Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 174
Trim: 5¾ x 9
978-1-4422-5461-9 • Hardback • January 2016 • $109.00 • (£84.00)
978-1-4422-5462-6 • Paperback • January 2016 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-5463-3 • eBook • January 2016 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Paul Bushkovitch is Reuben Post Halleck Professor of History at Yale University. His books include The Merchants of Moscow (1580–1650), Religion and Society in Russia: The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, Peter the Great: The Struggle for Power 1671–1725, and A Concise History of Russia.
Chronology
Introduction
Chapter 1: Russia at the End of the Seventeenth Century
Chapter 2: Tradition and Westernization
Chapter 3: A Quarter-Century of Conflict, 1676–1699
Chapter 4: The Era of Experimentation, 1700–1716
Chapter 5: Crisis and Resolution, 1716–1725
Chapter 6: Monarchy, Aristocracy, and Reform
Primary Sources
Index
About the Author
This deceptively simple book pulls off a nearly impossible task. It tells the story of Peter the Great and the different, complex worlds in which he lived—from the Moscow of the boyars to the Greenwich observatory to the shipyards of Zaandam and Amsterdam. Bushkovitch brings to life both Peter and the entire Russian court in their encounter with Europe beyond Poland, Sweden, and Denmark. Scottish doctors, English astronomers, Italian architects, French garden designers, Ukrainian clerics, and German engineers all take their turn in bringing Peter and his family into an ever-wider orbit. Most remarkable is the balance of deft, vivid character sketches with a sophisticated analysis incorporating the latest research. Bushkovitch manages to distill decades of scholarship and reflection into a single short volume. Thus this is not only an introduction to Peter and to Russia in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, but to the state of the field.
— Nadieszda Kizenko, University of Albany
An outstanding study of a fascinating and crucially important monarch by one of the Western world's most thoughtful and inspiring experts on Russian history.
— Dominic Lieven, University of Cambridge
Bushkovitch writes with admirable directness, and this fine book argues more vigorously than any other for the significance of the Muscovite legacy in the reign of Peter the Great.
— Simon Dixon, University College London
In this brief and easily digestible biography, Bushkovitch captures the essence of Peter's powerful personality—his physical strength, his ceaseless curiosity, and his indomitable will. Unlike several of Peter's earlier biographers, Bushkovitch downplays his subject's image as a lone-wolf modernizer; rather, he asserts that Peter often acted in concert with many of his supposedly reluctant nobles. This well-written survey of the life of an important, dynamic, and often frightening ruler should encourage general readers to delve deeper into the subject.
— Booklist
This is an exciting book that will provide readers with a very different look at early 18th-century Russia. Bushkovitch illuminates the complexities of reform and aristocratic politics during the last years of Alexis Mikhailovich as well as during the reigns of Tsar Fyodor and the regency of Sofia Alexeevna. The scholarship is excellent and it contains new material on the role of the great aristocrats during this period. Bushkovitch's direct and clear writing style is appropriate for all audiences from the least to the most sophisticated. He has the ability to convey the most interesting information in a clear and sensible manner.
— Alexandra S. Korros, Xavier University
It is Bushkovitch's incisive analysis of Peter the Great's relations with his aristocracy that sets this volume apart from other books on the subject. By demystifying the achievements of Russia's greatest ruler, Bushkovitch distills the complex personal politics of westernization for the general reader. It should serve as the standard introduction to Peter the Great for years to come.
— Colum Leckey, Lincoln Memorial University
Unlike so many books that stress Peter's foreign policy, Bushkovitch's Peter the Great focuses on domestic and cultural reforms and Peter's struggle with conservative aristocratic opposition. Concise and tightly argued, this book sets forth the myriad contexts in which Peter acted—Muscovite tradition, seventeenth-century cultural change and late Baroque Europe—and analyzes the key reforms. By focusing on power and political reform, Bushkovitch brilliantly demonstrates the logic behind Peter's incessant drive to europeanize Russia.
— Nancy Kollmann, Stanford University
A dramatic, clear, and engaging portrait of Russia's great emperor and his policies... An original and convincing explanation of Peter's reforms of Russian government.
— Jane Burbank, New York University
New features
Revised and updated sections on the church, foreign policy, and political thought
Bibliography of English-language primary sources