. Second edition of the                hardback and a paperback released on October 19, 1984. Awarded the Gordon                   J. Laing Prize for 1984 "for the book publishing during the preceding two years                       which adds the greatest distinction to the list of the University of Chicago Press"                      on April 18, 1985.]
The Ulozhenie (Law Code) of 1649. Irvine, CA: Charles Schlacks, Publisher, 1988. 710 p.                Volume 1, the  translation,  of a scholarly edition. Volume 2, the commentary,                  will be written and published as soon as possible.
Editor of Ivan the Terrible: A Quarcentenary Celebration of His Death. Irvine: Charles                       Schlacks, Publisher,              1987. 408 p.
Editor of The Frontier in Russian History. Los Angeles: Charles Schlacks, Publisher, 1995.                         514 p.
Editor of The Plow, the Hammer, and the Knout: Essays  in Eighteenth-Century Russian                 Economic History,  by Arcadius Kahan. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press,                  1985. 399 two-column 8-1/2 x 11"            pp. [I spent six months full-time editing this               work and inputting it on my TRS-80 Model 16 for computer typesetting. I also                     compiled the bibliography, wrote the conclusion, checked the page                        proofs, and compiled a 75-page index. The work is 218,000 words + 330 tables.              The volume was awarded the honorable mention citation in the Vucinich Prize                         competition by the American  Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies,               November 21, 1986. It was selected by Choice  as "an outstanding academic               book of 1986."]
            Kholopstvo v Rossii 1450-1725. Moscow: Academia, 1998. 708 pp. Translation of Slavery                in Russia, with a new foreword for the post-Soviet edition.
The Economy and Material Culture of Russia 1600-1725. Chicago: The University of                        Chicago Press, 1999.  xi + 671 large-format pages.
Editor of The Soviet Global Impact: 1945-1991. Idyllwild, CA: Charles Schlacks,                 Publisher, 2002. 413 pp.

 Articles:
"Generals of Iowa Civil War Regiments." Annals of Iowa. Winter, 1963: 498-504.
"The Law Code of 1649" and "Muscovite-Western Commercial Relations," in Readings in                 Russian  Civilization. Edited by Thomas Riha. 2nd edition. Chicago: University of                       Chicago Press, 1969. Pp.  154-72.
"The Foundations of Russian Capitalism." Slavic Review. March, 1967: 148-64.
"The Petrine Army: Continuity, Change, and Impact." Canadian-American Slavic Studies.                 Summer, 1974:  237-53. [The issue was devoted to the tercentenary of Peter the                 Great and resulted from a conference I organized at Chicago in 1972.]
"Alexander Nevsky." Encyclopaedia Britannica 3 (1973). 1: 478-79.
"In Search of Ivan the Terrible." In S. F. Platonov's Ivan the Terrible. Edited and                   translated by Joseph L.  Wieczynski. Gulf Breeze: Academic International Press,               1974. Paperback edition, 1986. Pp. ix-xxxiv. [I submitted a 59-page critique of              Wieczynski's draft translation. The volume was selected by Choice as "an              outstanding academic book of 1974."]
"Recent Soviet Historiography on Medieval and Early Modern Russian Slavery." Russian                 Review. January,  1976: 1-32. "Reply" to a "Comment," idem, January, 1977: 68-                  75.
"The Structure of Modern Russian History: Toward a Dynamic Model." Russian History 4,                no. 1 (1977):      1-22.
"Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic." Encyclopaedia Britannica3 [A revision of                  the article  appearing in 16 (1974): 89-100.]
"The Stratification of Muscovite Society: The Townsmen." Russian History 6, part 2                         (1979): 119-75.
"Muscovite Slavery in Comparative Perspective." Russian History 6, part 2 (1979): 133-                    209. Reprinted in Articles on Russian and Soviet History 1500-1991, ed. by              Alexander Dallin, vol. 1, Major Problems  in Early Modern Russian History, ed. by              Nancy Shields Kollmann. New York and London: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1992.                Pp. 291-367.
"Women in Muscovite Slavery." Russian History 10, part 2 (1983): 213-29.
"Slavery Among the Early Modern Peoples on the Territory of the USSR." Canadian-                       American Slavic  Studies 17, no. 4 (Winter 1983): 454-65.
Entries in The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet History (MERSH):
"Mikhail Mikhailovich Bogoslovskii" (5 [1977]: 39-42); "Daniil Aleksandrovich" (8                  [1978]: 168-       70); "Dvorianin" (10 [1979]: 77-79); "Kholop (Slave)" (16 [1980]:                        162-69); "Muscovy" (24 [1981]: 214-28);"Sergei Fedorovich Platonov" (28 [1982]:              112-17); "Nikolai Aleksandrovich Rozhkov"  (31 [1983]: 217-21); "St. George's                     Day" (33 [1983]: 22-24); "Serfdom in Russia" (34 [1983]: 4149); "Vasilii Ivanovich                Sergeevich" (34 [1983]: 67-70); "Pavel Petrovich Smirnov" (36 [1984]: 37-                   42); "Sudebniki" (38 [1984]: 15-21); "Vasilii Nikitich Tatishchev' (38 [1984]: 190-                   96); "The  Ulozhenie of 1649" (40 [1985]: 192-98); "Vasilii III Ivanovich" (41              [1986]: 219-23); "Stepan Borisovich Veselovskii" (42 [1986]: 60-65); Mikhail                        Fegontovich       Vladimirskii-Budanov" (4 [1986]: 177-81); "Robert Iur'evich                   Wipper" (44 [1987]: 1-6); "Yurii Danilovich" (45 [1987]: 68-70); Yurii                        Vladimirovich Dolgorukii" (45 [1987]: 73-76); "Aleksandr Ivanovich Zaozerskii"                  (45 [1987]: 160-63); "Zemskii sobor" (45 [1987]: 226-34); "A. A. Zimin" (46                 [1987]: 76-83).
Entry in The Modern Encyclopedia of Russian and Soviet Literatures (MERSL):
"Chronicles" (4 [1981]: 103-12).
"An Appreciation of Nikolai Evgenevich Nosov." Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas                   34 (1986): 317-20.
Entries submitted to The Encyclopedia of Military History: "Sapun Avramov"; "Aleksei                      Fedorovich  Adashev"; "Daniil Fedorovich Adashev" (1 page each).
"What Happened? How Did He Get Away With It? Ivan Groznyi's Paranoia and       the                    Problem of Institutional Restraints." Russian History 14, no. 1-4 (1987):          199-224.                        My "Introduction" to this volume, the  product of a conference I organized at                  the University of Chicago, is on pp. 1-4.
"Edward Keenan's Scholarly Ways." The Russian Review 46 (1987): 137-50.
"Early Modern Russian Law: The Ulozhenie of 1649" and "Ulozhenie Commentary:              Preamble and Chapters 1-2." Russian History 15, nos. 2 -4 (1988): 155-224;                  "Commentary on Chapters 3 through 6," idem, 17, no. 1 (1990): 65-78;                         "Commentary on Chapters 7-9," idem, 17, no.2 (1990): 179-226;                "Commentary on Chapter 11 (The Judicial Process for Peasants)." idem, 17, no. 3               (1990): 305-39; "The Church and the Law in Late Muscovy: Chapters 12 and 13              of the Ulozhenie of 1649." Canadian-American Slavic Studies 25, nos. 1-4 (1991):               179-99. [When completed, this series of  articles will become the "commentary"               volume, vol. 2, of my edition of the Ulozhenie of 1649.]            
"Slavery."The New Encyclpaedia Britannica. 15th edition (1989). 27: 285-98.
"Patterns of Instability in Russian and Soviet History." The Chicago Review of                     International Affairs. "Pt.  1, 750 to 1917," 1, no. 3 (Autumn 1989) 3-34. "Pt. 2,                        The Soviet Period," 2, no. 1 (Winter 1990): 15-40.
"Changing Military Technology, and the Evolution of Muscovite Society." In The Tools of                  War, 1445-1871, ed.             by John A. Lynn.  Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1990.                      Pp. 74-99.
"The Manumission of Russian Slaves." Slavery and Abolition 10, no. 3 (December 1989):                 23-39.
"Rewriting Pre-Mongol Russian History Once Again." Russian History 16, no. 1 (1989):                   67-76.
"Furs in Seventeenth-Century Muscovy." Russian History 16, nos. 2-4 (1989): 171-201.                   [A Festschrift for Leopold H. Haimson.]
"Muscovy Redux: More Parallels and Continuities?" Russian History 17, no. 4 (1990) 419-               26.
"Byzantine Law in Muscovy." In XVIII Mezhdunarodnyi kongress vizantinistov.                     Orgkomitet XVIII Mezhdunarodnogo kongressa vizantinistov. Reziume                     soobshchenii.    2 vols.; Moscow and Kazan':  MGU, AN SSSR, and POINT, 1991. Pp.                 437-38.
"Russia Before, During, and After the 'Keystone Coup' of August 1991." Russian History                  18, no. 3 (1991): 255-315.
"Arcadius Kahan." In Remembering the University of Chicago. Teachers, Scientists, and                 Scholars, ed. by  Edward Shils. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1991.                 Pp. 210-20.
"Tseny v Moskovskoi Rusi v XVII v." In Chteniia pamiati V. B. Kobrina. Problemy                 otechestvennoi istorii I kul'tury perioda feodalizma. Ed. by V. A. Murav'ev et al.                Moscow: RGGU, 1992. Pp. 186-88.
"The Impact of the Southern and Eastern Frontiers of Muscovy on the Ulozhenie (Law                     Code) of 1649  Compared with the Impact of the Western Frontier." Russian                     History 19, nos. 1-4 (1992): 99-115.         The volume was the product of a conference              on the impact of the frontier on Russian history held at the University of Chicago                 organized by Mikhail Khodarkovsky and me. I also wrote an "Introduction" to the                 volume, pp. 1-10.
"Russian Law From Oleg to Peter the Great. Foreword" to The Laws of Rus' Tenth to                      Fifteenth Centuries.              Trans. and ed. by Daniel H. Kaiser. Salt Lake City, Utah:              Charles Schlacks, Publisher, 1992. Pp. xi-xl. [This is the first volume of a series,                     "The Laws of Russia. Series I: Medieval Russia," of which I am editor.]
"The Value of Labor and Rank in Late Muscovy." In Sosloviia I gosudarstvennaia vlast' v                  Rossii.  XV seredina XIX vv. Mezhdunarodnaia konferentsiia Chteniia pamiati               akad. L. V. Cherepnina.  Ed. by N. V. Karlov et al. 2 vols. Moscow: MFTI, 1994. 2:                         334-45.
"The Great Paradox of the Seventeenth Century: The Stratification of Muscovite Society                  and the 'Individualization' of Its High Culture, Especially Literature." In O Rus!                     Studia Litteraria Slavica in Honorem Hugh McLean. Ed. Simon Karlinsky, James L.              Rice, Barry P. Scherr. Berkeley:  Berkeley Slavic Specialties, 1995. Pp. 116-28.
(with Jenifer L. Stenfors). "The Elite Clergy Diet in Late Muscovy." Russian History 22, no.               1 (Spring 1995): 1-23.
"Great Wealth in Muscovy: The Case of V. V. Golitsyn and Prices of the 1600-1725                        Period." Harvard Ukrainian Studies 19 (1995): 226-70.
"Late Medieval and Early Modern Russian Civilization and Modern Neuroscience." In                                               Culture and Identity        in Muscovy, 1359-1584 (= UCLA Slavic Studies, vol. 3), ed.                       by A. M. Kleimola and G. D. Lenhoff. Moscow: "ITZ-Garant", 1997: 146-65.
"The Origins of Denunciation in Muscovy." Russian History 24, nos. 1-2 (Spring-Summer                 1997): 11-26.
"Russia" in A Historical Guide to World Slavery. Ed. by Seymour Drescher and Stanley L.               Engerman. New  York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998. Pp. 344-46.
"Byzantium" and "Russia" in Macmillan Encyclopedia of World Slavery. Ed. by Paul                       Finkelman and Joseph  C. Miller. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998. Pp. 136-37                         and 781-83.
"Ivan III" and "Ivan IV" for the Microsoft Encarta Encyclopaedia.  1998.
"Russia, 1200-1815," in The Rise of the Fiscal State in Europe, c. 1200-1815." Ed. by                    Richard J. Bonney.  Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999. Pp. 481-505.
"Russian Clothing and Its International Context: 1600-1725." In Drevnerusskaia kul'tura                   v mirovom kontekste: arkheologiia I mezhdistsiplinarnye issledovaniia. Materialy                    konferentsii Moskva, 19-21 noiabria 1997             g. Ed. by A. V. Chernetsov. Moscow:                  RGGU and IARAN, 1999. Pp. 284-302.
"Why Did the Muscovite Elite Not Rebel?" In a Festschrift issue of Russian History (25,                   nos. 1-2 [Spring- Summer 1998]: 155-62) dedicated to the memory of A. A. Zimin                ed. by Peter Bowman Brown.
"Stoimost' stroitel'nykh materialov v Moskovskom gosudarstve XVII v." In Rossiiskaia                       Akademiia nauk. Nauchnyi sovet po istorii mirovoi kul'tury. Institut arkheologii.                     Kul'tura srednevekovoi Moskvy. XVII vek. Ed. by B. A. Rybakov et al. Moscow:                     Nauka, 1999. Pp. 233-48.
"Thoughts  on the Absence of Elite Resistance in Muscovy." Kritika. Explorations in                       Russian and Eurasian History (Special Issue: Resistance to Authority in Russia                        and the Soviet Union). 1, no. 1 (Winter 2000): 5-20.
"Slaves." In Encyclopedia of European Social History from 1350 to 2000. Ed. by Peter N.                Stearns. 6 vols. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2001. 3: 165-74.
"Migration in Early Modern Russia, 1480s-1780s," in Free and Coerced Migration:               Cultural and Economic Determinants and Consequences. Ed. by David Eltis.                   Stanford Univ. Press, 2002. Pp. 292-323, 418-24.
"The Russian Smoky Hut and Its Probable Health Consequences." In a Festschrift issue                 of Russian History  (28, nos. 1-4 [2001]: 171-84), dedicated to the memory of              Thomas S. Noonan and edited by Roman K. Kovalev and Heidi M. Sherman.
"The Costs of Muscovite Military Defense and Expansion," in The Military and Society in                  Russian History, 1350-1917.. Ed. by Marshall Poe and Eric Lohr. Leiden: Brill,                    2002. Pp. 41-66.
"The Soviet Global Impact: 1945-1991." Russian History. 29, nos. 2-4 (2002): 141-50.
"Working for the Soviets: Chicago, 1959-61, Mezhkniga, and the Soviet Book Industry."                                           Russian History,  29,      no. 2-4 (2002): 539-52.
"Le commerce entre la France et la Russie a la fin du XVIIIe siécle." In L'Influence              Française en Russie au XVIIIe siecle. Rèsumès des interventions.. Paris:                         Universite de Paris-Sorbonne/Foundation Singer-Polignac, 14 et 15 mars 2003.                        Pp. 17-20.
Articles for the Encyclopedia of Russian History, ed. by James R. Millar et al. (4 vols.;                    New York: Macmillan, 2003): "Assembly of the Land," "Civil War, 1425-1450),"                       "Colonial Expansion,"  "Dvorianstvo," "Enserfment," "Feudalism," "Izba," "Law                          Code of 1649," "Boris Morozov," "New Statute of Commerce (1667),"                         "Pomest'e," "Presidium of the Supreme Soviet," "Serfdom," "Service State,"                       "Slavery," "Sudebnik of 1589."
"The Expanding Role of the State in Russia." In Modernizing Muscovy: Reform and Social               Change in Seventeenth-Century Russia. Ed. by Marshall T. Poe and Jarmo T.                        Kotilaine (London: Routledge, 2004). Pp. 29-55.
"The Russian Economy 1472-1700," in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Economic History. 5                 vols. Ed. by Joel Mokyr,  Oxford University Press, 2003. 4: 415-17.
"Le commerce franco-russe dans la deuxieme moitie du XVIIIe siecle (1740-1810)." In
                        L'influence franchise en Russie au XVIIIe siecle. Ed. by Jean-Pierre Poussou et al.                        Paris: Presses de L'Universite de Paris-Sorbonne, 2004. Pp. 73-82.
"Interpreting Violence in Late Muscovy from the Perspectives of Modern Neuroscience."                  In States, Societies,             Cultures East and West. Essays in Honor of  Jaroslaw                 Pelenski Ed. by Janusz Duzinkiewicz et al.         New York: Ross Publishing, Inc, 2004.                        Pp. 295-315.
"Jerome Horsey," in The New Dictionary of National Biography. Ed. By H. C. G. Matthew.                Oxford University Press.  8 ms. p.
"Russian Estate Management." In European Aristocracies and Colonial Elites. Ed. by Paul                         Janssens. Aldershot, Hampshire, UK: Ashgate, 2005. Pp. 179-95.
"The Structure of Russian Imperial History." History and Theory.  44 (December 2005):                    88-112.
"Reflections on Muscovite Society in the Second Half of the Fifteenth Century." In Pre-                    Modern Russia and Its World: Essays in Honor of Thomas S. Noonan. Ed. by                              Kathryn L. Reyerson et al. Wiesbaden: Harrasowitz Verlag, 2006. Pp. 157-62. (=                            Schriften zur Geistesgeschichte des ostlichen Europa, 30 [Summer 2006]).

Articles/chapters not yet published:
"M. V. Mavrodin," for MERSH, 9 ms. pages.
"Credit, Moneylending, and Usury in Muscovy" for MERSH, 10 ms. pages.
"Dvorianstvo" for MERSH,  5 ms. pages. 
"Slavery and Serfdom in Russia, 1450-1804," in The Cambridge World History of Slavery,                vol. 2, ed. by David Eltis and Stanley Engerman. 10,500 words.
"Ch. 12. Peasant Farming and Material Culture, 1462-1613" 5,000 words;" Ch. 16. The                    Law, 1462-1613," 10,000 words;" Ch. 23. The Economy: Trade and Serfdom,                        1613-1689," 9,000 words, for The Cambridge History of Russia, vol. 1, ed. by              Maureen Perrie. Scheduled for publication in 2006.
"The Russian Diet and Its Nutritional Adequacy in 1650 and 1850." For a Festschrift                       entitled Vremena i sud'by for V. M. Paneiakh edited by Varvara Vovina in St.              Petersburg (Russian Academy of Sciences). 30 ms. pages.
"Migration in Russia Since 1600." In Klaus J. Bade et al., eds., Migration--Integration--                    Minorities Since the 17th Century: A European Encyclopaedia. Universitat                    Osnabruck, 2006. 31 ms. pages.
"Did Russians Ever Hope for Non-Autocratic Rule?" For a Festschrift to honor Michael                     Flier accepted for publication in the Harvard Ukrainian Studies.  16 ms. pages.

Book reviews
in The Historian, The American Historical Review, Canadian Historical Review, Russian History,  Slavic Review, Journal of Modern History, Labor History, The Russian Review, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, American Journal of Sociology, American Journal of Education, Canadian-American Slavic Studies, The Sixteenth-Century Journal, The International History Review, The Journal of Social History, Speculum.,            Reviews in History (British electronic "publication"), Annals of the American Academy of Political and  Social Sciences

Special report:
"History Students and Financial Aid, 1967-1981." Report to the Department of History,                    The University of Chicago, September 1981. xxviii + 636 p.

Editor of the quarterly journal Russian History commencing volume 15 (1988).

Papers presented:
"The Enserfment of the Russian Peasantry." Pacific Coast Branch of the American                         Historical Association, San Diego, August 1969.
"The Abasement of the Person of the Muscovite Peasant." Northeastern Slavic                   Conference, Montreal, May             1971.
"The Ulozhenie of 1649." American Society for Legal History, Boston, October 1971.
"The Reaction of the Traditional Muscovite Army to Obsolescence in the Seventeenth                      Century." American             Historical Association, New York City, December 1971.
"The Petrine Army." International Tercentenary Conference on Peter the Great, Chicago,                 November 1972.
"The Seventeenth-Century Crisis in Muscovy." International Conference of Slavicists,                       Banff, August 1974.
"The Transformation of the Tsarist Military." Colloquium on Military History and                   Sociology, Chicago, May 1974.
"The Structure of Modern Russian History." Various places, 1974-2005..
"Slavery in Muscovy: A Preliminary Report on Prices." University of Chicago Economic                   History Workshop,             February 1974.
"Time on the Cross from the Comparative Perspective of Early Modern Russian Slavery."                 MSSB-University  of Rochester Conference "Time on the Cross: A First Appraisal,"                   Rochester, October 1974.
"Recent Soviet Historiography on Mediaeval and Early Modern Russian Slavery." The                      American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies Conference on              Soviet Historiography, Quail's Roost, North Carolina, April 1975.
"Slavery and the Law in Muscovy." Third International Conference on Muscovy History,                    Oxford, September  1975.
"Muscovite Slave Demography." University of Chicago Social History Workshop,                 November 1975; revised, October 1976.
"The Functions of Slavery in Muscovy." Annual Conference of the Canadian Association                  of Slavists, Quebec, May 1976.
"Muscovite Conceptions of the Social Order." Eighth National Convention of the                  American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, St. Louis, October                       1976.
"Political Structure and Social Inequality in Muscovy." University of Chicago Workshop in                Comparative             Macro Sociology, April 1977.
"Muscovite Slavery in Comparative Perspective." Tenth Annual Convention of the                 American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Columbus, October                      1978.
"Social Control in Muscovy: the Lower Classes." Tenth Annual Convention of the                 American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Columbus, October                      1978.
"Ivan the Terrible: Paranoia, 'Evil Advisers,' Institutional Restraints, and Social Control."                   Thirteenth Annual  Southern Conference on Slavic Studies, Chapel Hill, November                  1978.
"The Muscovite Provincial Service Elite in Comparative Perspective." Ninety-third Annual                  Meeting of the American Historical Association, San Francisco, December 1978.
"Muscovite Slavery: Prices and Demography." University of Chicago Economic History                    Workshop, March 1979.
"Muscovite Military Slavery." Ninety-fifth Annual Meeting of the American Historical                         Association,             Washington, D.C., December 1980.
"Decision-Making in Muscovite Government: The Slavery Chancellery." Ninety-sixth                        Annual Meeting of  the American Historical Association, Los Angeles, December                    1981.
"Women and Slavery in Muscovy." "University of Pennsylvania Ethnohistory Workshop,                   Philadelphia,             September 1982.
"What Needs to be Done in Muscovite History?" Fourteenth National Convention of the                    American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Washington, D.C.,                   October 1982.
"Arcadius Kahan's Eighteenth-Century Russian Economic History." Fifteenth National                     Convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies,                    Kansas City, October 1983.
"Muscovite Tales Commenting on Law and Justice." Ninety-eighth Annual Meeting of the                 American Historical Association, San Francisco, December 1983.
"What Happened? How Did He Get Away With It? Ivan Groznyi's Paranoia and the              Problem of Institutional Restraints." Ivan Groznyi International Quarcentenary                    Conference, University of Chicago, March 1984.
"Early Modern Russian Law: The Ulozhenie of 1649." NEH Workshop on Russian and                     Soviet Law, Rutgers             Law School (Camden), May 25-June 1, 1984.
"Infanticide in Early Modern Russia." Midwest Slavic Association Regional Conference,                   South Bend,             Indiana, April 18, 1985.
"The Politics of Soviet Music." Orchestra Hall, Chicago, March 21, 1986.
"The Purges and Soviet Music." Symposium on "The Purge: 50 Years Later," Michigan                   State University, East Lansing, MI, May 19, 1986.
"V. N. Tatishchev: Eighteenth-Century Russian State Entrepreneur." UofC Economic                       History Workshop, October 24, 1986; American Historical Association Meetings,                    Chicago, December 29, 1986.
"The Evolution of Muscovite Society." S. Harrison Thomson Memorial Lecture, the              University of Colorado, Boulder, March 10, 1987.
"Changing Military Technology and the Evolution of Muscovite Society," Tools of War                      Conference,             University of Illinois (Urbana), April 2, 1987.
"The Role of the State in Muscovy." "The Kennan Institute, Washington, D.C., October                    26, 1987. Revised: The Harriman Institute, Columbia University, October 6, 1988.                    Revised again: Russian and East European Center Lecture Series, Uof Illinois,                     Urbana, October 17, 1988. Revised again for the conference on "Absolutism and                 Despotism in Early Modern Eurasia," University of Minnesota,                   Minneapolis, October 27-29, 1989.
"The Emancipation of Russian Slaves." Twelfth International Congress of Anthropological                 and Ethnological Sciences, Zagreb, July 28, 1988.
"The Impact of Lithuanian Law on Seventeenth-Century Muscovite Law." AAASS                 Convention, Honolulu, November 19, 1988.
"Patterns of Instability in Russian and Soviet History." Airlie House (Va.) Conference on                  Prospects for             Instability in the USSR, December 12, 1988.
"Prices in Seventeenth-Century Muscovy." 104th Annual Meeting of the American               Historical Association, San Francisco, December 28, 1989. Another presentation:                   Fifth World Congress of Central and East             European Studies, Warsaw, August 6,                   1995    
"Byzantine Law in Muscovy." Eighteenth International Congress of Byzantinists, Moscow,               August 12, 1991.
"Why 'Feudalism' Is Not a Useful Concept in Russian History." Institute of History of the                  Academy of             Sciences of the USSR, Moscow, September 10, 1991.
"The Impact of the Frontier on Muscovite Law, as Exhibited in the Ulozhenie of 1649."                     International              Conference on the Role of the Frontier in Russian History,                         University of Chicago, May 29-31, 1992.
"Textiles in Seventeenth-Century Muscovy." Twenty-fourth National Convention of the                      American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Phoenix, November                  21, 1992.
"The Great Paradox of the Seventeenth Century: The Stratification of Muscovite Society                  and the 'Westernization' of Its High Culture, Especially Literature." University of                  Chicago Russian Studies Workshop, March 19, 1993. Revised and presented at                     the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies annual meeting                         in Seattle on November 22, 1997.           
"Some Considerations on the Development of the Russian Mind and Culture (Especially                  Late Muscovy)." SSRC Second Summer Workshop on Early East Slavic Culture,                Stanford University, June 20, 1993.
"Was Early Modern Russian Civilization a Right-Brain Phenomenon? The Current                Evidence." University of Chicago Russian Studies Workshop, October 13, 1993.
"Great Wealth in Muscovy: The Case of V. V. Golitsyn and Price Trends in Seventeenth-                 Century Muscovy."             Twenty-fifth National Convention of the American               Association for the Advancement of Slavic            Studies, Honolulu, November 20,              1993.
"Material Culture and Identity in Late Mediaeval and Early Modern Russia." NEH                 Conference on Cultural Identity in a Multicultural State: Muscovy, 1359-1584,                   UCLA, Los Angeles, March 12, 1994.
"The Origins of Denunciation in Muscovite Law." National Council for Soviet and East                      European Research conference "The Practice of Denunciation in Comparative              Perspective," the University of Chicago, April 30, 1994.
"The Value of Labor and Rank in Late Muscovy." Russian Academy of Sciences                 conference "Estates and State Power in Russia 15th-Middle 19th Centuries,"                      Moscow, June 13-16, 1994.
"Literacy in Muscovy." Twenty-sixth National Convention of the American Association for                 the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Philadelphia, November 19, 1994.
"Service Wages in Late Muscovy." Also "From Binary Models to the Bicameral Brain:                     Interpreting Reading             and Writing in Early Modern Russia." Twenty-seventh                   National Convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic                      Studies, Washington, DC, October 26, 1995.
"Interpreting Violence in Late Muscovy from the Perspectives of Modern Neuroscience."                  Twenty-eighth National Convention of the American Association for the                Advancement of Slavic Studies, Boston, November 15, 1996.
"Why the Elite Did Not Rebel in Muscovy." Twenty-ninth National Convention of the                         American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Seattle, November                   12, 1997. This was a revised versionof a presentation I had made at a conference              of Old Russian Scholars at UCLA in April of 1997.
"The Role of the State in Early Modern Russia." First National Convention of the                 Historical Society, Boston, May 29, 1999.
"The Russian Smoky Hut." Third Conference on Old Slavic Studies. The University of                      Chicago. May 12, 2000.
"The Cost of the Early Modern Russian Army." Conference on the Russian Military and                   Society, Harvard University's Davis Center, September 9, 2000.
"D. S. Likhachëv and Russian Chronicle Writing." The 32nd National Convention of the                      American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Denver, November                    11, 2000.
"Migration, Enserfment, and State Expansion and Survival in Early Modern Russia,                         1480s-  1780s."The Davis Center, Princeton University. October 26, 2001.
"Migration Patterns in Early Modern Russia."  Twenty-sixth Annual Meeting of the Social                 Science History Association, Chicago, November 17, 2001.
"Working for the Soviets: Chicago, 1959-61, and Mezhkniga." Conference on The Soviet                  Global Impact 1945-91. The University of Chicago, May 24, 2002.
"The Evolution of Muscovite Society in the Second Half of the Fifteenth Century." Pre-                     Modern Russia and Its World. A Symposium Honoring the Work of Thomas S.                        Noonan at the University of Minnesota.    Minneapolis, November 2, 2002.
"The Steppe Peoples (Polovtsy) and the Igor' Tale of 1187." Thirty-fourth National                Convention of the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies,                       Pittsburgh, November 22, 2002.
"Franco-Russian Trade Relations in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century."                 International Conference on             Franco-Russian Relations in the Eighteenth Century.                    The Sorbonne, Paris, March 14, 2003.
"The Russian Service State, Path Dependency, Siberia, and China." Keynote Speech for                 an International Conference on Chinese Affairs. National University. Taipei, March              24, 2003.
"Slaves and Serfs." International Conference on Muscovite Lives. Harvard Russian               Research Center. Cambridge, April 4, 2003.
"Slavery and Serfdom in Russia to 1804." International Conference on Slavery. Emory                     University. Atlanta,             May 2, 2003.
"Russian Peasant Nutrition 1650 and 1850 and Its Probable Consequences." AAASS                     Convention, Toronto, November 23, 2003. 
With Peter H. Lindert and a dozen other authors. "Preliminary Global Price Comparisons,                1500-1870." Utrecht             Conference on Global Price and Income History, August 17,                      2004.
"Vladimir Putin and the Structure of Modern Russian History." 25th Annual University of                  Chicago Humanities             Open House, October 23, 2004.
"A. A. Zimin and the Oprichnina." AAASS 36th National Convention, Boston, December                  7, 2004.
"Neurobiological Aspects of Education from the 1649 Ulozhenie to the Slavophiles."                        AAASS Convention,             Boston, December 6, 2004.
"Aleksander Nevskii's Battle on the Ice." Ninth Midwest Medieval Slavic Workshop,                         Chicago, April 21, 2006.

Work in progress:
A book, The Structure of Modern Russian History, has been outlined and a first draft of the book's 19 chapters was written in the Slavonic Reading Room of the New York Public Library  in the summer of 2001. I hope to complete this project in two or three years. Summer 2002 was wasted (5 months total investment) on The University's Title VI application, so not one word was written on this book at a time when I had hoped to produce a solid second draft. Summer 2003 was devoted to CUP articles. In the summer of 2004, a final draft of the first third was written. In summer of 2005 sections of parts II and III were written.
A second urgent project is an annotated translation of the Law Code (Sobornoe Ulozhenie) of 1649, which  was supported by a grant from the National Endowment of Humanities. Volume 1, the translation, was published in 1988. The research for volume 2, the commentary volume, is done, and the writing of the commentary on the preamble and chapters 1-9 and 11-13 has been published. It would take me about a year to finish the commentary.
A third project might be entitled The Historians of Muscovy; it is perhaps a quarter to a third completed in the dozen biographies written in MERSH and elsewhere.
Another project involves psychology and neurobiology in Russian history.
Yet another involves writing a historical novel the central character of which would be N. I. Odoevskii, whose life spanned the seventeenth century.

Teaching:
Introduction to Russian Civilization, 1, 2. 3 [Russia from the Ninth Century to the Present]. Russian Civilization for Businesspersons at the GSB. History of Russia to Peter the Great. History of Kievan Rus'. History of Russia, 1223-1598. Seventeenth-Century Muscovy. History of Mediaeval and Early Modern Russian Law and Institutions. Comparative Slave Systems. The Ulozhenie of 1649. Muscovite Society.         History and the Russian Novel. The Black Book of Communism. Self, Culture, and Society [freshman social science]. The Structure of Modern Russian History, 1, 2, 3. Seminars on Muscovite and Russian history topics. The Structure of Modern Russian History, 1, 2. 3.

University of Chicago service:
Chairman of the College Russian Civilization course, 1967-. Chairman of Undergraduate Studies in Russian Civilization, 1970- .Chairman of the Eastern European NDEA Title VI Area Committee, 1974-78. College History coordinator, 1971-73. Member, College History and Culture Task Force, 1983-84. Member, Council of the University Senate, 1976-79. Member, College Committee on Academic Standing, 1984-87. Member, College Standing Committee on the General Education Program (biological Sciences), 1986-88. Co-coordinator, Moscow Exchange Program, 1990-96 Co-coordinator, Russian and Soviet Studies Workshop, 1990-93, 1995-98, 2001-5, sole coordinator, 1993-94., 1999-2001. Department of History committees: Admissions and Aid (chairman, 1984-85); Work/study (1972-2002); Recruiting; Library; Placement (chairman, 1985-87); Graduate Student Affairs; Policy; promotion-to-tenure. Director, National Resource Center for Slavic, East European/Russian and Eurasian Studies, 1997-June 2004.   Faculty Technology Oversight Committee on Computing, 1999-2002.

Memberships:
American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies [I was a member of the editorial board of its publication, The Slavic Review, in 1979-81]. American Society for Legal History [I was a member of the 1976 program committee for its annual meetings]. PEN. Economic History Association. Jean Bodin Society for Comparative Institutional History. Chicago Consortium of Slavic and East European Studies [I was president in 1990-92]. Founding member and member of the board of governors of the National Historical Society [1999-2002]. Chicago Committee of The Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, 2003.

Listings:
Who's Who in the World. Who's Who in America. Who's Who in the Midwest. Who's Who in American Law.
Who's Who In American Education. Directory of American Scholars. Who's Who in U. S. Writers, Editors & Poets. International Authors and Writers Who's Who. Bachrach "Faces of Chicago" exhibition (State of Illinois Center Atrium), June 1989. Dictionary of International Biography. 2000 Outstanding Scholars of the 20th Century. 2000 Outstanding People of the 21st Century. Great Minds of the 21st Century.

Hits on Googol for "Hellie, Richard", 64,000  (Not all of them relevant)  

June 6, 2006