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Nicholas II by Brian Pearce — book cover
Historical Biography - Royalty & Nobility, Russia - Kings & Rulers - Biography, Imperial Russia - 1881-1917

Nicholas II

by Brian Pearce
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Overview

One of the world's preeminent historians, Marc Ferro is a leading member of the Annales School of France and a recognized authority on early twentieth-century European history. For well over two decades, in volumes such as The February Revolution of 1917 and October 1917, he has demonstrated an unsurpassed skill in capturing the social and political forces that led to the Russian Revolution. Now Ferro turns his considerable talents to the biography of one of the pivotal figures of that era, Nicholas II, the last Tsar of Russia.
For this important new biography, Ferro has searched extensively in Russian archives to illuminate Nicholas's character. What emerges is a vivid portrait of a reluctant leader, a young man forced by the death of his father into a role for which he was ill-equipped. A conformist and traditionalist, Nicholas admired the order, ritual, and ceremony identified with the intangible grandeur of autocracy, and he hated everything that might shake that autocracy—the intelligentsia, the Jews, the religious sects. His reign, as Ferro documents, was one of continual trouble: a humiliating war with Japan; the 1905 revolution that forced Nicholas to accept a constitutional assembly, the Duma; the international crisis of 1914, leading to World War I; and finally the Revolution of 1917, forcing his abdication. Throughout, we see a Tsar who was utterly opposed to change and to the ferment of ideas that stirred his country, who felt it was his duty to preserve intact the powers God had entrusted in him. Ferro also provides an intimate portrait of Nicholas's personal life: his wife Alexandra; his four daughters, Olga, Tatiana, Maria, and Anastasia, sisters so close they signed letters "OTMA," the initials of their Christian names; his son and heir Alexis, who suffered from hemophilia; and the various figures in the court, most notably Rasputin, whose ability to revive the frequently ailing Alexis made him indispensable to the Tsaritsa. (Ferro recounts that, when Alexandra heard of Rasputin's murder, she collapsed in anguish, certain her son was lost; but when Nicholas heard the news while with the army, he simply walked off whistling cheerfully.) Perhaps most intriguing is Ferro's chapter on the fate of the Tsar and his family, examining all the rumors and contradictory testimony that swirl around this still cloudy event. Ferro concludes that Alexandra and her daughters may have survived the revolution, and the woman who later surfaced in Europe claiming to be Anastasia may well have been so.
This authoritative biography by one of the world's great historians shines a bright light on an ordinary man raised to an extraordinary station, who carried an unwanted burden, which crushed him.

About the Author, Brian Pearce

About the Author:
Marc Ferro is Director of Studies in Social Sciences at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes in Paris. He is the author most recently of The Russian Revolution and The Great War.

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Editorials

Library Journal

A highly regarded French historian, Ferro has written extensively on the Russian Revolution. He now focuses on Nicholas, the reactionary Romanov whose troubled reign (1894-1917) helped grease the skids for Soviet communism. Skillfully quoting from numerous letters and diaries, Ferro reconstructs the essential Nicholas: stubborn, shallow, and bound by tradition. Though absolutely mandatory, the accompanying social and political explication is awkwardly integrated into the biography. It's almost as if two distinct titles had been compressed into one. Robert Massie's Nicholas and Alexandra ( LJ 7/67) remains the volume of choice for a general audience, while Edvard Radzinsky's The Last Tsar: The Life and Death of Nicholas II ( LJ 7/92) harbors more interesting details concerning the Romanovs' final days.-- Mark R. Yerburgh, Fern Ridge Community Lib., Veneta, Ore.

Brad Hooper

"His only duty was to keep Russia great, and to maintain intact the powers that God had entrusted to him," says French historian Ferro with regard to the way in which the final Romanov ruler of the Russian Empire perceived his job. The task of all biographers of Nicholas II is to define his ineffectualness; as Ferro has it, it derived from the naive man's rigid belief that no czar of Russia worthy of the title might ever share power with any other individual or body. Nicholas' intransigence in that regard, particularly as the increasingly repressive nature of the czarist regime had resulted in increased and open dissidence, was fatal to his ability to maintain his throne. Abdicating in the face of revolution rather than compromising with those who were forcing his hand, "he abandoned this power that had overwhelmed, burdened and vexed him, without having changed his view of it, and completely unconscious of the crimes he had committed in the name of the autocracy." Upon a well-conceived framework Ferro hangs telling and even colorful detail, resulting in a sound biography of wide appeal.

Book Details

Published
April 22, 1993
Publisher
New York : Oxford University Press, 1993, c1990.
Pages
336
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195081923

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