Catherine the Great

Russian Empress, expansion

Early Modern influential 116 sayings

Sayings by Catherine the Great

I like to be praised, but I like to be praised for what I really am, not for what I am not.

1767 — Letter to Voltaire
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A great many people are anxious to be famous, but few are willing to pay the price.

c. 1780s — Memoirs of Catherine the Great
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I came to Russia a poor princess, and I shall leave it a rich empress.

c. 1762 — Reported remark to her ladies-in-waiting
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I will reign or I will perish.

1762 — Reported remark during the coup against Peter III
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Power without limits is a dream, but power with absolute limits is a nightmare.

c. 1770s — Reflections on governance
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I can only imagine what posterity will say of me.

c. 1780s — Letter to a correspondent
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I shall die as I have lived, with a good conscience.

1796 — Reported remark near the end of her life
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I consider myself an artist. My canvas is Russia.

c. 1770s — Reported remark to a courtier
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I have always been convinced that the true wealth of a state consists in its population.

1767 — Nakaz (Instruction) to the Legislative Commission
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The best way to govern is to make people believe that they are governing themselves.

c. 1770s — Reported remark
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I like to be loved, and I am not ashamed of it.

c. 1760s — Letter to a confidante
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I detest war, but I love glory.

c. 1780s — Reported remark
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To conquer a country, one must first conquer its people.

c. 1770s — Reported remark, reflecting on foreign policy
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I have lived a long life, and I have seen many things, but I have never seen a man who was not afraid of a woman.

c. 1790s — Reported remark
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I prefer to be feared than loved, if I cannot be both.

c. 1760s — Reported remark, often attributed to Machiavelli, but also associated with Catherine
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I was born to rule.

c. 1760s — Reported remark
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The only way to enjoy life is to love what you do.

c. 1780s — Letter to a friend
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I have loved men, but I have never allowed them to rule me.

c. 1780s — Reported remark
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The greatest happiness is to be able to live for one's country.

c. 1770s — Reported remark
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I have always been a good politician, even when I was a bad woman.

c. 1780s — Reported remark, reflecting on her personal life and political success
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