Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Prologue: Court politics and reform
- 1 Tsar and boyars: structures and values
- 2 The ascendancy of Artamon Matveev, 1671–1676
- 3 The reign of Tsar Fyodor, 1676–1682
- 4 The regency of Sofia, 1682–1689
- 5 Peter in power, 1689–1699
- 6 Peter and the favorites: Golovin and Menshikov, 1699–1706
- 7 Poltava and the new gubernias, 1707–1709
- 8 The Senate and the eclipse of Menshikov, 1709–1715
- 9 The affair of the tsarevich, 1715–1717
- 10 The end of Aleksei Petrovich, 1718
- Epilogue and conclusion, 1718–1725
- Bibliography
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction
- Prologue: Court politics and reform
- 1 Tsar and boyars: structures and values
- 2 The ascendancy of Artamon Matveev, 1671–1676
- 3 The reign of Tsar Fyodor, 1676–1682
- 4 The regency of Sofia, 1682–1689
- 5 Peter in power, 1689–1699
- 6 Peter and the favorites: Golovin and Menshikov, 1699–1706
- 7 Poltava and the new gubernias, 1707–1709
- 8 The Senate and the eclipse of Menshikov, 1709–1715
- 9 The affair of the tsarevich, 1715–1717
- 10 The end of Aleksei Petrovich, 1718
- Epilogue and conclusion, 1718–1725
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
After three hundred years Peter the Great retains his hold over the imagination of Russia as well as the rest of the world. For Russians in particular, the absorbing issue is the significance of his reign and of what are usually called his reforms. Did they really change Russia? Were they a good thing or a bad thing? Did they lead to democracy? To 1917? To the participation of Russia in European culture? To the alienation of Russia from its spiritual home in Orthodoxy? These are the questions which the story of Peter the Great will elicit in Russia and probably always has elicited, and this book will offer a direct answer to none of them.
I will offer no direct answer because it is my argument that Peter's reign has remained in large and crucial areas unknown. We cannot evaluate the significance of Peter's actions until we know what they were, and the traditional accounts have this in common that they do not tell us enough about those actions. It is my aim to rewrite the political narrative of the reign and its antecedents, using sources which have been largely bypassed or underutilized in the study of the period. The principal result of a new narrative of the politics of Peter's time will be to elucidate the informal structures of power in the Russian state.
Russian and Western historiography of Peter reflects the grand divisions of thought on the Russian past, perhaps more thoroughly than any other subject.
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- Information
- Peter the GreatThe Struggle for Power, 1671–1725, pp. 1 - 11Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001