This study of Russia’s colonial expansion across the Eurasian steppe is “a tremendously important contribution to the field of Russian history” (Valerie Kivelson). From the decline of the Mongol Golden Horde to the end of the 18th century, the Russian government expanded its influence and power throughout its southern borderlands. The process of incorporating these lands and peoples into the Russian Empire was not only a military and political struggle but also a cultural contest between the indigenous worlds of the steppe and Russian imperial hegemony. Drawing on sources and archival materials in Russian and Turkic languages, Michael Khodarkovsky presents a complex picture of the encounter between the Russian authorities and native peoples. A major contribution to the comparative study of empires and frontiers, “no other work treats Moscow’s colonial expansion to the south and east so competently” (Russia).
Additional ISBNs:
9780253339898, 0253339898, 9780253108777, 0253108772


Ability, Equity, and Culture: Sustaining Inclusive Urban Education Reform
A Guide to Crisis Intervention
Advanced Automotive Fault Diagnosis, 4th ed
A Student's Companion for Successful College Writing
Airline Marketing and Management
A New Psychology of Women: Gender, Culture, and Ethnicity
America's History: Concise Edition, Combined Volume
A Pony in the Bedroom
A Dissection Guide and Atlas to the Mink
A Brief Guide to Arguing about Literature
Abnormal Psychology: Clinical and Scientific Perspectives
America Now: Short Readings from Recent Periodicals
A History of Western Society, Value Edition, Volume II
A Guide to Online Course Design: Strategies for Student Success
They Say / I Say: The Moves That Matter in Academic Writing, with 2016 MLA Update and Readings (Third Edition)
America's Environmental Report Card
A Place to Stand
50 Essays: A Portable Anthology 
Review Russia’s Steppe Frontier
There are no reviews yet.