107,99 zł
The Romanov Empire did not collapse in a single revolution. Long before crowds filled the streets of Petrograd, authority inside the imperial court had already begun to fracture. Ministers competed for influence, economic crises deepened public distrust, and political paralysis spread through institutions unable to govern a modern empire at war. This book reconstructs the final years of Tsar Nicholas II through the machinery of imperial administration itself. Drawing on court correspondence, diplomatic memoranda, and wartime records, it examines how ministerial instability weakened the state from within. The growing influence of mystical court circles surrounding the royal family further eroded confidence among officials who increasingly viewed governance as improvised and disconnected from reality. At the same time, Russia's participation in World War I exposed catastrophic failures in military logistics. Supply shortages, transportation breakdowns, and collapsing troop morale accelerated radicalization inside military barracks. Revolutionary ideas spread not only through ideology, but through exhaustion, hunger, and administrative incompetence at every level of command. The story of the last Romanovs therefore becomes more than a dynastic tragedy. It reveals how empires often disappear gradually inside their own institutions before they fall publicly before the world.
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Liczba stron: 248
Rok wydania: 2026
