Peter Brown

Professor of Russian, Eastern European, and Eurasian History, Rhode Island College

Peter Brown received his Ph.D. in Russian History at the University of Chicago and worked with the late Richard Hellie. His fields include Muscovy; Rus'; the Russian Empire; the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth; pre-Commonwealth Poland, Belarus, and Lithuania: Ukraine and the Cossack Commonwealth. Comparative history, the sociology of complex organizations; law; historical linguistics and its relation to the study of social evolution; and Finno-Ugric studies. 

Currently, Dr. Brown is completing a manuscript on hereditary unfree labor in Western Eurasia and the Americas, 1400-1800. Russia, Ukraine, Poland-Lithuania, and Belarus figure significantly in this effort. He will then complete a monograph, heavily reliant on quantitative study, on the lower-ranking servitors in the seventeenth-century Moscow service class. Two studies bearing upon these topics are “Russian Serfdom’s Demise and Russia’s Conquest of the Crimean Khanate and the Northern Black Sea Littoral: Was There a Link?,” in Eurasian Slavery, Ransom and Abolition in World History, 1200-1860 (Farnam, Surrey, United Kingdom: Ashgate, 2015): 335-66 and “Muscovite Arithmetic in Seventeenth-Century Russian Civilization: Is It Not Time to Discard the ‘Backwardness’ Label,” Russian History 39, no. 4 (2012): 393-459.