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Tsarist Russia 1802, Writing Articles Cannot Save the Russians

Francesca Zabi

234K0

"Hardcore Ruthless Man Issue 514": From being hungry to pick up pears to living in the Winter Palace, how does a young editor handle the Russian Czar? When he woke up, Ivan became a tabloid editor in St. Petersburg in the parallel world of 1802. System? No. Goldfinger? He only has a familiar mind of Western European history. So, many years later, Napoleon wrote in his memoirs: "I have never lost to the mountains and rivers of Russia. I have lost to a person hidden behind the curtain of the Winter Palace - Ivan Ivanovich. He understands me better than all the monarchs in Europe put together." The Prussian Prime Minister said frankly in his speech to the Congress: "There were two celebrities in Europe in the 19th century, one was Napoleon in Paris and the other was Ivan in Petersburg. The former conquered the land with guns, and the latter rewrote the times with wisdom." There is a generally accepted conclusion in later historians: "Russia's destiny had two turning points. One was Peter the Great, who opened the window to Europe, and the other was Ivan Ivanovich, who paved the way for Russia to the world." This book is also called: "The beginning of the battle, the incognito tsar was manipulated by me"