Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
In a manuscript in a Russian archive, an anonymous German eyewitness describes what he saw in Moscow during Napoleon's Russian campaign. Who was this nameless memoirist, and what brought him to Moscow in 1812? The search for answers to those questions uncovers a remarkable story of German and Russian life at the dawn of the modern age.Johannes Ambrosius Rosenstrauch (1768-1835), the manuscript's author, was a man always on the move and reinventing himself. He spent half his life in the Holy Roman Empire, and the other half in Russia. He was a barber-surgeon, an actor, and a merchant, as well as a Catholic, a Freemason, and a Lutheran pastor. He saw the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, founded a business that flourished for sixty years, and took part in the Enlightenment, the consumer revolution, the Pietist Awakening, and Russia's colonization of the Black Sea steppe. A restless wanderer and seeker, but also the progenitor of an influential merchant family, he was a characteristic figure both of the Age of Revolution and of the bourgeois era that followed.Presenting a broad panorama of life in the German lands and Russia from the Old Regime to modernity, this microhistory explores how individual people shape, and are shaped by, the historical forces of their time.
UtmärkelserWinner, 2023 Reginald Zelnik Book Prize in History, Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies Shortlisted, 2022 Marc Raeff Prize, Eighteenth-Century Russian Studies Association for the year's best book in that field
Alexander M. Martin is Professor of History at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Romantics, Reformers, Reactionaries:Russian Conservative Thought and Politics in the Reign of Alexander I (1997) and Enlightened Metropolis: Constructing Imperial Moscow, 1762-1855 (2013).
This is a remarkable book...The book has an almost encyclopedic character. Read this book. Cover to cover. Then give it to your colleagues, friends, students, postal carriers, and pets. Hopefully, someone among them will choose to emulate it. We need more books like this.
Alexa von Winning, Tuebingen University) von Winning, Alexa (Lecturer, Lecturer, Institute for Eastern European History and Area Studies, Alexa Von Winning, Alexa von Winning
Andrew G. Bonnell, University of Queensland) Bonnell, Andrew G. (Associate Professor, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, Associate Professor, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, Andrew G Bonnell
Daniel-Joseph MacArthur-Seal, British Institute at Ankara) MacArthur-Seal, Daniel-Joseph (Assistant Director, Assistant Director, Daniel-Joseph Macarthur-Seal
Amit Prakash, Middlebury College) Prakash, Amit (Visiting Assistant Professor of International and Global Studies, Visiting Assistant Professor of International and Global Studies
Jan Eckel, University of Tubingen) Eckel, Jan (Professor of Modern and Contemporary History and Director of the Institute of Contemporary History, Professor of Modern and Contemporary History and Director of the Institute of Contemporary History
Andrew G. Bonnell, University of Queensland) Bonnell, Andrew G. (Associate Professor, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, Associate Professor, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, Andrew G Bonnell