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ARCHIVES

St Petersburg:

Oral History Center, European University at St Petersburg (Blokada v sudbakh i pamyati leningradtsev).

Tsentralniy Gosudarstvenniy Arkhiv Istoriko-Politicheskikh Dokumentov Sankt-Peterburga (TsGAIPD SPb).

Tsentralniy Gosudarstvenniy Arkhiv Kinofotofonodokumentov Sankt-Peterburga (TsGAKFFD SPb).

Moscow:

Gosudarstvenniy Arkhiv Rossiiskoi Federatsii (GARF).

Rossiisky Gosudarstvenniy Arkhiv Literatury i Isskustva (RGALI).

Rossiisky Gosudarstvenniy Arkhiv Sotsialnoi i Politicheskoi Istorii (RGASPI).

Rossiisky Gosudarstvenniy Voyenniy Arkhiv (RGVA).

Tsentralniy Arkhiv Ministerstva Oborony (TsAMO).

Elsewhere:

Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European Culture, Columbia University.

BBC Written Archives Centre, Caversham.

Bundesarchiv-Militararchiv, Freiburg.

Hoover Institution Archives, Stanford University.

Widener Library, Harvard University (Harvard Project on the Soviet Social System).

Acknowledgements

A great many people helped to create this book. First, I must thank my agent Peter Robinson for raising, and my editors Bill Swainson, George Gibson and Ludger Ikas for providing, the funds that allowed me to work on it for rather longer than the 872 days the siege itself lasted. Events on the scale of the siege of Leningrad can never be done full justice, but I was exceptionally fortunate in being granted the time and resources to make the attempt.

Second, my heartfelt thanks go to the five scholars — Dr Tatiana Voronina of the European University at St Petersburg, Maria Svichenskaya of the National Library of Russia, Dr Lyuba Vinogradova, Pavel Rakitin of the Russian State University for the Humanities and Michelle Miles of Freiburg’s Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat — who took time out from their own projects to take part in my research. As well as combing archives in Russia and Germany they advised, prompted and acted as sounding boards as I developed my ideas. Equally patient and insightful were Masha Bozunova, Masha Eremenko, Masha Kaminskaya, Dr Elena Khlinovskaya-Rockhill and Sofia Savage, who helped to translate dozens of voluminous oral histories and siege diaries. The credit for whatever merit this book possesses belongs in large part to all of them.

I was also extremely lucky in the encouragement given by fellow historians, chief among them Drs Sergei Yarov and Aleksandr Chistikov of the Petersburg branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Both were extraordinarily generous with their time and expertise, fielding rafts of questions and pointing me towards the latest debates and publications. In Freiburg Professor Ulrich Herbert and Dr Cornelia Brink fascinatingly explained German perspectives on the siege. In London Professors Orlando Figes and David Kirby, Simon Sebag Montefiore and in particular Antony Beevor — velikiy vozhd to all those of us posted to the Eastern Front — passed on wisdom and contacts and generally enlivened the long and solitary business of writing. So, too, did Judith Flanders, who found time between her own books expertly to pummel the final manuscript into shape. The last edits came under the eagle eyes of Richard Collins, Anna Simpson of Bloomsbury and Bernd Rullkotter, translator of the German edition.

Other busy people who gave interviews, made introductions or responded in detail to out-of-the-blue emails were Galina Afanasyeva of the St Petersburg zoo, Marion Beaton of Glasgow’s Mitchell Library, Meriel Buxton, Felicity Cave, Dr Robert Dale of Newcastle University, Dr Alan Dangour, George Edgar, Olga Filochika of the Museum of the History of St Petersburg, Irina Flige of the St Petersburg branch of Memorial, Aleksandr Frenkel of the city’s Jewish Community Centre, Deborah Hodgkinson, Virta Kaija of the Helsingin Sanomat, Olga Kalashnikova of Radio Baltika, Dr Nikita Lomagin and Dr Yekaterina Melnikova of the European University at St Petersburg, Dr Chiara Mayer-Rieckh, Giles Milton, Dr Yuri Nagovitsyn of the Pulkovo Observatory, Catriona Oliphant, Dr Vladimir Osinsky of the St Petersburg State University, Dr Siobhan Peeling of the University of Nottingham, Galina Retrovskaya of the St Petersburg Philharmonia, Nataliya Rogova of the National Library of Russia, Olga Smirnova and Renata Tairbekova of the BBC World Service, Dr Alexandra Smith of the University of Edinburgh, Tim Tzouliadis, Ludmilla Voronikhina of the Hermitage, Nicolas Werth of Paris’s Institut d’Histoire du Temps Present, Stephanie Williams, Dr Emma Wilson and Dmitri Zhuravlev of Petersburg’s Military- Medical Museum.

Vladimir Nikitin of the State University’s journalism faculty gave invaluable help in unearthing the

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