Inhabited since Neolithic times but not founded until 1147, Moscow was
for much of its early history in thrall to other nations--to the Khans,
to the Tartars and the Poles. The city was devastated by fire time and
again, but with each rebuilding, miraculously, it grew ever more
magnificent. For every church that was destroyed, it seemed that two
more were built, compounding the resonance of Holy Russia, with its
icons, its chanted liturgy, its packed and fervent congregations,
pre-eminently resurgent. Through the voices of visitors and residents,
the turbulent growth of this great city is recorded in this evocative
and informative anthology: Peter the Great's bloody reprisals after the
revolt of the streltsy in 1698; Napoleon's ignominious retreat from the
burning city in 1812; the flowering of literary greatness in the
nineteenth century and of the Moscow Art Theater in the twentieth; the
dazzling profusion of jewels in the Treasury of the Kremlin. In this
highly admired travel companion, these and other milestones in seven
centuries of history are all vividly brought to life.