W ith the dissolution of the
Soviet Union there has been an enormous resurgence of interest in Russia's pre-Soviet
past, as well as a great deal of debate and reconsideration of the Soviet era itself. This
shift has not resulted in a simple vilification of everything Soviet or a naive embrace of
all that preceded it, but it has spurred an unprecedented effort to regain the ancient
Russian national heritage. Churches are being restored all across the country, great
Russian writers and artists whose works were banned are once again being honored, and the
individual character of ancient cities and communities is once again becoming established.
Next year, the city of Moscow is celebrating its 850th Anniversary, a celebration that
will mark the recovery, as well as the commemoration, of its glorious past.
For most western visitors, the bulk of
Russia's history is nothing more than a compendium of hazy legends and sensationalist
rumors--from scurrilous stories about Catherine the Great to tabloid television reports of
the miraculous survival of the children of Nicholas II. However, the factual history of
the country is no less compelling than its fabulous history, and even a brief introduction
to the great and not-so-great figures of its past make a visit far more rewarding.
Ancient Russia | The Mongols & the Emergence of Moscow | The
Romanovs |
Napoleon's Invasion | The Path to
Revolution | The Soviet Era
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