Peter the Great — "I can conquer the world, but I cannot conquer my own stubbornness."
I can conquer the world, but I cannot conquer my own stubbornness.
I can conquer the world, but I cannot conquer my own stubbornness.
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"I will make them literate, and then they will understand me."
"It is better to have a good enemy than a bad friend."
"I shall die, but the state shall live."
"We are not in the habit of giving away cities."
"The clergy is a different body, but the state is the same."
Russian tsar (1682-1725) who Westernized Russia, founded St. Petersburg, and built Russia into a European great power. Closely associated with Catherine the Great (later Westernizing Russian empress). For an intellectual contrast, see Old Believers, Russian Orthodox traditionalist movement that rejected Patriarch Nikon's reforms and Peter's modernization — Peter's beard-shaving decrees, Western dress laws, and calendar changes triggered a religious-cultural schism — the founding poles of Russia's eternal 'European modernity vs Slavic tradition' debate that runs through Slavophiles, Solzhenitsyn, and contemporary Putin-era ideology.
Reported by various biographers, reflecting on his character.
Date: Early 18th century
Self-DeprecatingFound in 1 providers: grok
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