I am a history buff and especially enjoy reading about the late 19th and early 20th century of Europe. To my surprise, the historical details covered in this series were amazingly accurate and as comprehensive as one could include in a dramatic series such as this. Usually, great liberties and inaccuracies, including popular myths or simplifications mar these productions, but not this one. Even people only vaguely familiar with the slow flame-out of monarchy in these central and eastern European empires will be entertained and informed by watching this. I would also add that the acting, costumes and sets were very "theatre" like which I found to be quite "up close and personal" in a good sort of way. My only disappointment was the seemingly incomprehensible failure to cover the final days of the Hapsburg dynasty which was relegated to a single line in the last minute or two of the last episode when the German Kaiser asks an aide whether it is true that "the Austrian emperor has fled"? To me, unlike the overthrow of the German and Russian dynasties, the demise of the Austrian monarchy was a real tragedy. The collapse of Austria-Hungary, unlike the other two empires, resulted in the creation of innumerable small countries unable to defend themselves now against the predatory Nazi and Communist neo-imperial neighbors that followed within a decade. The last Emperor of Austria was a quiet reformer who, had he been given a chance, would have redeemed the failings of the ancien regime of his great uncle and perhaps avoided nearly a century of misery and domination by Germany and the Soviet Union that followed. Unlike the German Kaiser or Tsar Nicholas, who constantly held out against their ministers cries for reform, Kaiser Karl of Austria was on the leading edge of real reform within the Austrian empire which came, alas, too little and too late. This would have been a contrast and an interesting and largely unknown topic for this series to explore. The collapse of the Romanovs is well known to the world due to the assasination of the imperial family, but Americans and most Europeans have scant knowledge of the reason for the "power vacuum" left in the wake of the collapse of a very genial and benign Austria. As Voltaire once said about the Hapsburg empire, "if it did not exist, it would have to have been invented". Its collapse and disintegration proved the truth of Voltaire's words.