czarist


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  • adj

Synonyms for czarist

of or relating to or characteristic of a czar

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
After the Khazar empire crumbled with the rise of a new Chazar (Czarist Russia), Khazarian Jews, who were naturally all over Russia and Eastern Europe (Poland, Hungary, Germany, etc.), became minorities, but still believed they all came from Palestine, thus their craving for their Promised Land and the birth of the Zionist movement.
The run-up to the Russian presidential elections in early March of next year has seen a heightening of both religious nationalism and a ratcheting up of Czarist nostalgia.
When the fraud of communism could no longer be maintained, the Soviet empire collapsed, leaving Russia shorn even of her Czarist imperial lands.
The current Russian leadership, he considers, has the mentality from the past, as far back as the czarist past, as it elevates the idea of Russia's supremacy.
Taking readers through the rough and tumble of East London's streets, the twilight turmoil of czarist Russia, to the halls of the British Parliament, and right down Broadway in New York City, Peter Doran offers a richly detailed, fresh perspective on how Samuel and Deterding beat the world's richest man at his own game.
Amin challenges the financial aristocratic view that the Czarist Empire and the Soviet Union were horribly despotic and aggressive nations against which civilized peoples of Europe have always had to protect themselves.
Inspired by The Czarist Regime of Russia, the collection veered heavily towards opulence and was reminiscent of the recent show he concluded in Mumbai a few months ago.
From these sources, the authors were able to depict the various markings, signets, and emblems that appeared on aircraft and dirigibles during the Czarist period in Russia.
With the exception of a bunch of 1866s that were bought by the Ottomans and a large number of 1895s contracted by the Czarist government in World War I, for the most part lever-action involvement on an official military scale has been pretty much catch-as-catch-can.
"Doctor Zhivago'' is the tale of five intertwined lovers set during final days of Czarist Russia and the 1917 Revolution.
Review Production: Fiddler on the Roof (Longwood Amateur Operatic Society) Venue: Lawrence Batley Theatre Review: William Marshall THIS famous show is set in a Jewish village in Czarist Russia that is stifled from within by its own suffocating traditions and threatened from without by the everimminent possibility of racial persecution.
Eventually he found himself expelled from the party for his independent-mindedness, deported to Central Asia, and finally permitted to leave the USSR in 1936, an outcast of the regime whose overthrow of the czarist autocracy he had so enthusiastically embraced ...