Lindsey Hughes

Lindsey Hughes (4 May 1949 26 April 2007) was a British historian who studied seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Russia, especially the reign of Peter the Great. She authored biographies of Peter and his predecessor Sophia Alekseyevna, as well as a more general work, Russia in the Age of Peter the Great. She also wrote prolifically on art history.

Biography

Lindsey Audrey Jennifer Hughes was born May 4, 1949. She joined the School of Slavonic and East European Studies at University College London in 1987; became a reader in 1992; a professor of Russian History in 1997.

Hughes wrote a couple of books on Peter the Great. The New York Times called Russia in the Age of Peter the Great (1998) "a scholar's compilation, so organized -- with its full index and bibliography, lengthy chronology of events and topical arrangement of chapters and sections -- as to facilitate ready reference, the whole attractively printed with an absolute minimum of gaffes, all as befits the leading British authority on the subject and her distinguished publisher."[1]

In a review of her book Peter the Great: A Biography (2002), a review in Publishers Weekly said that the book "will likely become a standard for scholars and students who want a short but comprehensive account of Peter the Great."[2] Writing for The Daily Telegraph, Orlando Figes says that "In her splendid new biography, Lindsey Hughes... brings us closer to the true face of the Tsar. In the preface she modestly describes the book as a small companion to her panoramic social history, Russia in the Age of Peter the Great (1998); and in places where evidence about his life is thin, there is unavoidably some cut-and-paste from it. Yet the effect is always to enrich and clarify her picture of this fascinating Tsar."[3]

Hughes died of cancer, aged 57, on 26 April 2007.

Works

References

  1. Cracraft, James (September 20, 1998). "Russia's cultural revolution". The New York Times. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  2. "Peter the Great: A Biography". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  3. Figes, Orlando (June 30, 2002). "Russian bear of a man". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved August 25, 2014.

External links


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