Scenarios of Power: Myth and Ceremony in Russian Monarchy from Peter the Great to the Abdication of Nicholas IIPrinceton University Press, 2006年3月26日 - 491 頁 This new and abridged edition of Scenarios of Power is a concise version of Richard Wortman's award-winning study of Russian monarchy from the seventeenth century until 1917. The author breaks new ground by showing how imperial ceremony and imagery were not simply displays of the majesty of the sovereign and his entourage, but also instruments central to the exercise of absolute power in a multinational empire. In developing this interpretation, Wortman presents vivid descriptions of coronations, funerals, parades, trips through the realm, and historical celebrations and reveals how these ceremonies were constructed or reconstructed to fit the political and cultural narratives in the lives and reigns of successive tsars. He describes the upbringing of the heirs as well as their roles in these narratives and relates their experiences to the persistence of absolute monarchy in Russia long after its demise in Europe. |
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... sovereign power that would set them above the ruled and allow them to approach for- eign monarchs as equals . From the formation of the monarchy in the fif- teenth century , when Tsar Ivan III rejected the offer of the title of king ...
... sovereign expressed the dis- tance separating the monarch and his elite from the ruled . Rulers appeared as heroes coming from without , achieving the salvation or transformation of Russia . After the assassination of Alexander II in ...
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