1
Sunderland W. The baron’s cloak: a history of the Russian Empire in war and revolution. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 2014. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3138604
2
The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921 - Mark D. Steinberg - Oxford University Press. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4745368
3
Smith SA. Russia in revolution: an empire in crisis, 1890 to 1928. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2017. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4766847
4
Frame M. The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921: a bibliographic guide to works in English. Westport, Conn: : Greenwood Press 1995.
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Smele J. The Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917-1921: an annotated bibliography. London: : Continuum 2006. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9781441119926
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Evtuhov C. A history of Russia: peoples, legends, events, forces. Boston, Mass: : Houghton Mifflin 2004.
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Dowler W. Russia in 1913. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2010.
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Barnes I, Lieven DCB. Restless Empire: a historical atlas of Russia. Cambridge, Mass: : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2015.
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Gilbert M, Routledge (Firm). The Routledge atlas of Russian history. 4th ed. Abingdon: : Routledge 2007. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1158381
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Burbank J. An Imperial Rights Regime: Law and Citizenship in the Russian Empire. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2006;7:397–431. doi:10.1353/kri.2006.0031
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Kotsonis Y. Chapter 5, Mass taxation in the age of the individual. In: States of obligation: taxes and citizenship in the Russian Empire and early Soviet Republic. Toronto: : University of Toronto Press 2014. 151–73.
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Lohr E. Introduction. In: Russian Citizenship: From Empire to Soviet Union. Cambridge: : Harvard University Press 2012. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3301159
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‘Ex tempore: Did the working class matter in 1917?’ Kritika 2017;18:345–416.https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/36352
14
Bonnell VE, Kanatchikov SE. Chapter 1, From the story of my life. In: The Russian worker: life and labor under the Tsarist regime. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983. 36–71.
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Bater JH. Transience, Residential Persistence, and Mobility in Moscow and St. Petersburg, 1900-1914. Slavic Review 1980;39:239–54. doi:10.2307/2496787
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Bonnell VE. Urban Working Class Life in Early Twentieth Century Russia: Some Problems and Patterns. Russian History 1981;8:360–78. doi:10.1163/187633181X00174
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Bonnell VE. Roots of rebellion: workers’ politics and organizations in St. Petersburg and Moscow, 1900-1914. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983. https://www.degruyter.com/openurl?isbn=9780520322646
18
Bradley J. Muzhik and Muscovite: urbanization in late imperial Russia. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1985. https://www-degruyter-com.nottingham.idm.oclc.org/document/doi/10.1525/9780520312968/html
19
Jeffrey Burds. A Culture of Denunciation: Peasant Labor Migration and Religious Anathematization in Rural Russia, 1860-1905. The Journal of Modern History 1996;68:786–818.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2946720?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
20
Burds J. Peasant dreams & market politics: labor migration and the Russian village, 1861-1905. Pittsburgh, Pa: : University of Pittsburgh Press 1998.
21
Engel BA. Between the fields and the city: women, work, and family in Russia, 1861-1914. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1994.
22
Engel BA. Russian Peasant Views of City Life, 1861-1914. Slavic Review 1993;52:446–59. doi:10.2307/2499718
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Hamm MF, American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies. The city in late imperial Russia. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1986.
24
Hogan H. Forging revolution: metalworkers, managers, and the State in St. Petersburg, 1890-1914. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1993.
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Kuromiya H. Freedom and terror in the Donbas: a Ukrainian-Russian borderland, 1870s-1990s. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1998.
26
Johnson RE. Peasant and proletarian: the working class of Moscow in the late nineteenth century. [Leicester]: : Leicester University Press 1979.
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Johnson RE. Peasant Migration and the Russian Working Class: Moscow at the End of the Nineteenth Century. Slavic Review 1976;35. doi:10.2307/2495656
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Melancon MS, Pate AK. New labor history: worker identity and experience in Russia, 1840-1918. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2002.
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Susan P. McCaffray. Origins of Labor Policy in the Russian Coal and Steel Industry, 1874-1900. The Journal of Economic History 1987;47:951–65.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2122039?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Neuberger J. Hooliganism: crime, culture, and power in St. Petersburg, 1900-1914. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1993.
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Pallot J. Russia’s Women - ‘Women’s domestic industries in Moscow province, 1880-1900’. In: Russia’s Women: accommodation, resistence, transformation. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1991. 163–84.
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Phillips LL. Bolsheviks and the bottle: drink and worker culture in St. Petersburg, 1900-1929. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2000.
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Steinberg M. Moral communities: the culture of class relations in the Russian printing industry, 1867-1907. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1992.
34
Frank SP, Steinberg MD. Cultures in Flux: Lower-Class Values, Practices, and Resistance in Late Imperial Russia. 1st ed. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 1994. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=581552
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Steinberg MD. The Urban Landscape in Workers’ Imagination. Russian History 1996;23:47–65. doi:10.1163/187633196X00051
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Swift AE. Workers and intelligentsia in late Imperial Russia - ‘Workers’ theater and “proletarian culture” in prerevolutionary Russia,1905-1917’. In: Workers and intelligentsia in late Imperial Russia. Berkeley, CA: : International and Area Studies, University of California at Berkeley 1999. 260–91.
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von Geldern J. Life In-Between: Migration and Popular Culture in Late Imperial Russia. Russian Review 1996;55. doi:10.2307/131790
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Theodore H. Von Laue. Russian Peasants in the Factory 1892-1904. The Journal of Economic History 1961;21:61–80.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2114813?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Wynn C. Workers, strikes, and pogroms: the Donbass-Dnepr Bend in late imperial Russia, 1870-1905. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1992.
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Zelnik RE, Columbia University. Russian Institute. Labor and society in tsarist Russia: the factory workers of St. Petersburg, 1855-1870. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1971.
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Bonnell VE. Chapter 2. In: The Russian worker: life and labor under the Tsarist regime. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983. 72–112.
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Chugurin I, White JD, Sapon VP. THE MEMOIRS OF IVAN CHUGURIN. Revolutionary Russia 2011;24:1–12. doi:10.1080/09546545.2011.570905
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Dune EM, Koenker D, Smith SA. Notes of a Red Guard. Urbana, [Ill.]: : University of Illinois Press 1993.
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Vernadsky G. Chapter XVI. In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917 - Volume 3. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972. 75–8.
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Bek A, Rassweiler AD, Lindenmeyr A. Life of a Russian Woman Doctor: A Siberian Memoir, 1869-1954. 1st ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=255644
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Gaudin C. Introduction and chapter 4. In: Ruling peasants: village and state in late imperial Russia. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2007.
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Sukloff M. Chapter 1. In: The life-story of a Russian exile: the remarkable experience of a young girl, being an account of her peasant childhood, her girlhood in prison, her exile to Siberia, and escape from there. New York: : The Century 1914. 1–33.
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Sulkoff M. Chapter 1. In: The Life-story of a Russian Exile: The Remarkable Experience of a Young Girl. Heinemann 1915. 1–33.
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Levine ID, Botchkareva M, Yashka M. My Life as peasant, officer and exile. 1919. https://hdl.handle.net/2027/uc1.b3284358
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Rostislavov DI, Martin AM. Provincial Russia in the Age of Enlightenment: the memoir of a priest’s son. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2002.
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Semyonova Tian-Shanskaia O, Ransel DL. Village life in late tsarist Russia. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1993. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2198473
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Sukloff M. The life-story of a Russian exile: the remarkable experience of a young girl, being an account of her peasant childhood, her girlhood in prison, her exile to Siberia, and escape from there. New York: : The Century 1914. https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433070372796&view=1up&seq=9&skin=2021
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Sukloff M. The life-story of a Russian exile: the remarkable experience of a young girl, being an account of her peasant childhood, her girlhood in prison, her exile to Siberia, and escape from there. New York: : The Century 1914. https://archive.org/details/lifestoryarussi00suklgoog
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Vernadsky G. Chapter XVI of A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917 - Vol 3 (Docs. 38-42). In: A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917 - Vol 3. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972. 79–80.
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Ruane C, Eklof B. Chapter 13, ‘Cultural Pioneers and Professionals: The Teacher in Society’. In: Between tsar and people: educated society and the quest for public identity in late imperial Russia. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1991. 199–211.
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Anfimov AM, Bucher G. On the History of the Russian Peasantry at the Beginning of the Twentieth Century. Russian Review 1992;51. doi:10.2307/131119
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Baker AB. Deterioration or Development?: The Peasant Economy of Moscow Province Prior to 1914. Russian History 1978;5:1–23. doi:10.1163/187633178X00015
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Bartlett RP. Land commune and peasant community in Russia: communal forms in imperial and early Soviet society. Basingstoke: : Macmillan in association with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1990.
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Burbank J. Russian Peasants Go to Court: Legal Culture in the Countryside, 1905-1917. 1st ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=257254
60
Jeffrey Burds. A Culture of Denunciation: Peasant Labor Migration and Religious Anathematization in Rural Russia, 1860-1905. The Journal of Modern History 1996;68:786–818.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2946720?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Bushnell J, Shanin T. Peasant Economy and Peasant Revolution at the Turn of the Century: Neither Immiseration nor Autonomy. Russian Review 1988;47. doi:10.2307/130445
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John Bushnell. Peasants in Uniform: The Tsarist Army as a Peasant Society. Journal of Social History 1980;13:565–76.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3787433?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Confino M. Russian Customary Law and the Study of Peasant Mentalites. Russian Review 1985;44. doi:10.2307/129258
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Chulos CJ. Converging worlds: religion and community in peasant Russia, 1861-1917. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 2003.
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Eklof B, Frank S. The world of the Russian peasant: post-emancipation culture and society. Boston [Mass.]: : Unwin Hyman 1990.
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Ruane C, Eklof B. Between tsar and people: educated society and the quest for public identity in late imperial Russia - ‘Cultural Pioneers and Professionals: The Teacher in Society’. In: Between tsar and people: educated society and the quest for public identity in late imperial Russia. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1991. 199–214.
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Eklof B. Russian peasant schools: officialdom, village culture, and popular pedagogy, 1861-1914. Berkeley, Calif: : University of California Press 1986.
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Emmons T. The Russian Landed Gentry and Politics. Russian Review 1974;33. doi:10.2307/128009
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Engel BA. Russian Peasant Views of City Life, 1861-1914. Slavic Review 1993;52:446–59. doi:10.2307/2499718
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Engel BA. Cultures in Flux - ‘Women, men and the language of peasant resistance, 1870-1907’. In: Cultures in Flux: Lower-Class Values, Practices, and Resistance in Late Imperial Russia. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 1994. 34–53.https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=581552
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Frank SP. Emancipation and the birch: The perpetuation of corporal punishment in rural Russia, 1861-1907. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 1997;45:401–16.https://www.jstor.org/stable/2946720?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Frank SP. Cultures in Flux - ‘Confronting the domestic Other: Rural popular culture and its enemies in fin de siecle Russia.’ In: Cultures in Flux: Lower-Class Values, Practices, and Resistance in Late Imperial Russia. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 1994. 74–107.https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=581552
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Frank SP. Popular Justice, Community and Culture among the Russian Peasantry, 1870-1900. Russian Review 1987;46. doi:10.2307/130562
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Frierson C. Crime and Punishment in the Russian Village: Rural Concepts of Criminality at the End of the Nineteenth Century. Slavic Review 1987;46:55–69. doi:10.2307/2498620
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Frierson CA. All Russia Is Burning!: A Cultural History of Fire and Arson in Late Imperial Russia. Seattle: : University of Washington Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3444480
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Friesen LG. Bukkers, Plows and Lobogreikas: Peasant Acquisition of Agricultural Implements in Russia before 1900. Russian Review 1994;53. doi:10.2307/131194
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Gaudin C. Ruling peasants: village and state in late imperial Russia. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2007.
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Kingston-Mann E, Mixter T, Burds J. Peasant economy, culture, and politics of European Russia, 1800-1921. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1991.
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Hamburg GM. The Russian Nobility on the Eve of the 1905 Revolution. Russian Review 1979;38. doi:10.2307/128972
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Kotsonis Y. Making peasants backward: agricultural cooperatives and the Agrarian question in Russia, 1861-1914. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999.
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Kotsonis Y. "Face-to-Face”: The State, the Individual, and the Citizen in Russian Taxation, 1863-1917. Slavic Review 2004;63:221–46. doi:10.2307/3185727
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Macey DAJ. Government and peasant in Russia, 1861-1906: the prehistory of the Stolypin reforms. Dekalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 1987.
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Pallot J, Shaw DJB. Landscape and settlement in Romanov Russia, 1613-1917. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1990.
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Pallot J, World Congress for Central and East European Studies, International Council for Central and East European Studies. Transforming peasants: society, state and the peasantry, 1861-1930 : selected papers from the Fifth World Congress of Central and East European Studies, Warsaw, 1995. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1998.
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Eklof B, Frank S. The world of the Russian peasant: post-emancipation culture and society. Boston [Mass.]: : Unwin Hyman 1990.
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Edgar Melton. Proto-Industrialization, Serf Agriculture and Agrarian Social Structure: Two Estates in Nineteenth-Century Russia. Past & Present 1987;:69–106.http://www.jstor.org/stable/650840?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Moon D. The Russian peasantry, 1600-1930: the world the peasants made. London: : Longman 1999. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1743899
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Perrie M. Folklore as Evidence of Peasant Mentalite: Social Attitudes and Values in Russian Popular Culture. Russian Review 1989;48. doi:10.2307/130323
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Gareth Popkins. Code versus Custom? Norms and Tactics in Peasant Volost Court Appeals, 1889-1917. The Russian Review 2000;59:408–24.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2679463?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Seregny SJ. Revolutionary Strategies in the Russian Countryside: Rural Teachers and the Socialist Revolutionary Party on the Eve of 1905. Russian Review 1985;44. doi:10.2307/129301
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Shanin T. Russia as a ‘developing society’ - The Roots of Otherness: Russia’s Turn of the Century. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1986.
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Simms JY. The Crisis in Russian Agriculture at the End of the Nineteenth Century: A Different View. Slavic Review 1977;36:377–98. doi:10.2307/2494974
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J. Y. Simms. The Economic Impact of the Russian Famine of 1891-92. The Slavonic and East European Review 1982;60:63–74.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4208433?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Simms JY. The Crop Failure of 1891: Soil Exhaustion, Technological Backwardness, and Russia’s "Agrarian Crisis”. Slavic Review 1982;41:236–50. doi:10.2307/2496341
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Simms JY. More Grist for the Mill: A Further Look at the Crisis in Russian Agriculture at the End of the Nineteenth Century. Slavic Review 1991;50:999–1009. doi:10.2307/2500479
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Wcislo FW. Reforming rural Russia: state, local society, and national politics, 1855-1914. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1990.
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Wilbur EM. Was Russian Peasant Agriculture Really That Impoverished? New Evidence from a Case Study from the "Impoverished Center” at the End of the Nineteenth Century. Journal of Economic History 1983;43:137–44. doi:10.1017/S0022050700029107
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Worobec C. Peasant Russia: family and community in the post-emancipation period. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1991.
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Worobec CD. Witchcraft Beliefs and Practices in Prerevolutionary Russian and Ukrainian Villages. Russian Review 1995;54. doi:10.2307/130913
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Russian Empire : Space, People, Power, 1700-1930. Indiana University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=339112
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Eric Lohr. Russian Citizenship : From Empire to Soviet Union. Harvard University Press 2012. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=3301159&ppg=12
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Sunderland W. Introduction and Chapter 1, Graz. In: The baron’s cloak: a history of the Russian Empire in war and revolution. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 2014. 1–24.
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Mixed Marriage in the Russian Empire - Documents in Russian History. http://academic.shu.edu/russianhistory/index.php/Mixed_Marriage_in_the_Russian_Empire
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Vernadsky G, Fisher RT, Ferguson AD, et al. A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917 - Vol 3. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972.
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Ethnic Diversity - The Prokudin-Gorskii Photographic Record Recreated: The Empire That Was Russia | Exhibitions - Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/ethnic.html
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Evtuhov C. A history of Russia: peoples, legends, events, forces. Boston, Mass: : Houghton Mifflin 2004.
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Hosking GA. Russia: people and empire, 1552-1917. London: : HarperCollins 1997.
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Kappeler A. The Ambiguities of Russification. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2004;5:291–7. doi:10.1353/kri.2004.0026
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Brower DR. Peopling the Empires: Practices, Perceptions, Policies. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2007;8:841–59. doi:10.1353/kri.2007.0047
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Weeks TR. Nation and state in late Imperial Russia: nationalism and Russification on the western frontier, 1863-1914. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 1996.
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BEYOND THE PALE: Jews in the Russian Empire. http://www.friends-partners.org/partners/beyond-the-pale/english/28.html
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Avrutin EM. Racial Categories and the Politics of (Jewish) Difference in Late Imperial Russia. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2007;8:13–40. doi:10.1353/kri.2007.0000
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Blobaum RE. Rewolucja: Russian Poland, 1904-1907. Cornell University Press 1995. https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/58445
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Burbank J. An Imperial Rights Regime: Law and Citizenship in the Russian Empire. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2006;7:397–431. doi:10.1353/kri.2006.0031
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Carrère d’Encausse H. Islam and the Russian Empire: reform and revolution in Central Asia. London: : Tauris 1987.
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Clemens WC. Baltic independence and Russian empire. New York: : St. Martin’s Press 1991.
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Corrsin SD. Warsaw before the First World War: Poles and Jews in the third city of the Russian Empire, 1880-1914. Boulder: : East European Monographs 1989.
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Crews RD. ‘Muslim nationalism in the Russian empire: Nation-building and national movements among the tatars and bashkirs, 1861-1917’. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2003;4:444–50. doi:10.1353/kri.2003.0019
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Dowler W. Classroom and empire: the politics of schooling Russia’s Eastern nationalities, 1860-1917. Montréal: : McGill-Queen’s University Press 2001.
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Dowler W. The Politics of Language in Non-Russian Elementary Schools in the Eastern Empire, 1865-1914. Russian Review 1995;54. doi:10.2307/131607
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Geraci RP, Khodarkovsky M. Of religion and empire: missions, conversion, and tolerance in Tsarist Russia. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 2001.
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Horowitz B. Jewish philanthropy and enlightenment in late Tsarist Russia. Seattle: : University of Washington Press 2008. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3444405
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Horowitz B. Empire jews: Jewish nationalism and acculturation in 19th- and early 20th-century Russia. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2009.
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Kappeler A. The Russian Empire: a multiethnic history. Harlow: : Longman 2001.
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LeDonne JP. The Russian empire and the world, 1700-1917: the geopolitics of expansion and containment. New York: : Oxford University Press 1997.
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Lieven DCB. Empire: the Russian empire and its rivals. London: : John Murray 2000.
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Dominic Lieven. Dilemmas of Empire 1850-1918. Power, Territory, Identity. Journal of Contemporary History 1999;34:163–200.http://www.jstor.org/stable/261214?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Miller AI. The Ukrainian question: the Russian Empire and nationalism in the nineteenth century. Budapest: : Central European University Press 2003. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.7829/j.ctt1cgf882
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Miller AI (Aleksei I). ‘Great-Russians’ and ‘Little-Russians’: Russian-Ukrainian Relations and Perceptions in Historical Perpsective. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2005;6:635–45. doi:10.1353/kri.2005.0042
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Miller AI (Aleksei I), Olson G. Between Local and Inter-Imperial: Russian Imperial History in Search of Scope and Paradigm. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2004;5:7–26. doi:10.1353/kri.2004.0016
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Mondry H. Exemplary bodies: constructing the Jew in Russian culture, since the 1880s. Boston [Mass.]: : Academic Studies Press 2009. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3110414
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David Moon. Peasant Migration and the Settlement of Russia’s Frontiers, 1550-1897. The Historical Journal 1997;40:859–93.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2640127?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Burbank J, Ransel DL. Imperial Russia: new histories for the Empire. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1998.
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Robbins RG. The Tsar’s viceroys: Russian provincial governors in the last years of the empire. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1987.
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Safran G. Rewriting the Jew: Assimilation Narratives in the Russian Empire. 1st ed. Redwood City: : Stanford University Press 2002. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3037416
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Breyfogle NB, Schrader AM, Sunderland W. Peopling the Russian periphery: borderland colonization in Eurasian history. Abingdon: : Routledge 2007.
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David Saunders. Regional Diversity in the Later Russian Empire. Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 2000;10:143–63.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3679376?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Schimmelpenninck van der Oye D. Toward the rising sun: Russian ideologies of empire and the path to war with Japan. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 2001.
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Seton-Watson H. The Russian Empire, 1801-1917. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1967.
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Sunderland W. Taming the wild field: colonization and empire on the Russian steppe. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 2006. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4517879
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Sunderland W. Russians into Iakuts? "Going Native” and Problems of Russian National Identity in the Siberian North, 1870s-1914. Slavic Review 1996;55:806–25. doi:10.2307/2501239
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Ronald Grigor Suny. Nationalities in the Russian Empire. The Russian Review 2000;59:487–92.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2679274?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Weeks TR. The ‘Jewish Question’ in Eastern Europe. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2007;8:409–30. doi:10.1353/kri.2007.0030
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Weeks TR. Russification and the Lithuanians, 1863–1905. Slavic Review 2001;60:96–114. doi:10.2307/2697645
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Werth PW (Paul W. In the State’s Embrace? Civil Acts in an Imperial Order. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2006;7:433–58. doi:10.1353/kri.2006.0046
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Werth PW (Paul W. Toward ‘Freedom of Conscience’: Catholicism, Law, and the Contours of Religious Liberty in Late Imperial Russia. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2006;7:843–63. doi:10.1353/kri.2006.0061
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Werth PW. Baptism, Authority, and the Problem of Zakonnost’ in Orenburg Diocese: The Induction of over 800 ‘Pagans’ into the Christian Faith. Slavic Review 1997;56:456–80. doi:10.2307/2500925
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Paul W. Werth. The Limits of Religious Ascription: Baptized Tatars and the Revision of ‘Apostasy,’ 1840s-1905. The Russian Review 2000;59:493–511.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2679275?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Smith SA. Russia in revolution: an empire in crisis, 1890 to 1928. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2017. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4766847
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Bek A, Rassweiler AD, Lindenmeyr A. Life of a Russian Woman Doctor: A Siberian Memoir, 1869-1954. 1st ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=255644
151
Freeze GL. From supplication to revolution: a documentary social history of imperial Russia. New York: : Oxford University Press 1988.
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Sukloff M. The life-story of a Russian exile: the remarkable experience of a young girl, being an account of her peasant childhood, her girlhood in prison, her exile to Siberia, and escape from there. New York: : The Century 1914.
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Vernadsky G, Fisher RT, Ferguson AD, et al. A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972.
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Ascher A. The Revolution of 1905: a short history. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2004.
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Ascher A. The revolution of 1905: Russia in Disarray. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1988.
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Ascher A. The Revolution of 1905; Authority Restored. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1992.
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V. Ia.  Laverychev. On the Question of the Material Preconditions of the Great October Revolution. Soviet Studies in History;27.http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.2753/RSH1061-1983270138
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Mau V. ‘Bread, democracy and the Bolshevik coup’. Revolutionary Russia 1994;7:34–7.
470
Mawdsley E. The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: war and politics, February 1917-April 1918. London: : Macmillan [for] the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1978.
471
Melancon M. The Bolsheviks in Russian society - ‘The Left Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik uprising’. In: The Bolsheviks in Russian society: the revolution and the civil wars. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1997. 59–82.
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Melʹgunov SP, Pushkarev SG, Pushkarev BS. The Bolshevik seizure of power. Santa Barbara: : American Bibliographical Center-Clio Press 1972.
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W. E. Mosse. Revolution in Saratov (October-November 1917). The Slavonic and East European Review 1971;49:586–602.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4206454?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Pierce RA. Toward Soviet Power in Tashkent, February-October 1917. Canadian Slavonic Papers 1975;17:261–70. doi:10.1080/00085006.1975.11091408
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Rabinowitch A. The Bolsheviks come to power: the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New ed. London: : Pluto Press 2017. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4861811
476
Radkey OH. ‘The Socialist Revolutionaries and the peasantry after October’. HARVARD SLAVIC STUDIES 1957;VI:457–79.https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=20328814583&searchurl=tn%3Dharvard%2Bslavic%2Bstudies%26sortby%3D17&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title4
477
William G. Rosenberg. Russian Liberals and the Bolshevik Coup. The Journal of Modern History 1968;40:328–47.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1878144?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
478
Rosenberg WG. Zemstvo in Russia: an experiment in local self-government - ‘The zemstvo in 1917 and its fate under Bolshevik rule’. In: The Zemstvo in Russia: an experiment in local self-government. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1982. 383–422.
479
Suny RG. Toward a Social History of the October Revolution. The American Historical Review 1983;88. doi:10.2307/1869344
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Volobuev PV. The proletariat -: leader of the socialist revolution. Soviet Studies in History 1983;22:61–82.
481
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army, Vol 2 - The Road to Soviet power and peace. Princeton: : Princeton University Press
482
Hickey MC. Provincial landscapes: local dimensions of Soviet power, 1917-1953 - ‘The rise and fall of Smolensk’s moderate socialists: The politics of class and the rhetoric of crisis in 1917’. In: Provincial landscapes: local dimensions of Soviet power, 1917-1953. Pittsburgh: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2001. 14–35.
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Khalid A. Tashkent 1917: Muslim Politics in Revolutionary Turkestan. Slavic Review 1996;55:270–96. doi:10.2307/2501913
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W. E. Mosse. Revolution in Saratov (October-November 1917). The Slavonic and East European Review 1971;49:586–602.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4206454?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Phillips H. The heartland turns red: The Bolshevik seizure of power in Tver. Revolutionary Russia 2001;14:1–21. doi:10.1080/09546540108575731
486
Pierce RA. ‘Towards Soviet power in Tashkent, February-October 1917’. Canadian Slavonic papers 1975;2+3:261–9.
487
Radkey OH. Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1989.
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Radkey OH. ‘The Socialist Revolutionaries and the peasantry after October’. HARVARD SLAVIC STUDIES 1957;VI:457–79.https://www.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=20328814583&searchurl=tn%3Dharvard%2Bslavic%2Bstudies%26sortby%3D17&cm_sp=snippet-_-srp1-_-title4
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Raleigh DJ. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1986.
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Raleigh DJ. Revolutionary Politics in Provincial Russia: The Tsaritsyn "Republic” in 1917. Slavic Review 1981;40:194–209. doi:10.2307/2496946
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Rosenberg WG. Zemstvo in Russia: an experiment in local self-government - ‘The zemstvo in 1917 and its fate under Bolshevik rule’. In: The Zemstvo in Russia: an experiment in local self-government. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1982. 383–422.
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Suny RG. The Baku Commune 1917-1918: class and nationality in the Russian Revolution. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1972.
493
Smith SB. Captives of Revolution: The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Dictatorship, 1918-1923. 1st ed. Pittsburgh: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2039260
494
Swain G. The origins of the Russian Civil War. London: : Longman 1996.
495
Wade RA. ‘The Revolution in the Provinces: Kharkov and the Varieties of Response to the October Revolution’. Revolutionary Russia 1991;4:132–42.
496
Boleslavsky R, Woodward H. Way of the lancer. Indianapolis: : Bobbs-Merrill 1932.
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Babine AV, Raleigh DJ. A Russian civil war diary: Alexis Babine in Saratov, 1917-1922. Durham: : Duke University Press 1988.
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Bunin IA, Marullo TG. Cursed days: a diary of Revolution. Chicago: : Ivan R. Dee 1998. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9781461730309
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Mikhail Bulgakov,  Marian Schwartz, and Evgeny Dobrenko. White Guard. Yale University Press 2008. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3420449
500
Butt VP. The Russian civil war: documents from the Soviet archives. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1996.
501
Denikin AI. The Russian turmoil: memoirs: military, social, and political. London: : Hutchinson & Co 1922. https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/43680
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Dune EM, Koenker D, Smith SA. Notes of a Red Guard. Urbana, [Ill.]: : University of Illinois Press 1993.
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McCauley M. The Russian revolution and the Soviet state, 1917-1921: documents. London: : Macmillan in association with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1975.
504
Sholokhov MA, Daglish R, Murphy B. Quiet flows the don. London: : Dent 1996.
505
Rabinowitch A. The Bolsheviks in Power: The First Year of Soviet Rule in Petrograd. 1st ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=329980
506
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG, Suny RG. Party, state, and society in the Russian Civil War: explorations in social history. Bloomington, Ind: : Indiana University Press 1989.
507
Smith SB. Captives of Revolution: The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik Dictatorship, 1918-1923. 1st ed. Pittsburgh: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2039260
508
Kenez P. Russian and Eastern European history - ‘The Ideology of the Don Cossacks in the Civil War’. In: Russian and Eastern European history: selected papers from the Second World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies. Berkeley, Calif: : Berkeley Slavic Specialties 1984.
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Erik-C. Landis. Waiting for Makhno: Legitimacy and Context in a Russian Peasant War. Past & Present 2004;:199–236.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3600864?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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Landis EC. Bandits and partisans - ‘Waiting for Makhno: Legitimacy and context in a Russian peasant war’. In: Bandits and partisans: the Antonov movement in the Russian Civil War. Pittsburgh, Pa: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2008. 199–236.
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Murphy B. ‘The Don Rebellion March-June 1919’. Revolutionary Russia 1993;6:315–50.
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Radkey OH, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The unknown civil war in Soviet Russia: a study of the Green Movement in the Tambov Region, 1920-1921. Stanford, Calif: : Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University 1976.
513
William G. Rosenberg. Russian Liberals and the Bolshevik Coup. The Journal of Modern History 1968;40:328–47.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1878144?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
514
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG, Suny RG. Party, state, and society in the Russian Civil War: explorations in social history. Bloomington, Ind: : Indiana University Press 1989.
515
Brovkin V. The Mensheviks’ Political Comeback: The Elections to the Provincial City Soviets in Spring 1918. Russian Review 1983;42. doi:10.2307/129453
516
Brovkin VN. The Mensheviks after October: socialist opposition and the rise of the Bolshevik dictatorship. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1987.
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Jane Burbank. Waiting for the People’s Revolution: Martov and Chernov in Revolutionary Russia 1917-1923. Cahiers du Monde russe et soviétique 1985;26:375–94.http://www.jstor.org/stable/20170079?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
518
Foglesong DS. America’s secret war against Bolshevism: U.S. intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1917-1920. Chapel Hill: : University of North Carolina Press 1995.
519
Ullman RH, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Center of International Studies. Anglo-Soviet relations, 1917-1921. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1961.
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Kenez P. Civil war in South Russia, 1918: the first year of the Volunteer Army. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1971.
521
Kenez P. A. I. Denikin. Russian Review 1974;33. doi:10.2307/128283
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Kenez P. Red advance, white defeat: civil war in South Russia 1919-1920. Washington, D.C.: : New Academia Pub 2004.
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Luckett R. The White generals: an account of the White movement and the Russian civil war. Harlow: : Longman 1971.
524
Kowalski R. ‘Fellow travellers’ or revolutionary dreamers? The left social revolutionaries after 1917. Revolutionary Russia 1998;11:1–31. doi:10.1080/09546549808575689
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Melancon M. Critical companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914-1921 - ‘The SR Party, 1917-1920’. In: Critical companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914-1921. London: : Arnold 1997. 281–90.
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Melancon M. The Bolsheviks in Russian society - ‘The Left Socialist Revolutionaries and the Bolshevik uprising’. In: The Bolsheviks in Russian society: the revolution and the civil wars. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1997. 59–82.
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Melancon M. Critical companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914-1921 - ‘The Left Socialist Revolutionaries, 1917-1918’. In: Critical companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914-1921. London: : Arnold 1997. 291–9.
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Smith SB, ebrary. Captives of revolution: the socialist revolutionaries and the Bolshevik dictatorship, 1918-1923. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2039260
529
Smith SA. The Bolsheviks in Russian society - ‘The Socialist Revolutionaries and the Dilemma of Civil War’. In: The Bolsheviks in Russian society: the revolution and the civil wars. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1997. 83–104.
530
Borrero M. Hungry Moscow: scarcity and urban society in the Russian Civil War, 1917-1921. New York: : Peter Lang 2003.
531
John Channon. Tsarist Landowners after the Revolution: Former Pomeshchiki in Rural Russia during NEP. Soviet Studies 1987;39:575–98.http://www.jstor.org/stable/151958?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
532
John Channon. The Bolsheviks and the Peasantry: The Land Question during the First Eight Months of Soviet Rule. The Slavonic and East European Review 1988;66:593–624.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4209846?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
533
Mary Schaeffer Conroy. Health Care in Prisons, Labour and Concentration Camps in Early Soviet Russia, 1918-1921. Europe-Asia Studies 2000;52:1257–74.http://www.jstor.org/stable/155679?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
534
Figes O. Peasant Russia, civil war: the Volga countryside in revolution (1917-1921). Oxford: : Clarendon 1989.
535
Heinzen JW. "Alien” Personnel in the Soviet State: The People’s Commissariat of Agriculture under Proletarian Dictatorship, 1918-1929. Slavic Review 1997;56:73–100. doi:10.2307/2500656
536
David L. Hoffmann. Land, Freedom, and Discontent: Russian Peasants of the Central Industrial Region prior to Collectivisation. Europe-Asia Studies 1994;46:637–48.http://www.jstor.org/stable/152931?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
537
Diane Koenker. Urbanization and Deurbanization in the Russian Revolution and Civil War. The Journal of Modern History 1985;57:424–50.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1879687?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
538
Koenker DP. Men against Women on the Shop Floor in Early Soviet Russia: Gender and Class in the Socialist Workplace. The American Historical Review 1995;100. doi:10.2307/2169865
539
Kotsonis Y. "No Place to Go”: Taxation and State Transformation in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia. The Journal of Modern History 2004;76:531–77. doi:10.1086/425440
540
Rieber AJ. Landed Property, State Authority, and Civil War. Slavic Review 1988;47:29–38. doi:10.2307/2498836
541
S. A. Smith. The Social Meanings of Swearing: Workers and Bad Language in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia. Past & Present 1998;:167–202.http://www.jstor.org/stable/651109?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
542
Yaney G. Some Suggestions Regarding the Study of Russian Peasant Society prior to Collectivization. Russian Review 1985;44. doi:10.2307/129257
543
Husband WB. Soviet Atheism and Russian Orthodox Strategies of Resistance, 1917‐1932. The Journal of Modern History 1998;70:74–107. doi:10.1086/235003
544
Paul W. Werth. From ‘Pagan’ Muslims to ‘Baptized’ Communists: Religious Conversion and Ethnic Particularity in Russia’s Eastern Provinces. Comparative Studies in Society and History 2000;42:497–523.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2696643?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
545
GLENNYS YOUNG. ‘INTO CHURCH MATTERS’: LAY IDENTITY, RURAL PARISH LIFE, AND POPULAR POLITICS IN LATE IMPERIAL AND EARLY SOVIET RUSSIA, 1864-1928. Russian History 1996;23:367–84.https://www.jstor.org/stable/24660932?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
546
Orlando Figes. The Red Army and Mass Mobilization during the Russian Civil War 1918-1920. Past & Present 1990;:168–211.http://www.jstor.org/stable/650938?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
547
Jones DR. Sbornik 2 - ‘The officers and the Soviets, 1917- 1920: A study in motives’. In: Sbornik 2. Leeds: : Study Group on the Russian Revolution 1975. 21–33.
548
Brooks J. Official Xenophobia and Popular Cosmopolitanism in Early Soviet Russia. The American Historical Review 1992;97. doi:10.2307/2165946
549
Gorham MS. Tongue-Tied Writers: The Rabsel’kor Movement and the Voice of the ‘New Intelligentsia’ in Early Soviet Russia. Russian Review 1996;55. doi:10.2307/131792
550
Gorham MS. Mastering the Perverse: State Building and Language "Purification” in Early Soviet Russia. Slavic Review 2000;59:133–53. doi:10.2307/2696907
551
Borrero M. Hungry Moscow: scarcity and urban society in the Russian Civil War, 1917-1921. New York: : Peter Lang 2003.
552
John Channon. Tsarist Landowners after the Revolution: Former Pomeshchiki in Rural Russia during NEP. Soviet Studies 1987;39:575–98.http://www.jstor.org/stable/151958?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
553
John Channon. The Bolsheviks and the Peasantry: The Land Question during the First Eight Months of Soviet Rule. The Slavonic and East European Review 1988;66:593–624.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4209846?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
554
Mary Schaeffer Conroy. Health Care in Prisons, Labour and Concentration Camps in Early Soviet Russia, 1918-1921. Europe-Asia Studies 2000;52:1257–74.http://www.jstor.org/stable/155679?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
555
Farnsworth B. Bolshevik culture - ‘Village women experience the revolution’. In: Bolshevik culture: experiment and order in the Russian Revolution. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1985. 238–60.
556
Figes O. Peasant Russia, civil war: the Volga countryside in revolution (1917-1921). London: : Phoenix 2001.
557
Heinzen JW. "Alien” Personnel in the Soviet State: The People’s Commissariat of Agriculture under Proletarian Dictatorship, 1918-1929. Slavic Review 1997;56:73–100. doi:10.2307/2500656
558
David L. Hoffmann. Land, Freedom, and Discontent: Russian Peasants of the Central Industrial Region prior to Collectivisation. Europe-Asia Studies 1994;46:637–48.http://www.jstor.org/stable/152931?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
559
Diane Koenker. Urbanization and Deurbanization in the Russian Revolution and Civil War. The Journal of Modern History 1985;57:424–50.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1879687?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
560
Koenker DP. Men against Women on the Shop Floor in Early Soviet Russia: Gender and Class in the Socialist Workplace. The American Historical Review 1995;100. doi:10.2307/2169865
561
Kotsonis Y. "No Place to Go”: Taxation and State Transformation in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia. The Journal of Modern History 2004;76:531–77. doi:10.1086/425440
562
Rieber AJ. Landed Property, State Authority, and Civil War. Slavic Review 1988;47:29–38. doi:10.2307/2498836
563
S. A. Smith. The Social Meanings of Swearing: Workers and Bad Language in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia. Past & Present 1998;:167–202.http://www.jstor.org/stable/651109?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
564
Yaney G. Some Suggestions Regarding the Study of Russian Peasant Society prior to Collectivization. Russian Review 1985;44. doi:10.2307/129257
565
Badcock S. Chapter 1, Introduction: A Prison without Walls? In: A prison without walls?: Eastern Siberian exile in the last years of tsarism. New York: : Oxford University Press 2016. 1–25.https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199641550.003.0001
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Daly JW. Chapter 10 of Russia in the European context, 1789-1914 - ‘Russian punishments in the European mirror’. In: Russia in the European context, 1789-1914: a member of the family. New York: : Palgrave Macmillan 2005. http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781403982261
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Retish AB. Breaking free from the prison walls: penal reforms and prison life in revolutionary Russia. Historical Research 2017;90:134–50. doi:10.1111/1468-2281.12171
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Retish A. Russia’s home front in war and revolution, 1914-22 - "Judicial Reforms and Revolutionary Justice: The Establishment of the Court System in Soviet Russia, 1917-1922”. In: Russia’s home front in war and revolution, 1914-22. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2015.
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Landis EC. Chapter 8. In: Bandits and partisans: the Antonov movement in the Russian Civil War. Pittsburgh, Pa: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2008.
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Communist Manifesto. https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/download/pdf/Manifesto.pdf
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Steinberg M. Chapter 8, Utopians. In: The Russian Revolution, 1905-1921. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2017. 289–349.
572
Fuller WC. Chapter 6, The Roots of Spy Mania. In: The foe within: fantasies of treason and the end of Imperial Russia. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 2006. 150–83.
573
Peter Gatrell. Russia’s First World War: A Social and Economic History. Taylor and Francis 2005. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1733950
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Holquist P. Making war, forging revolution: Russia’s continuum of crisis, 1914-1921. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 2002.
575
Sanborn JA. Drafting the Russian nation: military conscription, total war, and mass politics, 1905-1925. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2003.
576
Sandborn JA. Introduction: Imperial Challenge. In: Imperial apocalypse: the Great War and the destruction of the Russian empire. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2014. 1–20.http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9780191015441
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Sanborn JA. Conclusion: Imperial Apocalypse. In: Imperial apocalypse: the Great War and the destruction of the Russian empire. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2014. 239–64.http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9780191015441
578
Smele J. The ‘Russian’ civil wars, 1916-1926: ten years that shook the world. New York: : Oxford 2015. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4413954
579
Badcock S. Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=321336
580
Gatrell P. Whole Empire Walking: Refugees in Russia during World War I. 1st ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2005. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=455795
581
Lohr E. Chapter 5, Forced Migration. In: Nationalizing the Russian Empire: the campaign against enemy aliens during World War I. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 2003. 121–65.
582
Retish AB. Russia’s peasants in revolution and civil war: citizenship, identity, and the creation of the Soviet state, 1914-1922. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2008.
583
Randolph J, Avrutin EM. This new means of transportation will make unstable people even more unstable": Railways and Geographical Mobility in Tsarist Russia. In: Schenk FB, ed. Russia in motion: cultures of human mobility since 1850. Urbana, Ill: : University of Illinois Press 2012. 218–34.
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Siegelbaum LH, Moch LP. Broad is my native land: repertoires and regimes of migration in Russia’s twentieth century. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 2014. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3138685
585
Badcock S. Women, protest, and revolution: Soldiers’ wives in Russia during 1917. 2004.
586
Clements BE. Bolshevik women. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1997.
587
Engelstein L. Chapter 5, Morality and the Wooden Spoon: Syphilis, Social Class, and Sexual Behaviour. In: The keys to happiness: sex and the search for modernity in fin-de-siècle Russia. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1992. 165–212.
588
Healey D. Homosexual desire in Revolutionary Russia: the regulation of sexual and gender dissent. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 2001.
589
Healey D. Masculine Purity and "Gentlemen’s Mischief”: Sexual Exchange and Prostitution between Russian Men, 1861-1941. Slavic Review 2001;60:233–65. doi:10.2307/2697270
590
Smith S. Chapter 6, Masculinity in Transition: Peasant Migrants to Late-Imperial St Petersburg. In: Russian masculinities in history and culture. Basingstoke: : Palgrave 2002. 94–112.
591
Stoff L. They fought for the Motherland: Russia’s women soldiers in World War I and the Revolution. Lawrence, Kan: : University Press of Kansas 2006.
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Stoff L. Chapter 4. In: Russia’s sisters of mercy and the Great War: more than binding men’s wounds. Lawrence, Kansas: : University Press of Kansas 2015.
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Stockdale MK. ‘My Death for the Motherland Is Happiness’: Women, Patriotism, and Soldiering in Russia’s Great War, 1914-1917. The American Historical Review 2004;109:78–116. doi:10.1086/530152
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Easley R. Chapter 4, The peace arbitrators in the field. In: The emancipation of the serfs in Russia: peace arbitrators and the development of civil society. London: : Routledge 2009. 93–143.https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=231&docID=321336&tm=1505054177170
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Bunin IA, Marullo TG. Cursed days: a diary of Revolution. Chicago: : Ivan R. Dee 1998. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9781461730309
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Marullo TG. Ivan Bunin: from the other shore, 1920-1933 : a portrait from letters, diaries, and fiction. Chicago: : Ivan R. Dee 1995.
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Rendle M. Defenders of the Motherland: the Tsarist elite in revolutionary Russia. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2009.
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Smith D. Former people: the last days of the Russian aristocracy. London: : Pan Books 2013.
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Steinberg MD, Khrustalëv VM. The fall of the Romanovs: political dreams and personal struggles in a time of revolution. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1995.
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Wortman R. Chapter 12, The crisis of autocracy. In: Scenarios of power: myth and ceremony in Russian monarchy from Peter the Great to the abdication of Nicholas II. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 2006. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=232&docID=1441397&tm=1505053068726
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Badcock S. Chapter 8, Feeding Russia. In: Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. 221–37.https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=231&docID=321336&tm=1505059402529
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Dune EM, Koenker D, Smith SA. Notes of a Red Guard. Urbana, [Ill.]: : University of Illinois Press 1993.
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Gorky M, Ermolaev H, Steinberg MD. Untimely thoughts: essays on revolution, culture and the Bolsheviks, 1917-1918. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1995.
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Kanatchikov S, Zelnik RE. A radical worker in Tsarist Russia: the autobiography of Semën Ivanovich Kanatchikov. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1986.
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Retish AB. Russia’s peasants in revolution and civil war: citizenship, identity, and the creation of the Soviet state, 1914-1922. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2008.
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Frank SP, Steinberg MD. Cultures in Flux: Lower-Class Values, Practices, and Resistance in Late Imperial Russia. 1st ed. Princeton: : Princeton University Press 1994. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=581552
607
Gerwarth R, Horne J. War in peace: paramilitary violence in Europe after the Great War. 1st ed. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2012.
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Holquist P. Violent Russia, Deadly Marxism? Russia in the Epoch of Violence, 1905-21. Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2003;4:627–52. doi:10.1353/kri.2003.0040
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Karsch S. Russia’s home front in war and revolution, 1914-22 -"Voronezh: Revolutionary violence and Bolshevik victory.". In: Russia’s home front in war and revolution, 1914-22. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2015. 323–54.
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Koenker D. Collective Action and Collective Violence in the Russian Labor Movement. Slavic Review 1982;41:443–8. doi:10.2307/2497017
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Retish AB. Controlling Revolution: Understandings of Violence through the Rural Soviet Courts, 1917–1923. Europe-Asia Studies 2013;65:1789–806. doi:10.1080/09668136.2013.842363
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Ryan J. Chapter 2, ‘Violence to end all violence’: Ideological Purity and the Great War, 1907-1917, from:  Lenin’s terror: the ideological origins of early Soviet state violence. In: Lenin’s terror: the ideological origins of early Soviet state violence. London: : Routledge 2012. 46–59.https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=59&docID=981651&tm=1505054297578
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Holquist, P. Violent russia, deadly marxism? Russia in the epoch of violence, 1905-21. Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2003;4.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v004/4.3holquist.html
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Freeze, Gregory L. Subversive Piety: Religion and the Political Crisis in Late Imperial Russia. The Journal of Modern History 1996;68.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2124666
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Seregny, Scott J. Zemstvos, peasants, and citizenship: The Russian adult education movement and World War I. Slavic Review 2000;59. doi:10.2307/2697052
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Tolz, V. Imperial Scholars and Minority Nationalisms in Late Imperial and Early Soviet Russia. Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2009;10. doi:10.1353/kri.0.0086
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Kotsonis, Y. ‘Face to face’: The state, the individual and the citizen in Russian taxation, 1861-1917. Slavic Review 2004;63. doi:10.2307/3185727
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Bonnell VE. The Russian worker: life and labor under the Tsarist regime. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=30696799
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Kanatchikov SE. Chapter 1, From the story of my life, from: Book. In: The Russian worker: life and labor under the Tsarist regime. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983. 36–71.
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Bonnell VE. Roots of rebellion: workers’ politics and organizations in St. Petersburg and Moscow, 1900-1914. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1983.
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Zelnik RE, Columbia University. Labor and society in tsarist Russia: the factory workers of St. Petersburg, 1855-1870. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1971.
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Burbank J, ebrary, Inc. Russian peasants go to court: legal culture in the countryside, 1905-1917. Bloomington, IN: : Indiana University Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=257254
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Bartlett RP. Land commune and peasant community in Russia: communal forms in imperial and early Soviet society. Basingstoke: : Macmillan in association with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1990. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=6581915
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Rostislavov DI, Martin AM. Provincial Russia in the Age of Enlightenment: the memoir of a priest’s son. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2002.
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Bochkareva M, Levine ID. Yashka: my life as peasant, exile and soldier. Milton Keynes: : Lightning Source 2010.
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Sukloff M. The life-story of a Russian exile: the remarkable experience of a young girl, being an account of her peasant childhood, her girlhood in prison, her exile to Siberia, and escape from there. New York: : The Century 1914.
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Gaudin C. Ruling peasants: village and state in late imperial Russia. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2007.
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Donnorummo RP. The peasants of central Russia: reactions to emancipation and the market, 1850-1900. New York: : Garland 1987.
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Chulos, Chris J. Peasant perspectives of clerical debauchery in post-emancipation Russia. Studia Slavica Finlandensia 1995;12.
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Matossian, Mary Kilbourne. Climate, Crops, and Natural Increase in Rural Russia, 1861-1913. Slavic Review 1986;45.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2499051
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Simms, J. Y. ‘Once More Into the Breach, Dear Friends’: A closer look at the indirect tax receipts and the condition of the Russian peasantry, 1881-1889: Reply. Slavic Review 1984;43.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2499313
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Seregny, Scott J. Zemstvos, peasants, and citizenship: The Russian adult education movement and World War I. Slavic Review 2000;59.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2697052
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Hoch, Steven L. Did Russia’s Emancipated Serfs Really Pay Too Much for Too Little Land? Statistical Anomalies and Long-Tailed Distributions. Slavic Review 2004;63.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3185728
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Sunderland, Willard. Peasants on the Move: State Peasant Resettlement in Imperial Russia, 1805-1830s. Russian Review 1993;52.http://www.jstor.org/stable/130647
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Worobec, Christine D. Horse thieves and peasant justice in post-emancipation Imperial Russia. Journal of Social History 1987;21.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3788144
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von Geldern, James. Life In-Between: Migration and Popular Culture in Late Imperial Russia. Russian Review 1996;55.http://www.jstor.org/stable/131790
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Frank, Stephen P. Confronting the domestic Other: Rural popular culture and its enemies in fin de siecle Russia. In: Cultures in Flux: Lower class values, practices and resistance in late Imperial Russia. PUP 1994. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=581552
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Popkins, Gareth. Peasant Experiences of the Late Tsarist State: District Congresses of Land Captains, Provincial Boards and the Legal Appeals Process. Slavonic and East European Review 2000;78.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4213009
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Hoffmann, David L. Land, Freedom, and Discontent: Russian Peasants of the Central Industrial Region prior to Collectivisation. Europe-Asia Studies 1994;46.http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09668139408412187?journalCode=ceas20#.VRKX-eG8qzc
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Nafziger, Steven. Did Ivan’s vote matter? The political economy of local democracy in Tsarist Russia. European Review of Economic History 2011;15. doi:10.1017/S1361491611000074
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Eklof, Ben. The Myth of the Zemstvo School: The Sources of the Expansion of Rural Education in Imperial Russia: 1864-1914. History of Education Quarterly 1984;24.http://www.jstor.org/stable/367737
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Hoffmann, David L. Moving to Moscow: Patterns of Peasant In-Migration during the First Five- Year Plan. Slavic Review 1991;50.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2500466
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Simms, James Y., Jr. The Crop Failure of 1891: Soil Exhaustion, Technological Backwardness, and Russia’s ‘Agrarian Crisis’. Slavic Review 1982;41.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2496341
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Engelstein, Laura. Gender and the Juridical Subject: Prostitution and Rape in Nineteenth-Century Russian Criminal Codes. The Journal of Modern History 1988;60.http://www.jstor.org/stable/1881400
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Mironov, Boris N. New Approaches to Old Problems: The Well-Being of the Population of Russia from 1821 to 1910 as Measured by Physical Stature. Slavic Review 1999;58.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2672985
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Perrie, Maureen. ‘A worker in disguise’; A.V. Peshekhonov’s contribution to the debate on the peasant at the turn of the century. In: Economy and Society in Russia and the Soviet Union, 1860-1930. Macmillan 1992.
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Wilbur, Elvira M. Was Russian Peasant Agriculture Really That Impoverished? New Evidence from a Case Study from the ‘Impoverished Center’ at the End of the Nineteenth Century. Journal of Economic History 1983;43.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2120273
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Easley, Roxanne. Opening Public Space: The Peace Arbitrator and Rural Politicization, 1861-1864. Slavic Review 2002;61.http://www.jstor.org/stable/3090387
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Channon, John. Tsarist Landowners after the Revolution: Former Pomeshchiki in Rural Russia during NEP. Soviet Studies 1987;39.http://www.jstor.org/stable/151958
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Sanders, John Thomas. ‘Once More Into the Breach, Dear Friends’: A Closer Look at Indirect Tax Receipts and the Condition of the Russian Peasantry, 1881-1899. Slavic Review 1984;43.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2499312
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Mironov, Boris. The Russian Peasant Commune After the Reforms of the 1860s. Slavic Review 1985;44.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2498014
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Frank, Stephen P. Popular justice, community and culture among the Russian peasantry, 1870-1900. Russian Review 1987;46.http://www.jstor.org/stable/130562
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Kotsonis Y. Making peasants backward: agricultural cooperatives and the Agrarian question in Russia, 1861-1914. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999.
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Gerasimov I, Palgrave Connect (Online Service). Modernism and public reform in late imperial Russia: rural professionals and self-organization, 1905-30. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: : Palgrave Macmillan 2009. http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230250901
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Moon D. The Russian peasantry, 1600-1930: the world the peasants made. London: : Longman 1999. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1743899
704
Corrsin SD. Warsaw before the First World War: Poles and Jews in the third city of the Russian Empire, 1880-1914. Boulder: : East European Monographs 1989.
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Miller, A. Between local and inter-imperial - Russian imperial history in search of scope and paradigm. Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2004;5.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v005/5.1miller.html
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Dowler W. Classroom and empire: the politics of schooling Russia’s Eastern nationalities, 1860-1917. Montréal: : McGill-Queen’s University Press 2001.
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Horowitz B. Empire jews: Jewish nationalism and acculturation in 19th- and early 20th-century Russia. Bloomington, Ind: : Slavica Publishers 2009.
714
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Lieven DCB. Empire: the Russian empire and its rivals. London: : John Murray 2000.
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Pearson R. National minorities in Eastern Europe, 1848-1945. London: : Macmillan 1983.
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Masoero A. Layers of property in the tsar’s settlement colony: projects of land privatization in Siberia in the late nineteenth century. Central Asian Survey 2010;29:9–32. doi:10.1080/02634931003765498
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Suny, Ronald G. Nationalities in the Russian Empire. Russian Review 2000;59.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2679274
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Orbach A. New voices of Russian Jewry: a study of the Russian-Jewish press of Odessa in the era of the great reforms 1860-1871. Leiden: : Brill 1980.
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Brower, Daniel R. Peopling the Empires: Practices, Perceptions, Policies. Kritika : Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History;8.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v008/8.4brower.html
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Sahadeo, J. Progress or Peril: migrants and locals in Russian Tashkent, 1906-1914. In: Peopling the Russian Periphery: Borderland colonisation in Eurasian history. Routledge 2007.
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Steinwedel, Charles. Resettling people, unsettling the Empire: migration and the challenges of governance, 1861-1917. In: Peopling the Russian Periphery: Borderland colonisation in Eurasian history. Routledge 2007.
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Weeks, T. R. The ‘Jewish question’ in Eastern Europe. Kritika - Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2007;8.https://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v008/8.2weeks.html
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739
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746
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Zimmerman JD, ebrary, Inc. Poles, Jews, and the politics of nationality: the Bund and the Polish Socialist Party in late tsarist Russia, 1892-1914. Madison, Wisc: : University of Wisconsin Press 2004. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3444671
751
Önol O. The Tsar’s Armenians: a minority in late Imperial Russia. London: : I.B. Tauris 2017.
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Miller BR. Rural unrest during the first Russian Revolution: Kursk Province, 1905-1906. Budapest: : Central European University Press 2013.
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Ury S, ebrary, Inc. Barricades and banners: the Revolution of 1905 and the transformation of Warsaw jewry. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2012. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=922486
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Rubenstein J, ebrary, Inc. Leon Trotsky: a revolutionary’s life. New Haven: : Yale University Press 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3420741
755
Ruthchild RG, ebrary. Equality & revolution: women’s rights in the Russian Empire, 1905-1917. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2010. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2039271
756
Smele J, Heywood A. The Russian Revolution of 1905: centenary perspectives. London: : Routledge 2005.
757
Ascher A. The Revolution of 1905: a short history. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 2004. https://www.degruyter.com/openurl?isbn=9780804766975
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Verner AM. The crisis of Russian autocracy: Nicholas II and the 1905 revolution. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1990.
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Surh GD. 1905 in St. Petersburg: labor, society, and revolution. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1989.
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Rice C, University of Birmingham. Russian workers and the Socialist-Revolutionary Party through the revolution of 1905-07. Basingstoke: : Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham 1988.
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Edelman R. Proletarian peasants: the revolution of 1905 in Russia’s southwest. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1987.
767
Reichman H. Railwaymen and revolution: Russia, 1905. Berkeley [Calif.]: : University of California Press 1987.
768
Shanin T. Russia, 1905-07: revolution as a moment of truth. London: : Macmillan 1986.
769
Bushnell J. Mutiny amid repression: Russian soldiers in the Revolution of 1905-1906. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1985.
770
King D, Porter C. Blood & laughter: caricatures from the 1905 revolution. London: : J. Cape 1983.
771
Engelstein L. Moscow, 1905: working-class organization and political conflict. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1982.
772
Galai S. The role of the Union of Unions in the Revolution of 1905. Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 1976;24:512–25.https://www.jstor.org/stable/41045365
773
Perrie M. The agrarian policy of the Russian Socialist-Revolutionary Party, from its origins through the revolution of 1905-1907. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1976.
774
Harcave S. The Russian Revolution of 1905. London: : Collier 1970.
775
Schwarz SM, Inter-university Project on the History of the Menshevik Movement. The Russian Revolution of 1905: the workers’ movement and the formation of Bolshevism and Menshevism. Chicago: : University of Chicago Press 1967.
776
Lenin VI. The revolution of 1905. London: : Martin Lawrence Ltd 1931.
777
Papastratigakis N. Russian imperialism and naval power: military strategy and the build-up to the Russian-Japanese war. London: : Tauris 2011.
778
Steinberg JW. All the tsar’s men: Russia’s General Staff and the fate of the empire, 1898-1914. Washington, D.C.: : Woodrow Wilson Center Press 2010.
779
Kowner R. The impact of the Russo-Japanese War. London: : Routledge 2007.
780
Kowner R, Shillony B-A, Chiharu I, et al. Rethinking the Russo-Japanese war, 1904-05. Folkestone: : Global Oriental 2006.
781
Steinberg JW, ebrary, Inc. The Russo-Japanese war in global perspective: World War Zero. Leiden: : Brill 2005. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=280826
782
Nish IH. The Russo-Japanese war, 1904-5: a collection of eight volumes. Folkstone, Kent: : Global Oriental 2003.
783
Jukes G. The Russo-Japanese War 1904-1905. Oxford: : Osprey 2002.
784
Schimmelpenninck van der Oye D. Toward the rising sun: Russian ideologies of empire and the path to war with Japan. DeKalb, Ill: : Northern Illinois University Press 2001.
785
Sakurai T, Ōkuma S, Bacon AM, et al. Human bullets: a soldier’s story of the Russo-Japanese War. Lincoln: : University of Nebraska Press 1999.
786
Wells D, Wilson S. The Russo-Japanese War in cultural perspective, 1904-05. Basingstoke: : Palgrave 1999.
787
McDonald DM. United government and foreign policy in Russia, 1900-1914. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1992.
788
Menning B. Bayonets before bullets: the Imperial Russian Army, 1861-1914. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1992.
789
Nish IH. The origins of the Russo-Japanese war. London: : Longman 1985.
790
Esthus RA. Nicholas II and the Russo-Japanese War. Russian Review 1981;40. doi:10.2307/129919
791
Asakawa K, Williams FW. The Russo-Japanese conflict: its causes and issues. Westminster: : Archibald Constable & Co 1904.
792
Stone DR. The Russian Army in the Great War: the Eastern Front, 1914-1917. Lawrence, KS: : University Press of Kansas 2015.
793
Stoff L. Russia’s sisters of mercy and the Great War: more than binding men’s wounds. Lawrence, Kansas: : University Press of Kansas 2015.
794
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
795
Boleslavsky R, Woodward H. Way of the lancer. Indianapolis: : Bobbs-Merrill 1932.
796
Dune EM, Koenker D, Smith SA. Notes of a Red Guard. Urbana, [Ill.]: : University of Illinois Press 1993.
797
Farmborough F. With the armies of the Tsar: a nurse at the Russian Front in war and revolution, 1914-1918. 1st Cooper Square Press ed. New York: : Cooper Square Press 2000.
798
Knox AWF. With the Russian army, 1914-1917. New York: : Arno Press 1971.
799
Paustovsky K, Harari M, Duncan M, et al. Story of a life. London: : Harvill Press 1964.
800
Golovin NN. The Russian army in the world war. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1931.
801
Rutherford W. The Tsar’s war, 1914-1917: the story of the Imperial Russian army in the First World War. Rev. ed. Cambridge: : Ian Faulkner 1992.
802
Vernadsky G, Fisher RT, Ferguson AD, et al. A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972.
803
Seregny, Scott J. Zemstvos, peasants, and citizenship: The Russian adult education movement and World War I. Slavic Review 2000;59.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2697052
804
Matsuzato, K. The role of the zemstva in the creation and collapse of tsarism’s war efforts during World War One. Jahrbucher fur Geschichte Osteuropas 1998;46.
805
Sanborn, Joshua A. The mobilization of 1914 and the question of the Russian nation: A reexamination. Slavic Review 2000;59.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2697051
806
Fuller WC. The foe within: fantasies of treason and the end of Imperial Russia. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 2006. https://www.degruyter.com/openurl?isbn=9781501732430
807
Melancon MS. The socialist revolutionaries and the Russian anti-war movement, 1914-1917. Columbus: : Ohio State University Press 1990.
808
Lohr, Eric. The Russian Army and the Jews: Mass Deportation, Hostages, and Violence during World War I. Russian Review 2001;60.http://www.jstor.org/stable/2679668
809
Sanborn, J. The Genesis of Russian Warlordism: Violence and Governance during the First World War and the Civil War. Contemporary European History 2010;19.http://search.proquest.com/docview/577063056?accountid=8018
810
Stone N. The eastern front, 1914-1917. London: : Hodder and Stoughton 1975.
811
Gleason, W. The All Russian Union of Zemstvos and World War One. In: The Zemstvo in Russia: An Experiment in Local Self Government. 1982.
812
Ant︠s︡yferov AN, Bilimovich A, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Russian agriculture during the war. New Haven [Conn.]: : Yale University Press 1930.
813
Gatrell P. Russia’s First World War: a social and economic history. 1st ed. Harlow, England: : Pearson/Longman 2005. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1733950
814
Gatrell, P. Prisoners of war on the eastern front during World War I. Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2005;6.http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/v006/6.3gatrell.html
815
Seregny, Scott J. Peasants, nation, and local government in wartime Russia. Slavic Review 2000;59. doi:10.2307/2697055
816
Pyle, E. E. Peasant strategies for obtaining State aid: A study of petitions during World War One. Russian History = Histoire Russe 1997;24. doi:10.1163/187633197X00041
817
Lohr, Eric. Patriotic violence and the State: the Moscow riots of May 1915. Kritika 2003;4.http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/toc/kri4.3.html
818
Jahn H. Patriotic culture in Russia during World War I. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1995.
819
Rachamimov A. POWs and the Great War: captivity on the Eastern Front. Oxford: : Berg Publishers 2002.
820
Engel, Barbara A. Not by bread alone: Subsistence riots in Russia during World War 1. Journal of Modern History 1997;69.http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/245591
821
Lohr E. Nationalizing the Russian Empire: the campaign against enemy aliens during World War I. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 2003. Table of contents http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy037/2002191913.html
822
Jahn, Hubertus. For Tsar and Fatherland? Russian Popular Culture and the First World War. In: Cultures in Flux: Lower class values, practices and resistance in Late Imperial Russia. PUP 1994. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?docID=581552&ppg=137
823
Struve PB. Food supply in Russia during the world war. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1930.
824
Sanborn, Joshua A. Conscription, correspondence, and politics in late imperial Russia. Russian History-Histoire Russe 1997;24.http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/10.1163/187633197x00032
825
Benvenuti, F. Armageddon not averted - Russia’s war, 1914-21. Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 2005;6.http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/kritika/toc/kri6.3.html
826
Gatrell P, ebrary, Inc. A whole empire walking: refugees in Russia during World War I. 1st pbk. ed. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2005. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=455795
827
Seregny, Scott J. A wager on the peasantry: Anti-zemstvo riots, adult education and the Russian village during World War One: Stavropol province. Slavonic and East European Review 2001;79.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4213156
828
Pyle, E. E. Peasant strategies for obtaining State aid: A study of petitions during World War One. Russian History = Histoire Russe 1997;24. doi:10.1163/187633197X00041
829
Hughes, Michael. ‘Revolution Was in the Air’: British Officials in Russia during the First World War. Journal of Contemporary History 1996;31.http://www.jstor.org/stable/261096
830
Holquist P. Making war, forging revolution: Russia’s continuum of crisis, 1914-1921. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 2002.
831
Denikin AI. The Russian turmoil: memoirs: military, social, and political. London: : Hutchinson & Co 1922.
832
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1980.
833
Sanborn JA. Drafting the Russian nation: military conscription, total war, and mass politics, 1905-1925. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2003.
834
Robinson P, Allshouse S, ebrary. Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich: Supreme Commander of the Russian Army. DeKalb, Illinois: : NIU Press 2014. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3382594
835
Shulʹgin VV, Adams BF. Days of the Russian Revolution: memoirs from the right, 1905-1917. Gulf Breeze, Fla: : Academic International Press 1990.
836
Shulʹgin VV. The years: memoirs of a member of the Russian Duma, 1906-1917. New York: : Hippocrene Books 1984.
837
Gurko VI, Sterling JEW, Eudin XJ, et al. Features and figures of the past: government and opinion in the reign of Nicholas II. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1939.
838
Emmons T. The formation of political parties and the first national elections in Russia. Cambridge, Mass: : Harvard University Press 1983.
839
Thatcher ID. Late Imperial Russia: problems and prospects : essays in honour of R.B. McKean. Manchester: : Manchester University Press 2005.
840
Hosking GA. The Russian constitutional experiment: government and Duma, 1907-1914. Ann Arbor, Mich: : U.M.I. Books on Demand 1994.
841
Kassow SD. Students, professors and the state in tsarist Russia. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1989.
842
McKean RB. St Petersburg between the revolutions: workers and revolutionaries, June 1907-February 1917. New Haven, [Conn.]: : Yale University Press 1990.
843
Pallot J, World Congress for Central and East European Studies, International Council for Central and East European Studies. Transforming peasants: society, state and the peasantry, 1861-1930 : selected papers from the Fifth World Congress of Central and East European Studies, Warsaw, 1995. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1998.
844
Pearson R. The Russian moderates and the crisis of Tsarism, 1914-1917. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1977.
845
Verner AM. The crisis of Russian autocracy: Nicholas II and the 1905 revolution. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1990.
846
Waldron P. Between two revolutions: Stolypin and the politics of renewal in Russia. London: : UCL Press 1998.
847
Gaudin C. Ruling peasants: village and state in late imperial Russia. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2007.
848
Atkinson D. The end of the Russian land commune, 1905-1930. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1983.
849
Immonen H. The agrarian program of the Russian Socialist Revolutionary Party, 1900-1914. Helsinki: : SHS 1988.
850
Kotsonis Y. Making peasants backward: agricultural cooperatives and the Agrarian question in Russia, 1861-1914. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999.
851
Pallot J. Land reform in Russia, 1906-1917: peasant responses to Stolypin’s project of rural transformation. Oxford: : Clarendon Press 1999.
852
Nimtz AH, MyiLibrary. Lenin’s electoral strategy from 1907 to the October Revolution of 1917: the ballot, the streets or both. Basingstoke: : Palgrave Macmillan 2014. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1661504
853
Dowler W. Russia in 1913. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2010.
854
Melancon MS, University of Pittsburgh. Rethinking Russia’s February Revolution: anonymous spontaneity or socialist agency? Pittsburgh, Pa: : Center for Russian & East European Studies, University Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburgh 2000.
855
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
856
Lyandres S. The fall of Tsarism: untold stories of the February 1917 Revolution. Oxford: : Oxford University Press 2013. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3055100
857
Vernadsky G, Fisher RT, Ferguson AD, et al. A source book for Russian history from early times to 1917. New Haven: : Yale University Press 1972.
858
Browder RP, Kerensky AF, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The Russian Provisional Government 1917: documents. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1961.
859
Sukhanov NN, Carmichael J. The Russian revolution, 1917: a personal record. London: : Oxford University Press 1955. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3030557
860
Getzler I. Nikolai Sukhanov: chronicler of the Russian revolution. Houndmills: : Palgrave 2002.
861
Shklovskiĭ V, Sheldon R, Monas S. A sentimental journey: memoirs, 1917-1922. 1st Dalkey Archive ed. Normal, Ill: : Dalkey Archive Press 2004.
862
Badcock S. Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=1&docID=321336&tm=1516796891472
863
Galili y Garcia Z. The Menshevik leaders in the Russian revolution: social realities and political strategies. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1989.
864
Ashworth T. Soldiers not peasants: the moral basis of the February revolution of 1917. 1992.
865
Burdzhalov ĖN, Raleigh DJ. Russia’s second revolution: the February 1917 uprising in Petrograd. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1987.
866
Di︠a︡kin VS. The leadership crisis in Russia on the eve of the February revolution. 1984.
867
Smith SA, University of Essex. Spontaneity and organisation in the Petrograd labour movement in 1917. [Colchester]: : Russian & Soviet Studies Centre, University of Essex 1984.
868
Mandel D, University of Birmingham. The Petrograd workers and the fall of the old regime: from the February Revolution to the July Days, 1917. London: : Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham 1983.
869
Hasegawa T. The February Revolution: Petrograd, 1917. Seattle: : University of Washington Press 1981.
870
Norton BT. Russian Political Masonry and the February Revolution of 1917. International Review of Social History 1983;28:240–58. doi:10.1017/S0020859000007641
871
Mawdsley E. The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: war and politics, February 1917-April 1918. London: : Macmillan [for] the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1978.
872
Ferro M. The Russian Revolution of February 1917. London: : Routledge and Kegan Paul 1972.
873
Pethybridge RW. The spread of the Russian Revolution: essays on 1917. London: : Macmillan 1972.
874
Katkov G. Russia, 1917: the February revolution. London: : Longmans 1967.
875
Kerensky AF. Why the Russian monarchy fell. The Slavonic and East European Review 1930;8.http://www.jstor.org/stable/4202435?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
876
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG. Strikes and revolution in Russia, 1917. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1989.
877
Koenker D. Moscow workers and the 1917 Revolution. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1981.
878
Browder RP, Kerensky AF, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The Russian Provisional Government 1917: documents. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1961.
879
Sukhanov NN, Carmichael J. The Russian revolution, 1917: a personal record. London: : Oxford University Press 1955. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3030557
880
Badcock S. Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/reader.action?ppg=1&docID=321336&tm=1516796891472
881
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
882
Acton E, Cherni︠a︡ev VI, Rosenberg WG. Critical companion to the Russian Revolution, 1914-1921. London: : Arnold 1997.
883
Rosenberg WG. Liberals in the Russian Revolution: the Constitutional Democratic Party, 1917-1921. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1974.
884
Stockdale MK. Paul Miliukov and the quest for a liberal Russia, 1880-1918. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1996.
885
Mili︠u︡kov PN, Mendel AP. Political memoirs, 1905-1917. Ann Arbor, Mich: : University of Michigan Press 1967.
886
Anweiler O. The Soviets: the Russian workers, peasants, and soldiers councils, 1905-1921. New York: : Pantheon Books 1974.
887
Wade RA. The Russian search for peace: February-October, 1917. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1969.
888
Raleigh DJ. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1986.
889
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
890
Browder RP, Kerensky AF, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The Russian Provisional Government 1917: documents. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1961.
891
Badcock S. Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=321336
892
Dune EM, Koenker D, Smith SA. Notes of a Red Guard. Urbana, [Ill.]: : University of Illinois Press 1993.
893
Steinberg MD, Schwartz M, Peregudova ZI, et al. Voices of revolution, 1917. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 2001.
894
Boleslavsky R, Woodward H. Way of the lancer. Indianapolis: : Bobbs-Merrill 1932.
895
Shklovskiĭ V, Sheldon R, Monas S. A sentimental journey: memoirs, 1917-1922. 1st Dalkey Archive ed. Normal, Ill: : Dalkey Archive Press 2004.
896
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG. Strikes and revolution in Russia, 1917. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1989.
897
Koenker D. Moscow workers and the 1917 Revolution. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 1981.
898
Smith SA. Revolution and the people in Russia and China: a comparative history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2008.
899
Smith SA. Red Petrograd: revolution in the factories, 1917-1918. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1983.
900
Kaiser DH. The workers’ revolution in Russia, 1917: the view from below. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 1987. https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/the-workers-revolution-in-russia-1917/32B07FFEF9CACD00400D16A3670B79E8
901
Mandel D, University of Birmingham. The Petrograd workers and the Soviet seizure of power: from the July Days 1917 to July 1918. London: : Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham 1984.
902
Mandel D, University of Birmingham. The Petrograd workers and the fall of the old regime: from the February Revolution to the July Days, 1917. London: : Macmillan in association with the Centre for Russian and East European Studies, University of Birmingham 1983.
903
Murphy K. Revolution and counterrevolution: class struggle in a Moscow metal factory. New York: : Berghahn Books 2005.
904
Mawdsley E. The Russian Revolution and the Baltic Fleet: war and politics, February 1917-April 1918. London: : Macmillan [for] the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London 1978.
905
Rabinowitch A. Prelude to revolution: the Petrograd Bolsheviks and the July 1917 uprising. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 1968.
906
Rabinowitch A. The Bolsheviks come to power: the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New edition. London: : Pluto Press 2017. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4861811
907
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1980.
908
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton: : Princeton University Press
909
Sanborn JA. Drafting the Russian nation: military conscription, total war, and mass politics, 1905-1925. DeKalb: : Northern Illinois University Press 2003.
910
Steinberg MD, Schwartz M, Peregudova ZI, et al. Voices of revolution, 1917. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 2001.
911
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
912
Browder RP, Kerensky AF, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The Russian Provisional Government 1917: documents. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1961.
913
Shklovskiĭ V, Sheldon R, Monas S. A sentimental journey: memoirs, 1917-1922. 1st Dalkey Archive ed. Normal, Ill: : Dalkey Archive Press 2004.
914
Badcock S. Politics and the people in revolutionary Russia: a provincial history. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=321336
915
Retish AB. Russia’s peasants in revolution and civil war: citizenship, identity, and the creation of the Soviet state, 1914-1922. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2008.
916
Raleigh DJ. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1986.
917
Hickey MC, MyiLibrary. Competing voices from the Russian Revolution: fighting words. Santa Barbara, Calif: : Greenwood 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=625392
918
Steinberg MD, Schwartz M, Peregudova ZI, et al. Voices of revolution, 1917. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 2001.
919
Browder RP, Kerensky AF, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The Russian Provisional Government 1917: documents. Stanford, Calif: : Stanford University Press 1961.
920
Sukhanov NN, Carmichael J. The Russian revolution, 1917: a personal record. London: : Oxford University Press 1955. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3030557
921
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1980.
922
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton: : Princeton University Press
923
Rabinowitch A. The Bolsheviks come to power: the revolution of 1917 in Petrograd. New edition. London: : Pluto Press 2017. http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=4861811
924
Rabinowitch A, ebrary, Inc. The Bolsheviks in power: the first year of Soviet rule in Petrograd. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=329980
925
Marot JE, ebrary, Inc. The October Revolution in prospect and retrospect: interventions in Russian and Soviet history. Boston: : Brill 2012. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=944160
926
Corney FC. Telling October: memory and the making of the Bolshevik Revolution. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 2004.
927
Eisenstein S, Aleksandrov GV, Shostakovich DD. October 1917. 2000.
928
Mandel E. October 1917: Coup d’état or social revolution?: the legitimacy of the Russian Revolution. [Amsterdam]: : International Institute for Research and Education 1992.
929
Collins Gallery. The Russian poster: from revolution to perestroika. London: : Collins Gallery 1989.
930
Ferro M, Stone N. October 1917: a social history of the Russian Revolution. London: : Routledge and Kegan Paul 1980.
931
German MI. Art of the October Revolution. 1st English language ed. London: : Collet’s 1979.
932
MacIlhone R, Kni︠a︡zev S, Konstantinov AP. Petrograd, October 1917: remiscences. Moscow: : Foreign Languages Publishing House 1957.
933
Trotsky L. The lessons of October, 1917. London: : The Labour Publishing Company 1925.
934
Radkey OH. Russia goes to the polls: the election to the all-Russian Constituent Assembly, 1917. Ithaca: : Cornell University Press 1989. https://www.degruyter.com/openurl?isbn=9781501738913
935
Raleigh DJ. Revolution on the Volga: 1917 in Saratov. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1986.
936
Wade RA. The Bolshevik revolution and Russian Civil War. Westport, Conn: : Greenwood Press 2001.
937
Swain G. The origins of the Russian Civil War. London: : Longman 1996.
938
Rabinowitch A, ebrary, Inc. The Bolsheviks in power: the first year of Soviet rule in Petrograd. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=329980
939
Wildman AK. The end of the Russian Imperial Army. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1980.
940
Raleigh DJ. Experiencing Russia’s civil war: politics, society, and revolutionary culture in Saratov, 1917-1922. Princeton, N.J.: : Princeton University Press 2002. https://www.degruyter.com/openurl?isbn=9781400843749
941
Babine AV, Raleigh DJ. A Russian civil war diary: Alexis Babine in Saratov, 1917-1922. Durham: : Duke University Press 1988.
942
Landis EC. Bandits and partisans: the Antonov movement in the Russian Civil War. Pittsburgh, Pa: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2008. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=6211900
943
Finkel S, ebrary, Inc. On the ideological front: the Russian intelligentsia and the making of the Soviet public sphere. New Haven: : Yale University Press 2007. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3420426
944
Borrero M. Hungry Moscow: scarcity and urban society in the Russian Civil War, 1917-1921. New York: : Peter Lang 2003.
945
Smele J. The Russian Revolution and Civil War, 1917-1921: an annotated bibliography. London: : Continuum 2006. http://www.vlebooks.com/vleweb/product/openreader?id=Nottingham&isbn=9781441119926
946
Landis EC, University of Pittsburgh. A civil war episode: General Mamontov in Tambov, August 1919. Pittsburgh, Pa: : Center for Russian & East European Studies, University Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburgh 2002.
947
Wade RA. The Bolshevik revolution and Russian Civil War. Westport, Conn: : Greenwood Press 2001.
948
Murphy B, Patrikeeff F. The Russian Civil War: primary sources. Houndmills, Basingstoke: : Macmillan 2000.
949
Lincoln WB. Red victory: a history of the Russian Civil War. New York: : Da Capo 1999.
950
Shlapentokh D. The counter-revolution in revolution: images of Thermidor and Napoleon at the time of Russian Revolution and Civil War. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1999.
951
Butt VP. The Russian civil war: documents from the Soviet archives. Basingstoke: : Macmillan 1996.
952
Swain G. The origins of the Russian Civil War. London: : Longman 1996.
953
Foglesong DS. America’s secret war against Bolshevism: U.S. intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1917-1920. Chapel Hill: : University of North Carolina Press 1995.
954
Koenker D, Rosenberg WG, Suny RG. Party, state, and society in the Russian Civil War: explorations in social history. Bloomington, Ind: : Indiana University Press 1989.
955
Arans D. How we lost the Civil War: bibliography of Russian emigre memoirs on the Russian Revolution, 1917-1921. Newtonville, Mass: : Oriental Research Partners 1988.
956
Husband W. The nationalization of the textile industry of Soviet Russia, 1917-1920: industrial administration and the workers during the Russian civil war. Ann Arbor: : University Microfilms International 1988.
957
Mawdsley E. The Russian Civil War. New edition. Edinburgh: : Birlinn 2017.
958
Malet M. Nestor Makhno in the Russian Civil War. London: : Macmillan 1982.
959
Luckett R. The White generals: an account of the White movement and the Russian civil war. Harlow: : Longman 1971.
960
Silverlight J. The victors’ dilemma: Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War. London: : Barrie & Jenkins 1970.
961
Brinkley GA. The Volunteer Army and Allied intervention in South Russia, 1917-1921: a study in the politics and diplomacy of the Russian Civil War. Notre Dame, Ind: : University of Notre Dame Press 1966.
962
Smith SB, ebrary. Captives of revolution: the socialist revolutionaries and the Bolshevik dictatorship, 1918-1923. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2011. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=2039260
963
Figes O. Peasant Russia, civil war: the Volga countryside in revolution (1917-1921). London: : Phoenix 2001.
964
Radkey OH, Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace. The unknown civil war in Soviet Russia: a study of the Green Movement in the Tambov Region, 1920-1921. Stanford, Calif: : Hoover Institution Press, Stanford University 1976.
965
Brovkin VN. The Bolsheviks in Russian society: the revolution and the civil wars. New Haven, Conn: : Yale University Press 1997.
966
Brovkin VN. Behind the front lines of the civil war: political parties and social movements in Russia, 1918-1922. Princeton, N.J: : Princeton University Press 1994.
967
Brovkin VN. The Mensheviks after October: socialist opposition and the rise of the Bolshevik dictatorship. Ithaca, N.Y.: : Cornell University Press 1987.
968
Kenez P. Civil war in South Russia, 1918: the first year of the Volunteer Army. Berkeley: : University of California Press 1971.
969
Bunin IA, Marullo TG. Cursed days: a diary of Revolution. Chicago: : Ivan R. Dee 1998.
970
Bulgakov MA, Schwartz M, Dobrenko EA, et al. White guard. New Haven: : Yale University Press 2008. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=3420449
971
Smele J. Civil war in Siberia: the anti-Bolshevik government of Admiral Kolchak, 1918-1920. Cambridge: : Cambridge University Press 2006.
972
Hartnett LA, MyiLibrary. The defiant life of Vera Figner: surviving the Russian revolution. Bloomington: : Indiana University Press 2014. https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/nottingham/detail.action?docID=1680204
973
Daly JW, Trofimov L. Russia in war and revolution, 1914-1922: a documentary history. Indianapolis: : Hackett Pub. Co 2009.
974
Slep͡tsov VA, Katz MR, Brumfield WC, et al. Hard times in Russia: a novel of liberals and radicals in 1860s Russia. Pittsburgh: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2016.
975
Kassymbekova B. Despite cultures: early Soviet rule in Tajikistan. Pittsburgh, PA: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2016.
976
Leontovitsch V, Leontovitsch P, Solzheni͡tsyn AI. The history of liberalism in Russia. Pittsburgh, Pa: : University of Pittsburgh Press 2012.
977
Hasegawa T. Crime and punishment in the Russian revolution: mob justice and police in Petrograd. Cambridge, Massachusetts: : The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2017.
978
Badcock S. Afterword: Endings and Beginnings. In: A prison without walls?: Eastern Siberian exile in the last years of tsarism. New York: : Oxford University Press 2016. 174–8.http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199641550.003.0006
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Ashworth T. Soldiers not peasants: the moral basis of the February revolution of 1917 from Sociology. Sociology 1992;26:455–70.