List of Illustrations and Tables
Acknowledgements
Maps
Introduction
Part I Representing the City
Chapter 1 Mapping the city in transition
Chapter 2 Using the past: The great cemetery of Rus’
Part II Making the City
Chapter 3 Municipal autonomy under the Magdeburg Law, 1800-1835
Chapter 4 Planning a new city: empire transforms space, 1835-1870
Chapter 5 Municipal autonomy reloaded: space for sale, 1871-1905
Part III Peopling the City
Chapter 6 Counting Kyivites: the language of class, religion, and ethnicity
Chapter 7 Municipal elites and “urban regimes”: continuities and disruptions
Part IV Living (in) the City
Chapter 8 Sociospatial form and psychogeography
Chapter 9 What language did the monuments speak?
Conclusion: Towards a Theory of Imperial Urbanism in the Borderlands
Notes
Bibliography 560
Index