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Latest comment: 16 years ago2 comments1 person in discussion
Sure thing, the plan is to outline Russian legal thought from early sources, to Russia's imperial age, to Soviet times, and lastly in the post-Soviet space. At this point, the organization of the article follows both chronologically as well being organized around the contributions of important jurists. The purpose of this article is to organize the information around key scholars whose works contributed to the development of Russian legal consciousness, rather than just politicians, notable dissidents, etc.—Preceding unsigned comment added by Haroldberman2 (talk • contribs)
Quite ambitious plans, I must say. It may result in a huge article. Please keep in mind that it is recommended to limit page sizes in wikipedia, due to difficulties with their viewing. For this reason, a special style is adopted in wikipedia of splitting large articles, please see wikipedia:Summary style. You may want to take a look at the structure of the "History of Russia". (BTW you missed pre-Imperial Russia in your sketch)
Please sign your posts in talk pages by typing four tildas ~~~~, which will automagically convert into your signature similar to mine: `'Míkka>t01:31, 5 December 2007 (UTC)Reply