Professor Nicholas B. Breyfogle received his Ph.D. (1998) and M.A. (1994)
in Russian and European History from the University of Pennsylvania. He received
his B. A. (1990) from Brown University in History and French Civilization.
Professor Breyfogle is a specialist in Imperial Russian history, c. 1700 to
1917, especially the history of Russian imperialism and the non-Russian nationalities
of the tsarist empire. His research interests include Russian colonialism,
inter-ethnic contact, peasant studies, religious belief and policy, and the
history and culture of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Siberia.
He is also a specialist in environmental history. His writings have examined
the history of earthquakes in Russia and the human history of water. He is
currently working on an environmental history of the Lake Baikal region of
Siberia, tentatively entitled "Baikal: the Great Lake and its People."
Breyfogle is the author of Heretics and Colonizers: Forging Russia's Empire
in the South Caucasus (Cornell University Press, 2005), which was awarded
the Ohio Academy of History Book Award for 2006. He is also co-editor of Peopling
the Russian Periphery: Borderland Colonization in Eurasian History (Routledge,
2007) and guest editor of Russian Religious Sectarianism, a thematic
issue of the journal Russian Studies in History (Winter 2007-8).
Professor Breyfogle works as co-editor of the on-line magazine Origins:
Current Events in Historical Perspective, http://ehistory.osu.edu/osu/origins/.