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The European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies (EBSEES) collects books, journal articles, reviews and dissertations from Eastern Europe (former countries of Eastern Bloc) which were published in Belgium, Germany, Finland, France, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Austria and Switzerland from 1991 to 2007. The segment "Literature" and "Culture" of the European Bibliography of Slavic and East European Studies contains 18.000 bibliographic entries (from the total asset of 85.000). More information can be found here.
ID | 8018 |
Title | Imperial Russian foreign policy |
Editor(s) | Ed. and transl. by Ragsdale, Hugh; assistant editor Ponomarev, Valerij N. |
Year | 1993 |
Pages | xv+457 p. |
Place | Cambridge |
Publsiher | Woodrow Wilson Center Press and University Press |
Language(s) | eng |
Annotation | Cf.: Ragsdale, Hugh, "The traditions of Imperial Russian foreign policy - problems of the present, agenda for the future", p. 1-20; Anisimov, Evgenij V., "The imperial heritage of Peter the Great in the foreign policy of his early successors", p. 21-35; Bagger, Hans, "The role of the Baltic in Russian foreign policy, 1721-1773", p. 36-74; Ragsdale, Hugh, "Russian projects of conquest in the eighteenth century", p. 75-102; Jones, Robert E., "Runaway peasants and Russian motives for the partitions of Poland", p. 103-18; Goldfrank, David M., "Policy traditions and the Menshikov mission of 1853", p. 119-58; Vinogradov, V.N., "The personal responsibility of Emperor Nicholas I for the coming of the Crimean War: an episode in the diplomatic struggle in the Eastern Question", p. 159-72; Ponomarev, Valerij N., "Russian policy and the United States during the Crimean War", p. 173-92; Bolhovitinov, Nikolaj N., "The sale of Alaska in the context of Russo-American relations in the nineteenth century", p. 193-218; MacKenzie, David, "Russia's Balkan policies under Alexander II, 1855-1881",p. 219-46; Ignat'ev, A.V., "The foreign policy of Russia in the Far East at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries", p. 247-67; McDonald, David MacLaren, "A lever without a fulcrum: domestic factors and Russian foreign policy, 1905-1914", p. 268-314; Rieber, Alfred J., "Persistent factors in Russian foreign policy: an interpretive essay", p. 315-59; Rieber, Alfred J., "The historiography of Imperial Russian foreign policy: a critical survey", p. 360-444 |
Series | Woodrow Wilson Center series |
Subjects | Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / History (1800 - 1917) [Browse all] Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / Foreign Policy, International Relations (General) [Browse all] Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / Foreign Relations / United States of America [Browse all] Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / Historiography, Historians [Browse all] Poland / History (477 to End of 18th Century) [Browse all] Eastern Europe / History (477 to End of 18th Century) / Baltic States [Browse all] Russia, USSR, Russia (Federation) / History (477 to End of 18th Century) [Browse all] Nikolaj I, tsar of Russia Petr I, tsar of Russia / Menšikov, Aleksandr S. [Browse all] |
Review(s) | Review by Sokoloff, Georges, in Politique étrangère, 60(3), automne 1995, p. 803-804; by McGrew, Roderick E., in Slavonic and East European Review, 73(2), 1995, p. 336-37 |
Medium | book |
Holdings | Search WorldCat |
PURL | Citation link |
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