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Tsars and Imposters: Russia's Time of Troubles
 
 
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Tsars and Imposters: Russia's Time of Troubles [Hardcover]

Daniel H. Shubin (Author)
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

February 17, 2009
Incomparable villains and heroes surge through the history of medieval Russia. Ivan IV may have been dubbed the Terrible, but when he died, the Rurik dynasty that had ruled Russia for centuries came to an end. And what followed was far worse. This volume is the history of Russia's struggle through a period of weak rulers, false pretendants to the throne, foreign invasions and civil strife. Even the weather was disastrous, and famine was inevitable. War, butchery and betrayals ensued until the Romanov Dynasty took control.

Boris Godunov governed from the shadows during the 13-year reign of the borderline-retarded Tsar Feodor Ivanovich, heir to Tsar Ivan IV, and then for almost seven years in his own name. But by then the brutal death of the 9-year-old Tsarevich Dmitri Ivanovich by Godunov's henchmen, and the effects of his Oprichniki security forces on Russian society, had taken their toll. In the absence of a clear line of succession, imposter princes were put forward by rivals, including the Poles, and proponents of these "False Dmitris" and other contenders only fanned the flames. This was an era when "Get thee to the nunnery!" was a light sentence; enemies who were not forced to retire from the worldly life were brutally tortured and removed from the world altogether.

Add to that the political machinations entailed in the creation of the Russian Patriarchate and Job, Russia s first patriarch, entirely indebted to the Crown. This 'Time of Troubles' wound to a close only after a new and lasting dynasty was established under Mikhail Romanov.

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About the Author

Daniel H. Shubin has written a 4-volume History of Russian Christianity (published with Algora) and The History of Monasteries of Russia. He has also translated five books from Russian into English. Shubin has traveled extensively throughout Russia, studying the various sectarian movements.

This is an original translation from classic Russian sources, principally Karamzin, Kostomarov, Skrynnikov, Solovyov, and Tatishchev.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 234 pages
  • Publisher: Algora Publishing (February 17, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0875866883
  • ISBN-13: 978-0875866888
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,396,178 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Troubles indeed, March 18, 2011
By 
GDP "TPL" (Northbrook, IL USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Tsars and Imposters: Russia's Time of Troubles (Hardcover)
There is no pleasure in writing a review of a book that was a disappointment, but had someone else fairly reviewed this book earlier it would have saved me from purchasing an expensive mistake.

Russia's "Time of Troubles" extends from the death of Tsar Feodor (1598) to the coronation of the first Romanov as Tsar (1613), as fascinating a period of time as can be imagined. To the extent that this book presents this period in a condense narrative it has some value. The book, however, suffers from several material weaknesses, such as:

1) Sloppy editing (from multiple spelling errors to the complete repetition of a paragraph at one point - pg. 8);
2) Sweeping statements about crowds ("Russians seethed with odium and whispered to one another, 'Vengeance is near.'" - pg. 139);
3) Melodramatic language ("The avarice megalomaniac saw only one item standing between him and the throne, a defenseless child" - pg. 41);
4) Lack of substantive footnotes or an index; etc.

The bibliography consists of six Russian sources, and the claim is made that, "This history is the author's translation and adaptation into English" of those texts (apparently a pastiche, of sorts). Without footnotes it is impossible to know which of the sources serve as a basis for any episodes in the book (and from what little I know, two of the source authors - Karamzin and Skrynnikov - had very different approaches to "history" and different views of events).

In short, this is not a book crafted to rigorous scholarly standards and the entire tone undermines its credibility as an attempt at "proper" historical writing. It is an undiscerning, albeit interesting, exercise in storytelling.

The subject period is fascinating enough that the book can sustain some interest (just how many times can a False Dimitri surface? And given the short life expectancy, why would he want to?), but it is more a "beach-read" in paperback than a pricey hardcover purchase.

Addendum: The example of "melodramatic language" cited above appears to come almost directly from Karamzin, who writes in vol. X, "Convinced that the scepter would be handed him who had so long and gloriously ruled as if tsar, this greedy and ambitious man saw only one helpless infant between him and the throne. Just as a lion sees a lamb ..." Closely paraphrasing the rhetoric of Karamzin, who had his own narrative style and purpose, does not indicate independent inquiry or thought.

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