James William Barnes Steveni (born 1859[1][2][3] in Kingston upon Hull,[4] Great Britain; died 1944 in Bromsgrove,[4] Great Britain) was a British journalist and author.
From 1887 he lived in Russia's capital Saint Petersburg (after 1914 named Petrograd), where he taught English language and met Leo Tolstoy, for example.[2] As a correspondent for the London Daily Chronicle in Petersburg between 1892 and 1917 he authored a number of books, essays and articles about political, military, social, cultural, ethnological and historical aspects of Russia's situation on the eve of the First World War and the Russian Revolution.[2][3]
Publications
edit- Through Famine-Stricken Russia (1892)[5]
- The Scandinavian Question (1905)
- Things seen in Russia (1913)
- Petrograd, past and present (1914)
- The Russian army from within (1914)
- Things seen in Sweden (1915)
- How to do business with Russia; hints and advice to business men dealing with Russia (1917)
- Europe’s Great Calamity: The Russian Famine, An Appeal for the Russian Peasant (1922)
- Unknown Sweden (1925)
Sources
edit- ^ :Michael Skinner: What we did for the Russians, page 186ff, Lulu, Garamond 2008
- ^ a b c Sofia Andreevna Tolstaya: My life, page 781. Ottawa 2010
- ^ a b The Online Books Page: William Barnes Steveni
- ^ a b rellyseeker.nz: James William Barnes STEVENI Archived 12 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Review of Through Famine-Stricken Russia by W. Barnes Steveni". The Athenaeum (3385): 348–349. 10 September 1892.
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