One Year at the Russian Court: 1904-1905

audiobook

One Year at the Russian Court: 1904-1905

by Renée Gaudin de Villaine Maud

EN·~4 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

0:51

Part I THE FULFILMENT OF MY DREAM

0:02

CHAPTER I

13:29

CHAPTER II

11:15

CHAPTER III

14:10

CHAPTER IV

16:02

CHAPTER V

14:54

CHAPTER VI

19:17

CHAPTER VII

15:14

Part II IN THE CAUCASUS

0:01

Description

The narrator finally sets out for Russia she has dreamed of since adolescence, spurred by family ties to the imperial court and a cherished heirloom from Queen Louise. Her journey unfolds across the European rail network, where the shift to wider Russian gauge introduces a bustling scene of porters and curious customs officials. Along the way she reflects on quiet winters of her Norman home, contrasting them with the vibrant expectations of St. Petersburg. The prose captures the mix of excitement and nervous propriety that accompanies a young lady entering a foreign aristocracy.

Upon arriving in Petrograd, she is greeted by her aunt’s elegant brougham and the striking tableau of a Russian turn‑out, with coachmen in thick blue coats and scarlet‑liveried courtiers. From her compartment she catches a fleeting glimpse of Grand Duke Nicholas‑Michaelovitch slipping into uniform, a moment that hints at the elaborate rituals governing the court. The narrative weaves together the sensory details of gilded carriages, bustling stations, and the palpable aura of imperial authority, offering listeners an intimate portrait of a world poised on the brink of change.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (277K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

Release date

2019-03-19

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

RG

Renée Gaudin de Villaine Maud

A firsthand memoir of life around the last Russian imperial court gives this writer a lasting place in history. Her account offers a rare, personal view of St. Petersburg society in the years just before the Romanov world collapsed.

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