List of Abbreviations . . xi Map of Russian Empire, 1912 . . xiv Introduction. The Storyteller and His Story . . 1 1. Transcaucasia: Boyhood and Family on an Imperial Frontier, 1849—1865 . . 18 'On Ancestors [O predkakh]': Men and Masculinity . . 21 Frontier Women and Imperial Imagination . . 37 Conclusion: A Grandmother's Tale . . 48 2. Imperial Identity: Corning of Age in New Russia, 1865-1881 . . 57 The University and 'Studenthood' . . 61 Odessa and St Petersburg: The Railway Man in an Age of Empire . . 69 Conclusion: A New Russian . . 86 3. Kiev: Dreaming in the Victorian 1880s . . 90 'The Reality That Surrounds Us': Imperial Economy and Polity . . 96 Public and Private Lives . . 113 Imagining Autocracy . . 127 Conclusion: A Tale of the Counter-reforms . . 134 4. A City of Dreams: St Petersburg, the Empire of the Tsars, and Imperial Horizons in the Gilded Age (1889—1903) . . 138 Gospodin Minister: Witte as Imperial Official . . 144 The Witte System and the Empire of Gold . . 153 Fathers and Sons on the Road to War . . 170 5. From Exile: Memories of Re volutionary Russia, 1903—1912 . . 189 From Summer 1903 to October 1905: War, America, and Revolution . . 195 The Nightmare of 1905 . . 215 Conclusion: 'My Six-Month Ministry' . . 231 Conclusion: From the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, 1915 . . 241 Notes . . 254 Bibliography . . 291 Index . . 309