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Travels in the East of Nicholas II Emperor of Russia when Cesarewitch 1890-1891 ... ; v. 2 / written ... ; by Prince E. Ookhtomsky ; and translated by Robert Goodlet ... ; edited by Sir George Birdwood. 1896 - 1900
39.5 x 30.5 cm (book measurement (conservation)) | RCIN 1142853

Prince Esper Esperovich Ukhtomsky (1861-1921)
Travels in the East of Nicholas II Emperor of Russia when Cesarewitch 1890-1891 . . . ; v. 2 / written . . . ; by Prince E. Ookhtomsky ; and translated by Robert Goodlet . . . ; edited by Sir George B 1896 - 1900

Prince Esper Esperovich Ukhtomsky (1861-1921)
Travels in the East of Nicholas II Emperor of Russia when Cesarewitch 1890-1891 . . . ; v. 2 / written . . . ; by Prince E. Ookhtomsky ; and translated by Robert Goodlet . . . ; edited by Sir George B 1896 - 1900


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‘Nothing gives so much breadth to the intellectual horizon, nothing has so much influence on the character, as immediate and living contact with the life of other lands’. The tour to the East by Tsesarevich Nicholas in 1890–91 was an important part of the education of the future emperor, following on from Peter the Great’s grand tour to Europe. The itinerary was devised by his tutor, General G.G. Danilovich, and took the Tsesarevich from Russia via Vienna to Greece, Egypt, India, Singapore, Java, Siam, China and, finally, Japan, from where he returned to St Petersburg via Vladivostok, travelling by land right across Russia. There had been the intention for Nicholas to journey to the United States after Japan, but an assassination attempt in April 1891 led to his trip being cut short.
Accompanying him on his journey was Prince Esper Ukhtomsky, poet and orientalist, a self-declared Buddhist and member of the Imperial Geographical Society. During the trip, Ukhtomsky collected significant amounts of information about the countries they travelled though, and on their return he began to write an account of the journey, with each chapter being approved by the Tsesarevich. It was published in Russian in 1893–7, in three volumes, followed by translations in English, French, German and Chinese.
Provenance
Acquired by Queen VIctoria
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Creator(s)
(translator)Acquirer(s)
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Measurements
39.5 x 30.5 cm (book measurement (conservation))
Category