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Love and Conquest - Personal Correspondence of Catherine the Great and Prince Grigory Potemkin (Paperback, New edition)
Loot Price: R787
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Love and Conquest - Personal Correspondence of Catherine the Great and Prince Grigory Potemkin (Paperback, New edition)
Series: NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Of all of history's great romances, few can compare with that of
Catherine the Great and Prince Grigory Potemkin. Their turbulent
and complicated relationship shocked their contemporaries and
continues to intrigue observers of Russia centuries later. Lovers,
companions, and, most likely, husband and wife, Catherine and
Potemkin were also close political partners, and for a time
Potemkin served as Catherine's de facto co-ruler of the Russian
Empire. Their letters offer an intimate glimpse into the lovers'
unguarded moments, revealing both ecstatic expressions of love and
candid insights on eighteenth-century politics. In February 1774,
the Russian empress took Grigory Potemkin for her lover and, it is
now believed, secretly married him a few months later. Particularly
in the first two years of their relationship, Catherine was
consumed by her passion for Potemkin. The hundreds of letters and
notes she dashed off to him between assignations in the Winter
Palace during this time attest to the giddy exuberance of the new
love that so fully embraced her. Love and Conquest contains the
most historically significant and personally revealing of these
letters, only a few of which have ever before been translated into
English. Beginning with Potemkin's letter to Catherine written
while off fighting the Turks in 1769 and concluding with his
farewell note scribbled the day before his death in 1791, the
correspondence spans most of Catherine's reign. The letters are at
once personal and political, private and public. Many of
Catherine's love letters to Potemkin written during their stormy
affair reveal the empress' passionate personality. Potemkin's
letters provide rare insight into his arrogant and mercurial
character, while serving to dispel the myth of Potemkin as little
more than a corrupt sycophant. Love and Conquest reveals the
complexity of Catherine and Potemkin's personal relationship in
light of dramatic changes in matters of state, foreign relations,
and military engagements. After their love cooled, Catherine and
Potemkin continued to discuss and debate a wide range of state
affairs in their letters, including the annexation of the Crimea,
court politics, wars against the Ottoman Empire and Sweden, and the
colonization of southern Russia. Together they carried out the most
dramatic territorial expansion in the history of imperial Russia,
transforming Catherine into a powerful world leader and creating a
bond of affection that would never fully fade. Readers will find in
the letters new insights on Russia's most famous empress, her
passions, and her world.
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