NON FICTION
IMPERIAL SPLENDOUR: Palaces and Monasteries of Old Russia by Prince George Galitzine, photographs by Earl Beezly and Garry Gibbons; Viking: $50; 187 pp.). Blame the Mongols. Running on a platform of rape, pillage and burn, Khan Batu, son of Ghengis, set the agenda of a host of subsequent invaders who torched Russia’s architectural heritage. Built of wood, the early structures were “almost dateless . . . highly original and creative,” laments Prince George Galitzine in this handsome book. What remain are the more solid monuments to God, tsar and nobility: churches (like Chesme Church above), monasteries, kremlins (citadels), palaces and mansions. With unlimited serf power, 18th-Century aristocrats (among them the author’s ancestors) ordered up open-air theaters, orangeries, aviaries, even breweries to grace their digs, while the high holy men endowed their cathedrals with comparable opulence. The book’s rare photos range beyond the Moscow-St. Petersburg axis, to Pskov, Zagorsk, Novgorod. Galitzine’s commentary is spendid, whether telling the tale of the chapel of “St. Anne-What’s-in-the-Corner” or of the city of Suzdal’s sets of twin churches--airy and high-vaulted for summer, squat in winter to contain body heat. The prince stresses, though, that this “is primarily a book of pictures, and as such the essential requirement is that they should be beautiful.” They are.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.