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19 th Century Russia… Fathers & Sons
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The Romanovs First came to the throne in 1613 Ruled Russia until 1917
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Catherine the Great ( r.1762-1796) Was German; married Peter III Peter was deposed in a military coup Catherine was an “enlightened monarch” who corresponded with Voltaire Life of peasants & serfs worsened during her reign Rights & privileges were restored to the gentry in the provinces; they gained property rights & more control over serfs Serfdom itself expanded through giving gifts of land and the people on the land
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Also a patron of the arts Worked to improve education, but price of schools kept poorer people illiterate Assumption Cathedral
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Pugachev’s Rebellion Part of a series of peasant revolts Pugachev promised serfs freedom & their own land After his defeat & death, Catherine strengthened control of Russian govt over the serfs
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What’s in a Name? Constantine Pavlovich Alexander Pavlovich (r. 1801-1825) Alexander I Nicholas P avolvich (r. 1825-1855) Nicholas I
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Nicholas I ascended the throne Alexander I died; Constantine & Nicholas debated who would be next Tsar In the meantime… Decembrist Revolt (1825) some thought Constantine Pavlovich would be a more liberal tsar Some of the soldiers in the army had been part of the occupation of France after the defeat of Napoleon They brought home Enlightenment ideas They wanted a constitutional monarchy and reform
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Nicholas I as Tsar… Autocratic Tsar of All the Russias Change is BAD! Motto was “autocracy, orthodoxy & nationality” Policy was Russification Believed that liberating serfs would cause nobles not to support the tsar The Orthodox Church was an arm of the secular government… controlled schools & universities The Orthodox religion provided the basis for morality, education & intellectual life
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Nicholas I strengthened secret police Increased censorship He suppressed a rebellion in Poland in 1830 Helped Austria defeat revolutions in 1848 Became involved in the Crimean War in 1852 Two ways of thinking about how to improve Russia emerged… Slavophiles and Westerners
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Fathers & Sons… Alexander Nikolaevich (r. 1855-1881) Alexander II Alexander Alexandrovich (r. 1881-1894) Alexander III Nicholas Alexandrovich (r. 1894-1917) Nicholas II
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When Alexander II became Tsar in 1855… Approximately 2/3 of Russians were Orthodox. Had 1/10 of the railroad track as Great Britain. Had 650 miles of track; first railroad line built 1843-1851 from St. Petersburg to Moscow. Approximately 4/5 of Russians were illiterate peasants Approximately 45% of Russians were serfs
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Nine of ten Russians lived in the countryside. It took 3 Russian peasants to produce as much as 1 English farmer. The gentry class was less than 2% of the population… most intellectuals came from this class. Serfs/peasants spoke Russian. Gentry spoke French… many did not know or understand Russian… in school, classes were in French except for Russian language class.
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St. Petersburg was very unsanitary with a lack of sewage system and clean water… deaths outnumbered births. Intellectuals debated whether Russia was part of European civilization (Westerners) or was Russia a unique and superior civilization (Slavophiles)? Some intellectuals believed they knew better than the tsar how to run the government; political reform was a major topic
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Alexander II is most famous for… Emancipation of the Serfs (1861) Government consulted the nobility about how to go about freeing the serfs Alexander II believed the serfs needed to be freed by the government (defeat in Crimean War) Owners received redemption certificates when their serfs were sent to the military The land allotments freed serfs received was small and of inferior quality Many freed serfs became tenant farmers The traditional right to timber & firewood was eliminated
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Freed serfs had to pay the government redemption payments over a period of 49 years The government used the money to compensate nobles for the loss of the serfs’ labor and of land
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Additional Reforms… Zemstovs—elected local governments, but elected on a tiered system; nobles dominated; only in ethnically Russian areas Judicial (1864)—gave independence to the courts; the separate military, church and peasant courts continued to exist Trial by jury and right to a lawyer were part of the reforms Judicial reforms were not applied in all parts of the Russian empire, such as Poland
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Military… in 1874 adult male draft was introduced to replace serf/peasant armies… serfs had been required to serve 25 years! The goal was to create a professional army similar to the armies of Britain & France Level of education determined the length of service No primary education… 6 years... Service included literacy classes If completed primary school… 4 years If completed secondary school… 2 years With a university education… 6 months
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Reactions to reform… Populist Movements… based on the peasants; middle class & upper class young people would go to the countryside to try to educate peasants. Generally peasants were suspicious of the outsiders Land & Liberty… more radical and some in the group favored terrorism & assassination; the group split into the more radical People’s Will and the populist Black Repartition
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Assassination of Alexander II There were about 8 different assassination attempts Some said Alexander went too far with reform, others said not far enough Some were unhappy that Alexander was not willing to allow the government to have a constitution
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One of the conspirators… Sophia Perovskaya Site of the assassination: Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood
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The Son… Alexander III End of reforms Secret police… Okhrana founded originally to protect the tsar’s family; expanded to hunting down all revolutionaries Okhrana had offices in several countries, such as in Paris, France Policy of Russification; allowed pogroms against Jews (watch Fiddler on the Roof) Restricted the power of the zemstovs Increased censorship… reversed other reforms Revolutionary activities increased
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Russian Empire… early 20 th Century
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Sources http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/catherine.html http://www.alexanderpalace.org/palace/catherine.html http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/history/russia/romanov.html http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/history/russia/romanov.html http://russiapedia.rt.com/russian-history/here-come-the-romanovs/ http://russiapedia.rt.com/russian-history/here-come-the-romanovs/ http://www.kreml.ru/en/ http://www.kreml.ru/en/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pugachyov.jpg http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pugachyov.jpg http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/ http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/empire/ http://forum.alexanderpalace.org/index.php?topic=8401.0
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