How Russia Got Big: A Territorial History
Author: Werth, Paul W.
ISBN: 9781350284005
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year first published: 16 Oct 2025
Pages: 184 Format: Paperback / softback
How Russia Got Big accounts for Russia's changing physical scope over some seven centuries.
Even people who know little about Russia know that it is big. This concise book tells the story of how it became so. Beginning with the small principality of Moscow in the early 14th century, Paul W. Werth recounts the construction of the world's largest country from Muscovy and the Russian Empire through the USSR to today's Russian Federation as well as its territorial retrenchment and even collapse on several occasions. Integrating geography, diplomacy, war, and imperial politics, the book ranges across three continents and recounts diverse interactions with neighboring polities and peoples. Werth likewise contemplates different ways of conceptualizing territorial possession and related understandings of sovereignty, authority, and belonging. The result, illustrated with 29 original maps, is a grand story from a bird's-eye view that reveals deeper rhythms to Russia's territorial history involving alternations of enlargement and crisis ones that continue in our own day.
ISBN: 9781350284005
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year first published: 16 Oct 2025
Pages: 184 Format: Paperback / softback
How Russia Got Big accounts for Russia's changing physical scope over some seven centuries.
Even people who know little about Russia know that it is big. This concise book tells the story of how it became so. Beginning with the small principality of Moscow in the early 14th century, Paul W. Werth recounts the construction of the world's largest country from Muscovy and the Russian Empire through the USSR to today's Russian Federation as well as its territorial retrenchment and even collapse on several occasions. Integrating geography, diplomacy, war, and imperial politics, the book ranges across three continents and recounts diverse interactions with neighboring polities and peoples. Werth likewise contemplates different ways of conceptualizing territorial possession and related understandings of sovereignty, authority, and belonging. The result, illustrated with 29 original maps, is a grand story from a bird's-eye view that reveals deeper rhythms to Russia's territorial history involving alternations of enlargement and crisis ones that continue in our own day.