Copyright
Simon Franklin; Katherine Bowers; Copyright of each chapter is maintained by the author.Published On
2017-11-27ISBN
Language
- English
Print Length
440 pages (vi + 436)Dimensions
Weight
Media
OCLC Number
1167489297LCCN
2017433308BIC
- HBTB
- JFC
BISAC
- HIS032000
LCC
- P92.R8
- I54
Keywords
- Russian Empire
- communication
- information
- postal service
- news circulation
- maps and atlases
- signs and monuments
- history of communication
Information and Empire
Mechanisms of Communication in Russia, 1600-1854
Reviews
A short review cannot do justice to the many felicitous discoveries that can be made in this volume.[..] I think the most interesting memory the volume will leave with its readers is of how seventeenth-century Russia operated as a society. We may vaguely imagine that before Peter the Great all was backwardness, chaos, inefficiency and sloth. Here we see, by contrast, a rather well-organized realm, able to meet big challenges; even its famously numerous chanceries did not function badly. This is an unusual work, often demanding but we can be grateful to Open Book Publishers for it.
Prof. Robin Milner-Gulland
"Book Review: Simon Franklin and Katherine Bowers (eds): Information and Empire: Mechanisms of Communication in Russia 1600–1850". Journal of European Studies (1740-2379), vol. 48, no. 2, 2018. doi:10.1177/0047244118773894i
Additional Resources
Contents
1. Early Mapping: The Tsardom in Manuscript
(pp. 23–58)- Valerie Kivelson
- Aleksei Golubinskii
3. Muscovy and the European Information Revolution: Creating the Mechanisms for Obtaining Foreign News
(pp. 77–112)- Daniel C. Waugh
- Ingrid Maier
- Ingrid Maier
- John Randolph
- Alison K. Smith
- Daniel C. Waugh
- Clare Griffin
9. What Could the Empress Know About Her Money? Russian Poll Tax Revenues in the Eighteenth Century
(pp. 287–310)- Elena Korchmina
10. Communication and Official Enlightenment: The Journal of the Ministry of Public Education, 1834–1855
(pp. 311–338)- Ekaterina Basargina
- Simon Franklin
12. Experiencing Information: An Early Nineteenth-Century Stroll Along Nevskii Prospekt
(pp. 369–408)- Katherine Bowers
Introduction
(pp. 7–20)- Simon Franklin