Oxford studies in modern European history
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Oxford studies in modern European history
Name
Oxford studies in modern European history
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- Has parts17
- States of division, border and boundary formation in Cold War rural Germany, Sagi Schaefer
- The Tsar's foreign faiths, toleration and the fate of religious freedom in imperial Russia, Paul W. Werth
- The birth of the new justice, the internationalization of crime and punishment, 1919-1950, Mark Lewis
- Britain's Levantine Empire, 1914-1923, Daniel-Joseph MacArthur-Seal
- Enlightened metropolis, constructing Imperial Moscow, 1762-1855, by Alexander M. Martin
- How Russia learned to talk, a history of public speaking in the stenographic age, 1860-1930, Stephen Lovell
- From the Holy Roman Empire to the land of the tsars, one family's odyssey, 1768-1870, Alexander M. Martin
- Geographies of nationhood, cartography, science, and society in the Russian imperial Baltic, Catherine Gibson
- Sorrowful shores, violence, ethnicity, and the end of the Ottoman Empire, 1912-1923, Ryan Gingeras
- Remaking the rhythms of life, German communities in the age of the nation-state, Oliver Zimmer
- Russia and the making of modern Greek identity, 1821-1844, Lucien J. Frary
- On arid ground, political ecologies of empire in Russian Central Asia, Jennifer Keating
- Geographies of nationhood, cartography, science, and society in the Russian Imperial Baltic, Catherine Gibson
- Turks across empires, marketing Muslim identity in the Russian-Ottoman borderlands, 1856-1914, James H. Meyer
- Intimate empire, the Mansurov family in Russia and the Orthodox East, 1855-1936, Alexa von Winning
- Empire on the Seine, the policing of North Africans in Paris, 1925-1975, Amit Prakash
- The global revolution, a history of international communism, 1917-1991, Silvio Pons ; translated by Allan Cameron