Russia's Balkan Entanglements, 1806-1914

Portada
Cambridge University Press, 2004 M03 11 - 308 páginas
In the century between 1806 and 1914 tsarist Russia was drawn into five wars due to its deep involvement, based on treaty rights and established traditions, in Balkan affairs. This book examines the reason for the Russian involvement in the Balkan peninsula and attempts to explain at least partially the connection that drew the Russian government into entanglements that were not only dangerous to its great power interests, but that were difficult to control. The wars, waged at a high human and economic cost, limited the resources that could be spent on internal development and, in particular when they ended in defeat, led to domestic unrest and after 1856 and 1917 to drastic internal change.
 

Contenido

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS ACQUIRED THE ADVANCE TO THE BLACK SEA THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES AND THE SERBIAN RE...
1
THE DANUBIAN PRINCIPALITIES THE RUSSOTURKISH WAR 180612
2
THE SERBIAN REVOLUTION
9
RUSSIAN INTERESTS IN THE BALKANS AFTER 1815
24
RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS DEFENDED AND EXTENDED THE GREEK REVOLUTION AND THE RUSSOTURKISH WAR 18289
42
THE GREEK REVOLUTION
49
THE RUSSOTURKISH WAR
75
THE DEFENSE OF THE STATUS QUO THE CRIMEAN WAR
90
RUSSIANBULGARIAN CONNECTIONS
159
THE RUSSOTURKISH WAR AND THE CONGRESS OF BERLIN
170
RUSSIANBULGARIAN RELATIONS 187887
178
FINAL STEPS THE BELGRADE LINK AND THE ORIGINS OF WORLD WAR I
197
RUSSIA AND THE BALKANS AFTER 1905
200
RUSSIANBALKAN RELATIONS 18941914
210
RUSSIA AND SERBIA
235
RUSSIA SERBIA AND THE ORIGINS OF WORLD WAR I
248

THE EASTERN QUESTION 183153
94
THE CRIMEAN WAR
115
BALKAN INVOLVEMENTS CONTIUNED THE BULGARIAN QUESTION AND THE RUSSOTURKISH WAR 18778
143
RUSSIAS BALKAN POLICY 185675
147
A CENTURY OF BALKAN INVOLVEMENT GAINS AND LOSSES
266
BIBLIOGRAPHY
277
INDEX
285
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