It's Ivan's first day at his new school, and Boris is told to look after him, and translate for him, because Ivan can only speak Russian. So when Ivan starts greeting people as 'lowly shivering worms', Boris realises that he's going to have his work cut out for him. And that's just the start of the
The Last Crusaders: Ivan the Terrible
β Scribed by Napier, William
- Book ID
- 108611688
- Publisher
- Orion Publishing Group
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- en-gb
- Weight
- 431 KB
- Series
- Clash of Empires 3
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781409105398
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
After the final defeat of the Ottoman Empire at the great naval battle of Lepanto, it seems that Europe is safe. But one day Nicholas Ingoldsby is summoned to London for an audience with the Queen herself. He is to go on a diplomatic mission to Constantinople, the heart of the old enemy - and then onward, to a little known but rising power called Muscovy. Here the Russian Czar has just proposed marriage to Elizabeth herself. Such a bold offer should be no surprise, for this is no normal leader: Ivan IV Vasil'evich is known to his people as Ivan the Terrible.β¨β¨But this rising new Christian power in the North has also caught the attention of the Ottomans; and their allies, the wild Tatar horsemen of the Asiatic steppes, Russia's ancient enemy. And soon Nicholas and his fellow travellers, Smith, Stanley and the faithful Hodge, are caught up in their most dangerous adventure yet, trapped in a doomed Muscovy ruled by a deranged but cunning Czar Ivan, and with a vast army of Tatar tribesmen riding down upon them, vowed to burn the city to the ground and extinguish Russia forever ...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Ivan IV, βthe Terribleβ (1533β1584), is one of the key figures in Russian history, yet he has remained among the most neglected. Notorious for pioneering a policy of unrestrained terrorβand for killing his own sonβhe has been credited with establishing autocracy in Russia. This is the first attempt
Ivan IV, βthe Terribleβ (1533β1584), is one of the key figures in Russian history, yet he has remained among the most neglected. Notorious for pioneering a policy of unrestrained terrorβand for killing his own sonβhe has been credited with establishing autocracy in Russia. This is the first attempt