Pulitzer Prize winner Massie offers the tale of a princess who went to Russia at 14 and became one of the most powerful women in history.
Born into minor German nobility, she transformed herself into an empress by sheer determination. Possessing a brilliant, curious mind, she devoured the works of Enlightenment philosophers, and reaching the throne, tried using their principles to rule the vast, backward empire. She knew or corresponded with notable figures of her time: Voltaire, Diderot, Frederick the Great, Maria Theresa of Austria, Marie Antoinette & John Paul Jones.
Wanting to be the “benevolent despot” Montesquieu idealized, she contended with the deeply ingrained realities of Russian life, including serfdom. She persevered, and for 34 years the government, foreign policy, cultural development and welfare of the Russian people were in her hands. She dealt with domestic rebellion, wars & the tides of political change and violence inspired by the French Revolution. Her reputation depended on the perspective of the speaker. She was praised by Voltaire as like the classical philosophers. She was condemned by enemies, mostly foreign, as “the Messalina of the north.”
Her family, friends, ministers, generals, lovers and enemies are vividly described. These included her ambitious, scheming mother; her weak, bullying husband, Peter (who left her sexually untouched for nine years after their marriage); her unhappy son & heir, Paul; her beloved grandchildren; and her favorites — the young men from whom she sought companionship and the recapture of youth as well as sex. Here, too, is Gregory Potemkin, her most significant lover & possible husband, with whom she shared a correspondence of love & separation, followed by 17 years of unparalleled mutual achievement.
All the qualities that Massie brought to Nicholas & Alexandra andPeter the Great are present: historical accuracy, deep understanding, felicity of style, mastery of detail, ability to shatter myth & a genius for finding and expressing a human drama.
Chapter 3: Frederick II and the Journey to Russia
Chapter 5: The Making of a Grand Duke
Chapter 6: Meeting Elizabeth and Peter
Chapter 8: Intercepted Letters
Chapter 9: Conversion and Betrothal
Chapter 10: A Pilgrimage to Kiev and Transvestite Balls
Chapter 14: The Zhukova Affair
Chapter 17: “He Was Not a King”
Chapter 21: Dismissals at Court
Chapter 22: Moscow and the Country
Chapter 23: Choglokov Makes an Enemy and Peter Survives a Plot
Chapter 24: A Bath Before Easter and a Coachman’s Whip
Chapter 25: Oysters and an Actor
Chapter 26: Reading, Dancing, and a Betrayal
Chapter 28: The Birth of the Heir
Chapter 30: The English Ambassador
Chapter 31: A Diplomatic Earthquake
Chapter 33: A Dead Rat, an Absent Lover, and a Risky Proposal
Chapter 34: Catherine Challenges Brockdorff; She Gives a Party
Chapter 35: Apraksin’s Retreat
Chapter 36: Catherine’s Daughter
Chapter 37: The Fall of Bestuzhev
Chapter 41: Panin, Orlov, and Elizabeth’s Death
Chapter 42: The Brief Reign of Peter III
Chapter 44: “We Ourselves Know Not What We Did”
Chapter 46: The Government and the Church
Chapter 48: “Madame Orlov Could Never Be Empress of Russia”
Chapter 49: The Death of Ivan VI
Chapter 50: Catherine and the Enlightenment
Chapter 52: “All Free Estates of the Realm”
Chapter 53: “The King We Have Made”
Chapter 54: The First Partition of Poland and the First Turkish War
Chapter 55: Doctors, Smallpox, and Plague
Chapter 56: The Return of “Peter the Third”
Chapter 57: The Last Days of the “Marquis de Pugachev”
Chapter 59: Catherine and Potemkin: Passion
Chapter 60: Potemkin Ascending
Chapter 61: Catherine and Potemkin: Separation
Chapter 64: Catherine, Paul, and Natalia
Chapter 65: Paul, Maria, and the Succession
Chapter 66: Potemkin: Builder and Diplomat
Chapter 67: Crimean Journey and “Potemkin Villages”
Chapter 68: The Second Turkish War and the Death of Potemkin
Chapter 69: Art, Architecture, and the Bronze Horseman
Chapter 70: “They Are Capable of Hanging Their King from a Lamppost!”
Chapter 71: Dissent in Russia, Final Partition of Poland
Chapter 73: The Death of Catherine the Great