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Day by Day with the Russian Army, 1914-15

Chapter 6: PAUL VINOGRADOFF, F.B.A.
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About This Book

A day-by-day wartime diary by an official British observer attached to Russian forces during 1914–1915, combining front-line reportage with Red Cross hospital and transport work, prisoner interrogations, and strategic commentary. Entries document military operations in the eastern theatres, advances and retreats, material and logistical conditions, and the morale and conduct of soldiers. The account also registers political and national strains within the opposing empires and relates battlefield events to broader diplomatic developments. Supplemented by maps and contemporaneous notes, the narrative aims to convey both the unfolding campaigns and the lived experience of the army.

PAUL VINOGRADOFF, F.B.A.

Corpus Professor of Jurisprudence in the University of Oxford,
sometime Professor of History in the University
of Moscow.

The Russian Problem
Demy 8vo. Paper 1s. net; cloth 2s. net.

Russia and Self-Government
Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. net.


CONSTABLE'S RUSSIAN LITERATURE

Under the Editorship of Stephen Graham

In this Library it is intended to issue a selection from the many important Russian books that have not yet appeared in English translations. The Library will comprise Novels, Short Tales, Dramas and Essays, the work of writers recognised in Russia as of first rank.

THE FIRST TITLES ARE—

The Sweet-Scented Name
By Fedor Sologub. With an Introduction by Stephen Graham. Ex. crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. net.

War and Christianity
Three conversations by Vladimir Solovyof. With an Introduction by Stephen Graham. Ex. crown 8vo. 4s. 6d. net.

OTHER VOLUMES IN PREPARATION