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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0679456724
ISBN-13: 9780679456728
Buy.com Sku: 219493010
Publish Date: 11/8/2011
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 9.5H x 6.5L x 1.5T
Pages:  656
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Annotation:
In this comprehensive biography, noted historian Robert K. Massie turns his attention to one of the most storied figures in history, Empress Catherine, who deposed her own husband to rule over Russia for more than three decades. An expert horsewoman and military leader, devotee of the Enlightenment philosophers, and romantic partner of Gregory Potemkin (among several other paramours), Catherine provides more than ample fodder for her biographer. Massie is known for his biographies of major Russian figures, many of which have become bestsellers--including NICHOLAS AND ALEXANDRA.
Praise
"Massie delivers a fascinating account of dog-eat-dog politics in 18th-century Europe and the larger-than-life Russian empress who gave as good as she got." 10/01/2011

"Massie immerses the reader in Russian history and culture. The author . . . is clearly enraptured by his extraordinary heroine and by the end, so is the reader. Even bone-deep anti-monarchists will find themselves cheering on this absolute despot. What a woman, what a world, what a biography." - Deirdre Donahue 11/12/2011

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1

Sophia's Childhood

Prince Christian Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst was hardly distinguishable in the swarm of obscure, penurious noblemen who

cluttered the landscape and society of politically fragmented eighteenth-century Germany. Possessed neither of exceptional virtues nor alarming vices, Prince Christian exhibited the solid virtues of his Junker lineage: a stern sense of order, discipline, integrity, thrift, and piety, along with an unshakable lack of interest in gossip, intrigue, literature, and the wider world in general. Born in 1690, he had made a career as a professional soldier in the army of King Frederick William of Prussia. His military service in campaigns against Sweden, France, and Austria was meticulously conscientious, but his exploits on the battlefield were unremarkable, and nothing occurred either to accelerate or retard his career. When peace came, the king, who was once heard to refer to his loyal officer as "that idiot, Zerbst," gave him comman
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