Articles and publications prepared in accordance with the rules adopted in the journal are accepted for consideration.
I. Technical requirements
All materials (text of the article, illustrations and additional fonts, if any) are submitted to email edit-sloves@yandex.ru in formats supported by MS Word, and also additionally in PDF format if the text contains complex formatting and special fonts. Illustrations are attached as separate files, and as a separate file – captions for them.
II. Document structure
The author attaches to the article basic information about him or herself: first name, patronymic or middle name, last name; academic degree (if any); rank (if any); job title; full name of organization (also translated into English); city; country; e-mail.
Articles, notes and publications are preceded by keywords (no more than 15) and a summary (120–150 words). The abstract should briefly outline the objectives, methods and results of the study.
The article is concluded with a list of references in alphabetic order without numbering. Several works of the same author in the list of references are arranged in chronological order. The surname and initials of the authors are italicized.
Links in the text of the article include the author’s last name, year of publication (if there are links to several works by the same author) and publication pages: [Lavrov 2019, p. 143]. In case several books by the same author were published in the same year, designations in Latin letters are introduced – a, b, c after the year of publication.
Notes are made in the form of page-by-page automatic footnotes. The footnote number at the end of the sentence is placed before the full stop. Links to archival materials are provided in the form of page-by-page automatic footnotes.
III. Examples of formatting bibliographic references
Antonov-Ovseenko, V. A. (1924–1933). Zapiski o Grazhdanskoi voine. Moscow, Leningrad: Gosudarstvennoe voennoe izdatel’stvo. Vols. 1–4. 271 + 298 + 350 + 343 p.
Sgibnev, A. S. (1869). ‘Istoricheskii ocherk glavneishikh sobytii v Kamchatke’, Morskoi sbornik, 6, 37–69.
Thyrêt, I. (2014). ‘One Town’s Saint is Another’s Worst Nightmare: Saints Cults and Regional Identity in Medieval and Early Modern Russia’s Upper Volga Region’, in: S. Kuzmová, A. Marinković, Trpimir Vedriš, eds., Cuius Patrocinio Tota Gaudet Regio. Saints’ Cults and the Dynamics of Regional Cohesion. Zagreb: Hagiotheca, 335–349.
Taison, V. (1980). ‘Prezhde i teper’’, Vera i zhizn’, 29, 25–26, accessed August 18, 2022, https://online.fliphtml5.com/bzklq/pefq/#p=29.