After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle Époque Through Revolution and War

After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle Époque Through Revolution and War

by Helen Rappaport
After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle Époque Through Revolution and War

After the Romanovs: Russian Exiles in Paris from the Belle Époque Through Revolution and War

by Helen Rappaport

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Overview

Notes From Your Bookseller

Helen Rappaport’s vast and detailed knowledge of 18th- and early 19th-century imperial and revolutionary Russian history is matched only by her ability to craft a cracking great story.

From Helen Rappaport, the New York Times bestselling author of The Romanov Sisters comes After the Romanovs, the story of the Russian aristocrats, artists, and intellectuals who sought freedom and refuge in the City of Light.

Paris has always been a city of cultural excellence, fine wine and food, and the latest fashions. But it has also been a place of refuge for those fleeing persecution, never more so than before and after the Russian Revolution and the fall of the Romanov dynasty. For years, Russian aristocrats had enjoyed all that Belle Époque Paris had to offer, spending lavishly when they visited. It was a place of artistic experimentation, such as Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes. But the brutality of the Bolshevik takeover forced Russians of all types to flee their homeland, sometimes leaving with only the clothes on their backs.

Arriving in Paris, former princes could be seen driving taxicabs, while their wives who could sew worked for the fashion houses, their unique Russian style serving as inspiration for designers like Coco Chanel. Talented intellectuals, artists, poets, philosophers, and writers struggled in exile, eking out a living at menial jobs. Some, like Bunin, Chagall and Stravinsky, encountered great success in the same Paris that welcomed Americans like Fitzgerald and Hemingway. Political activists sought to overthrow the Bolshevik regime from afar, while double agents from both sides plotted espionage and assassination. Others became trapped in a cycle of poverty and their all-consuming homesickness for Russia, the homeland they had been forced to abandon.

This is their story.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781250273116
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 03/08/2022
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 148,023
File size: 25 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

DR. HELEN RAPPAPORT is the New York Times bestselling author of several books, including A Magnificent Obsession, The Romanov Sisters and Caught in the Revolution. She studied Russian Special Studies at Leeds University and is a specialist in Imperial Russian and Victorian history and a frequent historical consultant on TV and radio. She lives in West Dorset.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations
Map of Paris
Glossary of Russian Names


Chapter 1: La Tournée des Grands Ducs
Chapter 2: ‘We Really Did Stagger the World’
Chapter 3: ‘Paris Taught Me, Enriched Me, Beggared Me, Put Me on My Feet’
Chapter 4: ‘We Had Outlived Our Epoch and Were Doomed’
Chapter 5: ‘I Never Thought I Would Have to Drag Out My Life As an Émigré’
Chapter 6: ‘Paris is Full of Russians’
Chapter 7: ‘How Ruined Russians Earn a Living’
Chapter 8: ‘We Are Not in Exile, We Are on a Mission’
Chapter 9: Emperor Kirill of All the Russias
Chapter 10: ‘Ubiquitous Intriguers’, Spies and Assassins
Chapter 11: ‘A Far Violin Among Near Balalaikas’
Chapter 12: ‘I Forever Pity the Exile, a Prisoner, an Invalid’

Acknowledgements
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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