Peter the Great through British Eyes
Perceptions and Representations of the Tsar since 1698
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Explains how the British have responded to Peter the Great, Tsar of Russia, since 1698.
This book shows how the British have responded to Peter the Great, Tsar of Russia, since his momentous descent on London in January 1698. It uses an extensive range of printed sources to show the reactions to his visit, his personality and his reign by contemporaries and by succeeding generations.Peter the Great's visit to England in the first months of 1698 has been called 'the most picturesque episode in the history of Anglo-Russian relations', and lives on most vividly in popular memory for the devastation caused at Sayes Court, John Evelyn's house and garden in Deptford. Recent celebrations of the tercentenary of that visit have refocused attention on the most famous of Russian tsars, but the story of Britain's love-hate relationship with him over the intervening centuries has never before been told. This study analyses changing British reactions to Peter in an extremely wide variety of printed sources - newspapers and journals, letters and collections of anecdotes, histories and biographies, novels, poems and plays. A final innovative chapter is devoted to images of the tsar as interpreted by British painters from Godfrey Kneller to Daniel Maclise, and by a whole cohort of engravers, illustrating biographies and travel accounts.
'… a significant building block in the growing edifice of writings on Anglo-Russian relations. It supersedes everything else written on the subject, and will appeal to historians both of Russian culture and identity, and of British media culture and international relations in the eighteenth century.' Roger Bartlett, School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London
'… a most impressive volume. It covers a formidable chronological range. It is also great fun: Cross has a masterly eye for quotes, and the book makes a wonderful read.' Jeremy Black, University of Exeter
'… a remarkable study demonstrating the scholarly approach of Professor Cross to its full extent. He has a remarkable talent for seeking out all kinds of individuals and their works in his chosen field, as well as throwing new light on the publications of some famous writers - in this case Daniel Defoe, William Wordsworth and George Bernard Shaw, among others.' Paul Dukes, University of Aberdeen
'This is an immensely enjoyable book … For general readers there is a wealth of fascinating stories, for scholars - copious references to rare publications.' Lindsey Hughes, Rossica
'The book is a significant building block inn the growing edifice of writing on Anglo-Russian relations, and supersedes everything else written on the subject. It should appeal not only to historians of Russia, but also to students of British culture and international relations in the eighteenth century.' The English Historical Review
' … a meticulous and comprehensive account …'. The Times Literary Supplement
'This is an enjoyable book not just for the Peter addict like this reviewer, but also for those interested in British views of Russia generally.' SEER
ISBN: 9780521782982
Dimensions: 252mm x 179mm x 15mm
Weight: 580g
208 pages