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Catherine The Great

Love, Sex, and Power

Virginia Rounding

$39.99

Paperback

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English
Arrow
01 May 2007
Power politics and sexual politics combine in the life of an extraordinary woman who ruled Russia from 1762 until her death in 1796.

'THE MOST ACCESSIBLE AND ENJOYABLE PORTRAIT YET.' DAILY MAIL

Power, sex, and politics- the fascinating rule of one of Russia's most significant monarchs

Catherine the Great ruled Russia from 1762 until 1796. Famous for the legends circulated by political rivals about her sexual rapacity, some were true - though not the infamous rumour of her death by stallion. However, a conservative Russian court was shocked by her use of her sexuality as a political tool, as well as the number and age of her lovers.

Unhappily married to the Grand Duke Peter, a man who preferred to play with his toy soldiers in the bedroom, they failed to produce an heir, and Catherine turned her attentions to a certain Sergey Saltykov who fathered the future Tsar Paul I. Six months into the reign of Peter III, Catherine, supported by the Imperial Guard, staged a successful coup against her husband and became Empress. It was her ambition to transform a vast but semi-barbaric country with the cultural and political reforms of Enlightenment Europe.

In this fascinating biography, Virginia Rounding reveals an extraordinary woman in all her complexity.

'A great thumping triumph of a book.' DAILY TELEGRAPH

'Rounding shows that the reality is far more interesting than any of the fictions.' SCOTLAND ON SUNDAY

'An intimate study of Catherine's life' GUARDIAN

'Enjoyable and perceptive study . . . Rounding has read widely, and writes history with a no-nonsense style and a respectful relish for the details that make the past come alive.' Simon Sebag Montefiore, SUNDAY TELEGRAPH

'Rounding writes with enviable lucidity, and gives us the most accessible and enjoyable portrait yet.' DAILY MAIL

'Written with vigour and intelligence enough to do justice to its prodigious subject.' SUNDAY TIMES
By:  
Imprint:   Arrow
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 198mm,  Width: 129mm,  Spine: 36mm
Weight:   439g
ISBN:   9780099462347
ISBN 10:   0099462346
Pages:   592
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Virginia Rounding is the author of Les Grandes Horizontales (2003), is fluent in French and Russian (vital for the source material of her new book). She lives in London (EC1).

Reviews for Catherine The Great: Love, Sex, and Power

Lively biography of a much misunderstood, most gifted ruler of Russia. That this most civilized of women should be known by most people only in relation to the infamous and entirely untrue 'horse story' is one of the greatest injustices of history, grumbles London-based translator and writer Rounding. In fairness to that misperception, Sophia Frederica Auguste of Anhalt-Zerbst, having climbed to the top of the feudal anthill, was renowned for affairs with the courtiers and retainers who surrounded her; what with all the amorous hustle and bustle, it's easy to see how a steed could steal into the narrative. Catherine, Rounding makes clear, understood that sex was an element of power. She had come to a St. Petersburg that was still mostly a metropolis of log cabins to be married off to young Peter III, who, it emerged, was a bit of a dimwit and rather easily controlled. Instead of being able to be a wise consort to his young wife-to-be, Rounding writes, Peter found it was the other way round, and he did not, on the whole, welcome this. Catherine was, after all, well-read, fluent in several languages and given to philosophy and literature, though in later life her philosophy was of a practical and even Machiavellian nature; writing that children cried either to complain or out of stubbornness, for instance, she urged that neither sort of tears should be allowed, all crying should be forbidden. Moscow does not believe in tears, indeed, but Catherine had shed many as Peter kept his distance from her, pushing her into the willing arms of a succession of dashing cavaliers and counselors who helped her build St. Petersburg into a mighty city and Russia into a mighty empire; in this regard, Rounding ranks the empress as equal to or greater than her predecessor Peter the Great, who was certainly more murderous than she.A welcome study of a multifaceted, very eighteenth-century woman. (Kirkus Reviews)


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