Chronicle sources
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archaeographic Commission. V. V. VI. Pskov and Sophia chronicles
St. Petersburg: In the printing house of Edward Pratz, 1841-1921. 1851.
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archaeographic Commission. T. 6. VI. The Sofia chronicle
St. Petersburg: Archaeological Museum. commis., 1841 -____. 1853.
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archaeographic Commission. T. 8. VII. Continuation of the Annals on the Resurrection List
St. Petersburg: Archaeological Museum. commis., 1841 -____. 1859.
Complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archeographic Commission. T. 18. Simeon's Chronicle
T. 18: The Simeon Chronicle. 1913.
It is named after the owner, Nikifor Simeonov, the printer of the 17th century Printing Yard. The defective list consists of a copy of the chronicle, which is close to the Trinity Chronicle of 1408, which burned down in 1812, and the Grand Ducal chronicle for 1410-1493. pp. 176-279 (scans 190-290).
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archaeographic Commission. T. 20, half 1. Lviv Chronicle, part 1
It is named after the first publisher (1792) N. A. Lvov. It contains the Second Edition of the Code of 1518, which included numerous sources, including those independent of the Grand ducal chronicle. One of them, an anonymous Moscow cleric, received Athanasius Nikitin's "Writing" from deacon Vasily Mamyrev in 1475 and placed it in the text. pp. 240-376 (scans 248-384).
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, issued by the highest order of the Archaeographic Commission. 23. The Yermolin chronicle
St. Petersburg: Archaeological Museum. commis., 1841 -____. 1910.
The Independent Ermolinsky Chronicle (1440-1488). pp. 150, 155-162 (scans 162, 167-174); continuation of the Grand ducal "Chronicler from the 72nd language" (1478-1491) according to the Uvarov Chronicle. pp. 177-188 (scans 190-200).
A complete collection of Russian chronicles, published by the highest command of the imperial archaeographic commission.T. 24. Typographic chronicle
Rostov Archiepiscopal Chronicle (1440-1505). pp. 183-215 (scans 195-227).
The Voskresenskaya Grand Ducal Chronicle of the second quarter of the XVI century included the main body of chronicles of Ivan III from the beginning of the Russian state to the death of the sovereign. pp. 100-245 (scans 114-259).