This fascinating study shows how terrorism as developed and practiced in Romanov Russia has, over the past century, manifested itself as the template for modern and postmodern terrorism as a universal sociocultural, psychological, and existential experience, irrespective of particular political causes, ethnic distinctions, and ideological boundaries.
• Offers data based on extensive archival and primary research
• Includes citations from numerous original sources found in Russian, American, European, and Israeli depositories
• Provides a comprehensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources