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Bibliography & Resources
Textbooks:
1. World History: Connections to Today, Ellis and Esler, Prentice Hall, 1999
2. A History of World Societies, Complete 5th Edition, McKay, et. al, Houghton Mifflin, 2000
Websites (Containing Primary Sources)
1. Remembering the Romanovs: Devil Monk
Websites (Secondary Sources):
1. Wikipedia: Grigori Rasputin
2. The Murder of Rasputin, Jennifer Rosenberg
3. Alexander Palace: Rasputin
4. TheMystica.com: Rasputin
5. Worsley School: Rasputin
6. The Evil Monk, Arturo Beeche
7. Rasputin: The Mad Monk
8. Dictionary.com: Hemophilia
Anything from the supplemental "footnote" pages that cannot be considered common knowledge can be found on the Wikipedia Online Encyclopedia. Pictures for the "footnote" pages for Nikolai and Alexandra were taken from My Name is Anastasia, from the Alexander Palace.
Note: Images of Rasputin or the royal family were taken from the sites above. The pictures of Alexander III and the Neva came from Wikipedia. The picture of the canal from 2002 was taken during a tour of St. Petersburg while I was there on a mission trip (the details of that trip can be found here, courtesy of the ISLAS Student Newspaper). The drawing of tsarist flag on the front page comes from A Brief History of Russia.
Last updated 20 April 2004
Website and original content by Tyler Steven Whetstone, 2004 |
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