Listen "The Tsar Liberates Europe? Russia against Napoleon, 1807-1814"
Episode Synopsis
Contributor(s): Professor Dominic Lieven | In 1812-14 Alexander I defeated Napoleon's invasion of Russia and then created and led a European alliance all the way to Paris. This lecture explains why and how he did this. It discusses Russian grand strategy, diplomacy and espionage, as well as the tsarist military machine, and the mobilisation of the home front. In both Western and Russian historiography the Russian achievement in 1813-14 is greatly underestimated, which seriously distorts understanding of European power politics and the causes of Napoleon's demise. The lecture explains this underestimate partly as a legacy of Leo Tolstoy but also because while 1812 was traditionally seen by Russians as a national war, the victories of 1813-14 were interpreted as the triumph of the dynasty and empire.
More episodes of the podcast Autumn 2009 | Public lectures and events | Audio and pdf
Broke: voices from the edge
10/12/2009
The End of Lawyers?
08/12/2009
Cyprus: The Settlement Process
07/12/2009
Social Theories of Risk and Economic Life
03/12/2009
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.