When a French Fencing Master Witnesses Revolution
In the winter of 1825, Augustin Grisier, a celebrated French fencing master, arrives in Saint Petersburg to teach the art of the blade to Russian nobility and military officers. Through his privileged position in the highest circles of Russian society, he gains access to the imperial court and befriends aristocratic officers who speak in whispers of reform and constitutional government.
Then Tsar Alexander I dies unexpectedly, plunging the empire into dynastic confusion. His brother Constantine has secretly renounced the throne, but few know this. As another brother, Nicholas, prepares to assume power, liberal military officers see their moment. On a freezing December morning in Senate Square, three thousand soldiers refuse to swear allegiance to the new tsar, proclaiming instead their loyalty to "Constantine and Constitution."
What follows is Russia's first modern revolution-a failed coup that will haunt the empire for generations. Grisier becomes entangled in the lives of the conspirators, witnesses the brutal suppression of the revolt, and embarks on a desperate winter journey across the Urals to Siberia, where love and loyalty are tested against the harshest exile imaginable.
Based on the firsthand account of Alexandre Dumas's own fencing teacher, The Fencing Master is part travelogue, part political thriller, and part tragic romance. It captures the idealism of Russia's first revolutionaries, the savage beauty of the Russian landscape, and a pivotal moment when men dared to challenge absolute power-and paid the ultimate price.
So controversial that Tsar Nicholas I banned both the book and Dumas himself from entering Russia, this forgotten masterpiece offers a window into a world of imperial courts, secret societies, and revolutionary martyrdom.