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  1. Alexandra " Sasha " Kropotkin (1887–1966) was a New York -based writer and Russian language translator. Born in British exile to the Russian scientist and anarchist Peter Kropotkin, the socially prominent family returned to Russia from the 1917 revolution through his death several years later.

  2. War and Peace in an Abridged Translation Revised By Princess Alexandra Kropotkin. Leo Tolstoy. 4.16. 330,718 ratings17,545 reviews. Published to coincide with the centenary of Tolstoy's death, here is an exciting new edition of one of the great literary works of world literature.

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  3. Let us know. If not, help out and invite Alexandra to Goodreads. Alexandra Kropotkin is the author of Crime and Punishment (4.27 avg rating, 913745 ratings, 37296 reviews, published 1866), The Brothers Karamazov (4.37 ...

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  4. Princess Alexandra Kropotkin was a direct descendent of the Rurik Dynasty. She was born in London during her parents’ exile. Her father was the famous aristocrat-turned-anarchist, Prince Peter Alexeyevich Kropotkin. He had served for as an aide to Tsar Alexander II in 1862.

  5. Alexandra " Sasha " Kropotkin (1887–1966) was a New York -based writer and Russian language translator. Born in British exile to the Russian scientist and anarchist Peter Kropotkin, the socially prominent family returned to Russia from the 1917 revolution through his death several years later.

  6. Alexandra Kropotkin (b. 1887) had known Shaw since she was a child through her father, the Russian revolutionary and social philosopher, Prince Peter Kropotkin. An associate of William Morris, he became a leader of the anarchist movement after he settled in London in 1886.

  7. Alexandra and her mother did not want a government funeral and insisted Kropotkin be buried in the family plot. The Bolsheviks wanted to inter the body under the Kremlin wall, but Alexandra told them her father’s bones would never be mixed with the remains of scoundrels who were drowning the revolution in the blood of the Russian people.