Catherine the Great

Front Cover
Penguin, Apr 1, 1994 - Biography & Autobiography - 400 pages
By delving into the life of Catherine the Great, this acclaimed biographer reveals the rich tapestry of Russia’s past, giving insight into the paradoxical character of its people and their stunning evolution from feudalism to communism to their present-day struggle for a free-market democracy.

This is history as it is rarely written today—elegant, witty, dramatic, and with an intimate knowledge of its characters. And what better subject for a biography than one of history's most powerful women, the German-born Russian empress whose adopted language and culture were French, and whose most loyal correspondents were Voltaire and Diderot? Troyat details the various lives of Catherine II: the ambitious child, the acquiescent yet firm grand duchess, the forceful politician and patron of the arts, the belligerent war maker, and the doting grandparent.
 
“A remarkable woman . . . A riveting book.”—Mary Renault
 
“Brilliantly captures one of the most colorful figures of all time.”—Doubleday Book Club News
 

Contents

Figchen
1
En Route
13
III
22
IV
31
Marriage
44
VI
54
VII
69
VIII
83
The French and the Turks
183
XVII
194
XVIII
205
XIX
218
XX
233
XXI
251
XXII
272
XXIII
289

IX
98
X
107
XI
116
XII
126
XIII
140
XIV
152
Legislomania
169
XXIV
300
XXV
317
XXVI
333
Bibliography
358
Index
369
Copyright

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About the author (1994)

Henri Troyat was a Russian-born French author, biographer, historian and novelist.

The daughter of a writer and translator, Joan Pinkham translated nearly a dozen books over her career, including Pierre Vallières’ Nègres blancs d’Amérique.

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