Catherine the Great: Difference between revisions

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* [[Going Native]]: She may not have been born Russian, but she ended up fully embracing her adopted nation.
* [[Going Native]]: She may not have been born Russian, but she ended up fully embracing her adopted nation.
* [[Grande Dame]]
* [[Grande Dame]]
* [[Grandma What Massive Hotness You Have]]: She was still physically attractive well into her 60's, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Empress_Catherine_The_Great_1787_<!-- 28Mikhail_Shibanov29.JPG as her late portraits show]]. At least, her later lovers never complained about doing it only for money and status. -->
* [[Grandma, What Massive Hotness You Have!]]: She was still physically attractive well into her 60's, [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Empress_Catherine_The_Great_1787_<!-- 28Mikhail_Shibanov29.JPG as her late portraits show]]. At least, her later lovers never complained about doing it only for money and status. -->
* [[The High Queen]]: Catherine intentionally [[Invoked Trope|invoked]] this trope during her reign. She styled herself "the Russian Minerva" and "Semiramis of the North" and tried to give an impression of possessing unearthly wisdom and grandeur. Even [[Deadpan Snarker|wise-cracking]] libertines like Voltaire and Diderot were awed by her well-orchestrated posturing.
* [[The High Queen]]: Catherine intentionally [[Invoked Trope|invoked]] this trope during her reign. She styled herself "the Russian Minerva" and "Semiramis of the North" and tried to give an impression of possessing unearthly wisdom and grandeur. Even [[Deadpan Snarker|wise-cracking]] libertines like Voltaire and Diderot were awed by her well-orchestrated posturing.
* [[Historical Domain Character]]: Most of them.
* [[Historical Domain Character]]: Most of them.
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* [[Never Live It Down]]: The horse, even though it's a myth.
* [[Never Live It Down]]: The horse, even though it's a myth.
* [[The Not Secret]]: The existence of her bastard son by Orlov, Alexei, who Catherine herself acknowledged privately, but who wasn't officially acknowledged until after she had died. No one was surprised.
* [[The Not Secret]]: The existence of her bastard son by Orlov, Alexei, who Catherine herself acknowledged privately, but who wasn't officially acknowledged until after she had died. No one was surprised.
* [[Pimped Out Dress]]
* [[Pimped-Out Dress]]
* [[Porn Stash]]: Catherine sent her agents out to scour Europe for the finest Western pornography.
* [[Porn Stash]]: Catherine sent her agents out to scour Europe for the finest Western pornography.
* [[Praetorian Guard]]: Subverted. Peter III's Prussian guards made the hate against him grow. Russia had just been at war with Prussia.
* [[Praetorian Guard]]: Subverted. Peter III's Prussian guards made the hate against him grow. Russia had just been at war with Prussia.
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* [[Royals Who Actually Do Something]]: Catherine ruled and expanded Russia.
* [[Royals Who Actually Do Something]]: Catherine ruled and expanded Russia.
* [[Rule Abiding Rebel]]: While writing many plays satirising contemporary Russian nobility, she didn't like people who took that criticism too far.
* [[Rule Abiding Rebel]]: While writing many plays satirising contemporary Russian nobility, she didn't like people who took that criticism too far.
* [[Shell Shocked Veteran]]: Potemkin.
* [[Shell-Shocked Veteran]]: Potemkin.
* [[Star Crossed Lovers]]: actually, every Russian empress regnant had it hard, except for Catherine I (who was a quite normal widow without a new romance).
* [[Star-Crossed Lovers]]: actually, every Russian empress regnant had it hard, except for Catherine I (who was a quite normal widow without a new romance).
* [[Strange Bedfellows]]: Bestuzhev and Vorontsov.
* [[Strange Bedfellows]]: Bestuzhev and Vorontsov.
* [[Succession Crisis]]: What you get when the heir is insane.
* [[Succession Crisis]]: What you get when the heir is insane.
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[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1990s]]
[[Category:Catherine The Great]]
[[Category:Catherine The Great]]
[[Category:Trope]]
[[Category:Trope]][[Category:Pages with comment tags]]

Revision as of 13:17, 9 January 2014

Catherine II of Russia (2 May 1729 - 17 November 1796), aka Catherine the Great, was, as her epithet states, one of the great rulers of Tsarist Russia, expanding the size, influence, and progress of the vast nation.

She wasn't actually born part of the Russian royal family (although had some distant relations). She was a Princess of one of the many principalities of pre-imperial Germany. A marriage was arranged between her and the future Peter III of Russia. After he ascended the throne, some of his reforms and military actions angered the nobility, and they conspired with Catherine to overthrow him, although her reasons were more personal.

She was unable to make all the reforms she wanted, like fixing the serf system in Russia, and she even had to slow down reforms after The French Revolution twisted many of the principles of the enlightenment movement she was (supposedly) previously basing her reign on. While criticising many aspects of Russian society, she was also capable of repressing intellectuals whose criticism of serfdom was too subversive.

Despite the good she did for her country, there were still some bits of slander and libel about her, particularly her love life. There is this false story where she died making love to a horse. Although she wrote in her memoirs that she had strong urges, she did have a number of lovers, they were human, and she died of a stroke.

There have been a few works about her, notably The Scarlet Empress staring Marlene Dietrich. That same year there was film about here just called Catherine The Great starring Elisabeth Bergner and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Later there was Young Catherine starring Julia Oomond, and a tv movie Catherine The Great starring Catherine Zeta Jones. She was also a major character in Le Chevalier Deon. She's also, naturally, a major character in some Russian Swashbuckler movies, such as The Gardemarines and the recent miniseries Catherine's Musketeers. She appeared in the movie Russian Ark watching a play of her own composition and telling everyone to praise it. Valentin Pikul's novel Favourite tells the story of Catherine and Potemkin both as lovers and as statepersons.


Tropes about her and the works about her: