Suggested Topics within your search.
Suggested Topics within your search.
- History 2
- Politics and government 2
- Aristocracy (Social class) 1
- Central-local government relations 1
- Civil society 1
- Economic conditions 1
- Emancipation 1
- Gentry in literature 1
- Group identity 1
- History and criticism 1
- Landowners in literature 1
- Nobility 1
- Regionalism 1
- Rural conditions 1
- Russian fiction 1
- Serfs 1
- Social conditions 1
- Temperance 1
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"Russian nobility" » "Russian mobility" (Expand Search), "Russian ability" (Expand Search)
"Russian nobility" » "Russian mobility" (Expand Search), "Russian ability" (Expand Search)
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The emancipation of the Russian nobility, 1762-1785 /
Published 1973Table of Contents: “…Preface; I The Russian Nobility from Peter the Great to Peter III ; II The ""Emancipated"" Nobility ; III The Politics of Usurpation ; IV The Legislative Commission ; V Bureaucratic Absolutism 1762-1774; VI The Provincial Reform of 1775 ; VII The State and the Nobility 1775-1785 ; VIII the Resolution of the Problem.…”
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Imagining Russian regions : subnational identity and civil society in nineteenth-century Russia / Subnational identity and civil society in nineteenth-century Russia
Published 2017Table of Contents: “…: the shift from paternalism to abolitionism among the Russian nobility, 1830s-50s -- Former serfs and masters united by shared property rights: Hegel and the case for a new rural civil society -- Centralization and its discontents: the clash between the state and the followers of the Hegelian idea of civil society -- Conclusion: subnational identity and civil society in nineteenth-century Russia.…”
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The imperial Russian project : autocratic politics, economic development, and social fragmentation
Published 2017Table of Contents: “…Chapter Six: The EconomistsChapter Seven: Origins of the Reutern System; Chapter Eight: The Reutern System in Operation; Chapter Nine: Patronage and Professionalism: The Witte System; PART THREE: Social Structures in a Divided Polity; Chapter Ten: Social Identity and Political Will: The Russian Nobility from Peter I, â#x80;#x9C;The Great,â#x80;#x9D; to 1861; Chapter Eleven: The Sedimentary Society; Chapter Twelve: Social and Political Fragmentation in Imperial Russia on the Eve of the First World War; Notes; Index…”
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Noble Subjects : the Russian Novel and the Gentry, 1762-1861
Published 2018Full text (Emmanuel users only)
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