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Hardcover The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias Book

ISBN: 0385271875

ISBN13: 9780385271875

The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias

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Book Overview

For three centuries--beginning with the accession of Mikhail Feodorovich Romanov in 1613--the Romanov Dynasty ruled Russia. Its reign ended with the execution of Nicholas II and Alexandra in the early... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

The best there is....

Mr. Lincolm, unlike Robert Massie who wrote "Peter the Great," left me with the clear impression that he understood the source material he had at hand, and was able to verify through corroboration every thing he said. Some of the more incredible stories, or speculative rumors are left out. This does not make his work any less enjoyable, but it does lend Mr. Lincoln's work a feeling of solid thoroughness in its research--something that is lacking in Massie's book. If a story was left out, I felt quite confident that Mr. Lincoln knew of the story, but could not corroborate it to his satisfaction.This book is very thorough and incredible in its vast sweep. But it is broken apart into major periods. Each period is further broken down into topics, such as political history, economic history, social history, and so on. This format makes the book quite useful as a reference as well as enjoyable to read. This is the best book on the story of the Romanov family in the English language to date. And I can see this book firmly establishing itself as a timeless classic, alongside Shelby Foote's "Civil War," or Gibbons, "Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire."

Remarkable

Lincoln opens his book with a candidely written note to the reader explaining the intentions of his book. Quite rightly, he admits that a real account of so vast a subject would take several volumes of this size: instead, he has set out to put concisely and organically the history and biographies of the Romanovs, reflecting his own preferences, prejudices, and feelings. Such a task relies more on the author than the subject: thankfully, Lincoln is the most canny and insightful writers on the subject that I have ever come across. His book is a triumph in every sense; fair, complete, well-researched, and drawing from so many great resources that it seems as though Lincoln has drawn together every rich fountain of knowledge on his subject and made a great pool for every curious mind.The scope of this book is stunning, but Lincoln's organization brings great coherence. First he details and outlines the lives, the personalities, and the administrations of a certain era of the Romanovs; then, in a series of subchapters, he details the events, the wars, the civil unrest, the art, and the accomplishments of that same period. Doing this, he has managed to collect in one relatively short volume what a myriad of books have tried to capture individually. The writing is fluid and lively: professional and not novelesque, but still managing to draw on the imagination of the reader while conveying clearly a great avalanche of knowledge.The author does write from his own perspective, but his views are not overbearing, unfair, or masked with selective facts and underhanded reasoning: in short, the author is not trying to sell you to his point of view, and his understanding of the Romanovs is based in pure reasoning, not political bias or ideology. He clearly thinks little of Catherine II -- but he writes of her with remarkable understanding and honesty. His view is not unfounded: he presents her has a devout autocrat with a shrewd and tactful mind and great mastery over foreign policy who nevertheless was hypocritical in the lip-service she paid to the Enlightenment. Indeed, this is not a radical conclusion and many have come to it before. His views of Peter the Great seem mixed; the author reflects on the magnitude of Peter's accomplishments and the cost of status that eventually took its toll on the Russian identity. His portrayal of Nicholas I is particularly great, having written a separate biography on him, and treating him as every other does with a subject they know so well. The book covers well other topics, from the building of St. Petersburg and its great architechts, to a responsible chapter on the Gold and Iron ages of art and what they meant, in a larger sense, to Russia (He curiously leaves out the Mighty Five composers, which would have fit his theme quite well, but probably for brevity rather than oversight).Lastly, the book treats the touchy subject of the last Tsar and the Revolutions with great skill. Unlike so many other authors who write on th

a "novelesque" history

This is a great history of the Romanov dynasty that teeters between biography and the novel. In some places, it is literally a page-turner. It's not as analytical as some historical texts, but Lincoln provides more than enough information to allow the reader to make his/her own decisions. Every detail is perfectly groomed for presentation, and few stones are left unturned. This book is accessible (ie, those with little background in Russian history will find it intriguing and highly readable) and informative. The only complaint I have is that, occassionaly, it jumps around in time in peculiar ways (but this is not something that really causes one to get lost or confused).

"Sweeping in scale and minute in detail no book is better."

W. Bruce Lincoln does the best job I've seen so far of covering the ENTIRE Romanov history and that of her mother Russia. From rise to fall no writer could have imagined a greater plot. It was once said "to understand the present you must look to the past". To understand modern day Russia I suggest you look to this book.

Brian Wells, Esquire, reviews "The Romanovs"

The entire Eastern section of Europe, extending from its natural geographical eastern boundry-- the Ural mountains--to the next geographical boundry to the west--the Carpathian Mountains in what is now eastern Slavic Republic (formerly Czechoslovakia) and Romania, is one flat space without natural barriers against invasion. As a result, all through history, this land of many different languages and cultures was overrun by invaders--the Vikings, the Swedes, the German/Teutonic Knights and the Monguls. Early on, in their history, the inhabitants of this flat plain learned that a strong cntral authority was their only defense against foregn invasion and plunder. The establishment of Tsar of all the Russias was, therefore, an inevitable result of the geography of the location of the Russian people. If the diverse peoples of the Russian plain were to survive at all, they needed a strong autocratic authority to hold them together against the storms of military invasion. Consequently, in a very real way, the emmense authority that developed around the position of Tsar grew up out of the soil of the Russian plain. If viewed in this light, many puzzling elements of Russian life can be better understood. The reason for their xenophobic reactions to outsiders and their servile attitude toward authority can all be drawn into sharper focus. No longer need we be reduced into racial stereotyping the Russian people as irresponsible children unready to accept the resposibilties of democratic government or as superstitious paranoids, frightened of any change. Their reactions to the world and acceptance of autocratic authority is the merely natural reaction of any people or culture who may have been similarly situated on a flat indefensible plain any where in the world. Bruce Lincoln writes cogently about the sweeping history of the entire Romanov Dynasty. To be sure the autocratic rule of the Tsar did not begin with the crowning of Michael Romanov in 1613. The emergence and growth of the Principality of Moscow dating from 1300 had been accompanied by extremely autocratic rule. Indeed Ivan IV (called the Terrible) was the first prince of Moscow to take on the title of "Tsar of all the Russias" in 1547. However, when Ivan IV died without heirs in 1584, Russia entered into a 29 year peiod of time called "Time of Troubles" during which many boyer families competed for power. What resulted was a power vaccuum which allowed chaos, peasant revolts and suffering to reign at home and which invited foreign invasion from abroad. Only in 1613 did the boyers agree to settle on a single person for Tsar and elected Michael Romanov to that position. From that point on the Russia began a rise to the position of world power that lasted until the time of Napoleon. Bruce Lincoln weaves an interesting tale as he follows the coarse of the Romanov Dynasty through the glory years of the Russian nation through the reigns of Michael, (reigned 1613-1645), his son,
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