There was no slavery in Russia. However, during early centuries (before 15th century AD), southern Slavic tribes were engaged in accidental capturing and trading slaves with Greek/Bysantium merchants at seasonal slavery markets at the towns of the South coast of Black Sea.
no
slaves
Slavs not Slaves. Slavs are Slavic people living in eastern Europe, slaves were treated as sub-humans and sold as live-stock at live-stock auctions. The Slavic people were simply part of the European population then, and now.
In the 9th century Swedish Vikings sailed from the Baltic Sea along rivers into Russia and the Ukraine and settled there. The Slaves called the Vikings Rus and they gave their name to Russia. From Russia the Vikings sailed into the Black Sea and they attacked the Byzantine Empire.
It was brutal because Stalin didn't regard human life and treated his subjects worse than slaves.
In early America, mostly. In the world, absolutely not. Our word "slave" comes from the world "slav," a European (white) people who were apparently taken as slaves a lot back in the day. Slaves could also be captured enemy soldiers of any nation, especially in the ancient world, when slavery was extremely common. Later on, kidnapping African tribesmen became the most profitable form of slavery.
Russia does not and never has had control of Samoa.
slaves
slaves.
check republic
Great Britain.
Russia I think. They had even more slaves than America!
slaves had to ride horses all the way to France to Russia
Nobles and Serfs. Serfs(slaves) were most of the population.
Russia
* Spain * United States * France * Russia * All of Africa (slaves)
Russia, as the self-appointed guardian of Slaves and Eastern Orthodoxy (originally a move to give them justification for fighting the Turks), was defending Serbia from Austria.
Slavs not Slaves. Slavs are Slavic people living in eastern Europe, slaves were treated as sub-humans and sold as live-stock at live-stock auctions. The Slavic people were simply part of the European population then, and now.