The Twilight of Imperial Russia

The Twilight of Imperial Russia

by Richard Charques
The Twilight of Imperial Russia

The Twilight of Imperial Russia

by Richard Charques

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Overview

The fateful twenty-three years following the accession of the last of the Romanov Tsars formed the prologue to the Russian Revolution, and foreshadowed the motives and mental attitudes of Russian policy today. Richard Charques’s detailed, vivid, and objective account of the reign of Nicholas II is based upon a wide study of Russian and other sources. It is given particular force and liveliness by the portrait gallery of the leading figures of the period; Nicholas II, the Tsaritsa Alexandra, Constantine Pobedonostsev, Sergius Witte, Lenin, Trotsky, Premier Stolypin, Miluikov, and Rasputin.

“Striking phrases, fine judgments, flashes of deep perception, flicker through these pages, illuminating the sad, sombre story, which Mr. Charques is not afraid to extend, by implication, into the present.”—Observer (London)

“Informative and well written, and the story of the last phase of the Romanovs is...movingly told.”—New Statesman (London)

“Mr. Charques writes with great lucidity and elegance; he has also unusual discernment, a healthy sense of historical reality, and a penetrating mind...Scrupulously fair.”—Times Educational Supplement (London)

“An uncommonly good book about the decline and fall of the Russian empire—lucid, incisive, well balanced, and extremely well written.”—Chicago Sunday Tribune

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787203099
Publisher: Normanby Press
Publication date: 11/11/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 254
Sales rank: 742,792
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Richard Charques (1899-1959) was a news correspondent, literary critic, author, translator and editor.

He was a correspondent for The Times (London) and literary critic for the New Statesman, the Times Literary Supplement, and the New York Times.

He was the author of The Soviets and the Next War (1932), Soviet Education (1932), A Short History of Russia (1956), and translator of The Nineteen (1929) and Leningrad in the Days of the Blockade (1946), both by A. A. Fadeyev.

Charques died in 1959.
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