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A portrait of the twilight years of Isarism by Count Sergei Witte (1849-1915), the man who built modern Russia. Witte presents incisive and often piquant portraits of the mighty and those around them--powerful Alexander III, the weak-willed Nicholas II, and the neurasthenic Empress Alexandra, along with his own notorious cousin, Madam blavatsky, the "priestess of the occult".
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A portrait of the twilight years of Isarism by Count Sergei Witte (1849-1915), the man who built modern Russia. Witte presents incisive and often piquant portraits of the mighty and those around them--powerful Alexander III, the weak-willed Nicholas II, and the neurasthenic Empress Alexandra, along with his own notorious cousin, Madam blavatsky, the "priestess of the occult".
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 922
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 1990
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 53mm
- Gewicht: 1458g
- ISBN-13: 9780873325714
- ISBN-10: 0873325710
- Artikelnr.: 21787192
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 922
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 1990
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 53mm
- Gewicht: 1458g
- ISBN-13: 9780873325714
- ISBN-10: 0873325710
- Artikelnr.: 21787192
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Sergei Iu Witte, Sidney Harcave
Volume I: 1849-1903
1_1: My Family
1_2: General Fadeev and His Times
1_3: Some Caucasian Memories
1_4: My Education
1_5: The Odessa Railroad, 1870-1879
1_6: St. Petersburg, 1879-1880
1_7: Kievan Years 1880-1889
1_8: Kievan Years, 1880-1889
1_9: Kiev in the 1880s
1_10: Kiev in the 1880s
1_11: Director of the Department of Railroad Affairs 1889-1891
1_12: St. Petersburg, 1889-1891
1_13: Minister of Ways and Communications, 1891-1892
1_14: Family Matters
1_15: Prince Vladimir Petrovich Meshcherskii
1_16: Fellow Ministers and Other High Officials, 1889-1894
1_17: Minister of Finance
1_18: Emperor Alexander III
1_19: My Work as Minister of Finance under Emperor Alexander III
1_20: The Imperial Court
1_21: Last Days of Emperor Alexander III
1_22: A New Reign Begins
1_23: The New Emperor's First Personnel Changes, 1894-1895
1_24: The Sino-Russtan Treaty of 1896
1_25: The Khodynka Tragedy
1_26: May-October 1896
1_27: Some New Faces, Some New and Unfortunate Policies 1896-1898
1_28: The Visiting Dignitaries, 1897
1_29: Origins of the War with Japan, 1897-1900
1_30: Foreign Affairs, 1898-1900
1_31: A New Minister of Interior and Some Minor Developments, 1898-1900
1_32: The Imperial Court
1_33: On the Road to War and Revolution, 1901-1903
1_34: My Departure from the Office of Minister of Finance
Volume II: 1903-1906
2_1: On the Eve of War
2_22: My Differences with Plehve
2_3: The First Months of War, January-July 1904
2_4: The "Political Spring" and Bloody Sunday
2_5: War and Peace, February-September 1905
2_6: General Strike
2_7: General Strike
2_8: The October Manifesto
2_9: My First Ten Days as Premier
2_10: Impediments to My Work
2_11: The Restoration of Order
2_12: Cabinet Changes
2_13: The Loan That Saved Russia's Financial Strength
2_14: Fulfilling the Promise of the October 17 Manifesto
2_15: The End of My Tenure
Volume III
3_1: Exile?
3_2: Attempts on My Life
3_3: Personalia, 1907-1911
3_4: Formation of the Goremykin Government
3_5: The First State Duma
3_6: The Opening of the Stolypin Era
3_7: The Second State Duma
3_8: Stolypin in the Ascendant, 1907-1910
3_9: Foreign Affairs, 1907-1911
3_10: Court Calendar, 1907-1911
3_11: Politics and the Armed Forces, 1907-1911
3_12: The End of the Stolypin Era
1_1: My Family
1_2: General Fadeev and His Times
1_3: Some Caucasian Memories
1_4: My Education
1_5: The Odessa Railroad, 1870-1879
1_6: St. Petersburg, 1879-1880
1_7: Kievan Years 1880-1889
1_8: Kievan Years, 1880-1889
1_9: Kiev in the 1880s
1_10: Kiev in the 1880s
1_11: Director of the Department of Railroad Affairs 1889-1891
1_12: St. Petersburg, 1889-1891
1_13: Minister of Ways and Communications, 1891-1892
1_14: Family Matters
1_15: Prince Vladimir Petrovich Meshcherskii
1_16: Fellow Ministers and Other High Officials, 1889-1894
1_17: Minister of Finance
1_18: Emperor Alexander III
1_19: My Work as Minister of Finance under Emperor Alexander III
1_20: The Imperial Court
1_21: Last Days of Emperor Alexander III
1_22: A New Reign Begins
1_23: The New Emperor's First Personnel Changes, 1894-1895
1_24: The Sino-Russtan Treaty of 1896
1_25: The Khodynka Tragedy
1_26: May-October 1896
1_27: Some New Faces, Some New and Unfortunate Policies 1896-1898
1_28: The Visiting Dignitaries, 1897
1_29: Origins of the War with Japan, 1897-1900
1_30: Foreign Affairs, 1898-1900
1_31: A New Minister of Interior and Some Minor Developments, 1898-1900
1_32: The Imperial Court
1_33: On the Road to War and Revolution, 1901-1903
1_34: My Departure from the Office of Minister of Finance
Volume II: 1903-1906
2_1: On the Eve of War
2_22: My Differences with Plehve
2_3: The First Months of War, January-July 1904
2_4: The "Political Spring" and Bloody Sunday
2_5: War and Peace, February-September 1905
2_6: General Strike
2_7: General Strike
2_8: The October Manifesto
2_9: My First Ten Days as Premier
2_10: Impediments to My Work
2_11: The Restoration of Order
2_12: Cabinet Changes
2_13: The Loan That Saved Russia's Financial Strength
2_14: Fulfilling the Promise of the October 17 Manifesto
2_15: The End of My Tenure
Volume III
3_1: Exile?
3_2: Attempts on My Life
3_3: Personalia, 1907-1911
3_4: Formation of the Goremykin Government
3_5: The First State Duma
3_6: The Opening of the Stolypin Era
3_7: The Second State Duma
3_8: Stolypin in the Ascendant, 1907-1910
3_9: Foreign Affairs, 1907-1911
3_10: Court Calendar, 1907-1911
3_11: Politics and the Armed Forces, 1907-1911
3_12: The End of the Stolypin Era
Volume I: 1849-1903
1_1: My Family
1_2: General Fadeev and His Times
1_3: Some Caucasian Memories
1_4: My Education
1_5: The Odessa Railroad, 1870-1879
1_6: St. Petersburg, 1879-1880
1_7: Kievan Years 1880-1889
1_8: Kievan Years, 1880-1889
1_9: Kiev in the 1880s
1_10: Kiev in the 1880s
1_11: Director of the Department of Railroad Affairs 1889-1891
1_12: St. Petersburg, 1889-1891
1_13: Minister of Ways and Communications, 1891-1892
1_14: Family Matters
1_15: Prince Vladimir Petrovich Meshcherskii
1_16: Fellow Ministers and Other High Officials, 1889-1894
1_17: Minister of Finance
1_18: Emperor Alexander III
1_19: My Work as Minister of Finance under Emperor Alexander III
1_20: The Imperial Court
1_21: Last Days of Emperor Alexander III
1_22: A New Reign Begins
1_23: The New Emperor's First Personnel Changes, 1894-1895
1_24: The Sino-Russtan Treaty of 1896
1_25: The Khodynka Tragedy
1_26: May-October 1896
1_27: Some New Faces, Some New and Unfortunate Policies 1896-1898
1_28: The Visiting Dignitaries, 1897
1_29: Origins of the War with Japan, 1897-1900
1_30: Foreign Affairs, 1898-1900
1_31: A New Minister of Interior and Some Minor Developments, 1898-1900
1_32: The Imperial Court
1_33: On the Road to War and Revolution, 1901-1903
1_34: My Departure from the Office of Minister of Finance
Volume II: 1903-1906
2_1: On the Eve of War
2_22: My Differences with Plehve
2_3: The First Months of War, January-July 1904
2_4: The "Political Spring" and Bloody Sunday
2_5: War and Peace, February-September 1905
2_6: General Strike
2_7: General Strike
2_8: The October Manifesto
2_9: My First Ten Days as Premier
2_10: Impediments to My Work
2_11: The Restoration of Order
2_12: Cabinet Changes
2_13: The Loan That Saved Russia's Financial Strength
2_14: Fulfilling the Promise of the October 17 Manifesto
2_15: The End of My Tenure
Volume III
3_1: Exile?
3_2: Attempts on My Life
3_3: Personalia, 1907-1911
3_4: Formation of the Goremykin Government
3_5: The First State Duma
3_6: The Opening of the Stolypin Era
3_7: The Second State Duma
3_8: Stolypin in the Ascendant, 1907-1910
3_9: Foreign Affairs, 1907-1911
3_10: Court Calendar, 1907-1911
3_11: Politics and the Armed Forces, 1907-1911
3_12: The End of the Stolypin Era
1_1: My Family
1_2: General Fadeev and His Times
1_3: Some Caucasian Memories
1_4: My Education
1_5: The Odessa Railroad, 1870-1879
1_6: St. Petersburg, 1879-1880
1_7: Kievan Years 1880-1889
1_8: Kievan Years, 1880-1889
1_9: Kiev in the 1880s
1_10: Kiev in the 1880s
1_11: Director of the Department of Railroad Affairs 1889-1891
1_12: St. Petersburg, 1889-1891
1_13: Minister of Ways and Communications, 1891-1892
1_14: Family Matters
1_15: Prince Vladimir Petrovich Meshcherskii
1_16: Fellow Ministers and Other High Officials, 1889-1894
1_17: Minister of Finance
1_18: Emperor Alexander III
1_19: My Work as Minister of Finance under Emperor Alexander III
1_20: The Imperial Court
1_21: Last Days of Emperor Alexander III
1_22: A New Reign Begins
1_23: The New Emperor's First Personnel Changes, 1894-1895
1_24: The Sino-Russtan Treaty of 1896
1_25: The Khodynka Tragedy
1_26: May-October 1896
1_27: Some New Faces, Some New and Unfortunate Policies 1896-1898
1_28: The Visiting Dignitaries, 1897
1_29: Origins of the War with Japan, 1897-1900
1_30: Foreign Affairs, 1898-1900
1_31: A New Minister of Interior and Some Minor Developments, 1898-1900
1_32: The Imperial Court
1_33: On the Road to War and Revolution, 1901-1903
1_34: My Departure from the Office of Minister of Finance
Volume II: 1903-1906
2_1: On the Eve of War
2_22: My Differences with Plehve
2_3: The First Months of War, January-July 1904
2_4: The "Political Spring" and Bloody Sunday
2_5: War and Peace, February-September 1905
2_6: General Strike
2_7: General Strike
2_8: The October Manifesto
2_9: My First Ten Days as Premier
2_10: Impediments to My Work
2_11: The Restoration of Order
2_12: Cabinet Changes
2_13: The Loan That Saved Russia's Financial Strength
2_14: Fulfilling the Promise of the October 17 Manifesto
2_15: The End of My Tenure
Volume III
3_1: Exile?
3_2: Attempts on My Life
3_3: Personalia, 1907-1911
3_4: Formation of the Goremykin Government
3_5: The First State Duma
3_6: The Opening of the Stolypin Era
3_7: The Second State Duma
3_8: Stolypin in the Ascendant, 1907-1910
3_9: Foreign Affairs, 1907-1911
3_10: Court Calendar, 1907-1911
3_11: Politics and the Armed Forces, 1907-1911
3_12: The End of the Stolypin Era







