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Title: Russia 1825-1917


1
Russia1825-1917
2
Russia
Alexander II (the Great Reformer) becomes Tsar
(1855)
Edicts of 1864 (Legal equality, political
representation
Count Witte begins Industrial reform (1882)
-Dynastic Crisis -Decembrist Revolt
Russo-Japanese War
Official Nationalism
1815 1825 1853 1861
1881 1905
Bloody Sunday begins Revolution of 1905
Alexander II assassinated by Peoples Will
Emancipation Act
Holy Alliance Formed
Crimean War (1853-1856)
3
Russia under Nicholas I
  • Decembrist Revolt (1825)
  • Liberal officers led coup in favor of
  • Constantine Constitution
  • Elimination of serfdom
  • Crushed by Nicholas I (1825-1855)
  • Nicholas I
  • Ruled as autocrat
  • Disliked serfdom but was afraid of angering
    Boyers
  • Utilized censorship, secret police
  • Reform
  • Codified Russia Law (1833)
  • Official Nationality
  • Program of state controlled Russian nationalism
  • Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationalism
  • Slogan found in schoolbooks, newspapers, etc.
  • Russian Orthodox Church
  • Charged with education morality
  • Russians taught to accept place in society (no
    upward mobility)
  • Taught to see Mother Russia (language, culture,
    customs) as a safeguard against the immorality of
    the West

It is our common obligation to ensure that the
education of the people be conducted, according
to Supreme intention of our August Monarch, in
the joint spirit of Orthodoxy, Autocracy and
Nationality. I am convinced that every professor
and teacher, being permeated by one and the same
feeling of devotion to the throne and fatherland,
will use all his resources to become a worthy
tool for the government and to earn its complete
confidence. Sergey Uvarov, Minister of Education
4
Crimean War
  • Nationalist tensions led to the War
  • originated over competing claims by Roman
    Catholic and Greek Orthodox monks to be the
    guardians of Jerusalems holy places
  • France (supporting the Catholics) pressured the
    Ottoman sultan into giving the Catholics special
    privileges
  • caused the Russians (supporting the Greek
    Orthodox) to demand a protectorate over Orthodox
    churches w/in the Ottoman Empire
  • then the Russians occupied Wallachia and
    Moldavia,
  • Danubian lands that were under the Ottomans
  • Concerned by the Russian expansion, the English
    urged the sultan to resist the Russian demands
  • When negotiations broke down, Britain and France
    sent their fleets to the Aegean Sea, and in
    October 1853 the sultan declared war on Russia

Florence Nightingale
5
Peace of Paris (1856)
  • In the end, England (BalOfPow), France (defend
    Catholics), Sardinia (to elevate its prestige)
    Turkey fight Russia in the Crimean
  • exposed the weakness of Austria and Russia
  • Congress of Paris
  • Russia forced to cede some territory, surrender
    its claims in Turkey and accept a ban on warships
    in the Black Sea
  • big issue at the conference had to do w/national
    claims (who should get the Danubian
    principalities?
  • postponed b/c the Austrians didnt want the
    obvious solution (an autonomous state) to be put
    into effect as they felt threatened by
    nationalism

6
Tsarist Russia after 1856
  • Outcomes of the Crimean War showed the strength
    of the western nations and the backwardness of
    the enormous village
  • Huge empire (Poland to Pacific) was unable to
    repel the limited but efficient attacks of the
    West
  • Illiterate unmotivated serfs were unproductive
    famers and poor soldiers
  • Alexander II (1855-1881)
  • Assumed tsardom during the war
  • Not a born liberal but knew he had to act
  • European examples again become the model for
    Russian reforms (Peter, Catherine)

7
Westernizers v. Slavophiles
  • Two major perspectives of what Russia was
  • Westernizers Russia is destined to become more
    like Europe
  • Petr Chaadayev
  • Philosophical Letters said that Russia had lagged
    behind Western countries and had contributed
    nothing to the world's progress
  • Slavophiles Russia is destined to be unique
    (Just not sure what!)
  • Celebrated Orthodox faith extended family of
    Russian serfs
  • Rejected Western materialism
  • We are a backward people and therin lies our
    salvation. We must thatk destiny that we have not
    lived the life of Europewe do not want its
    proletariat, its aristocratic system..

8
Autocracy of the Tsar
  • Russias 1st fundamental institution was
    autocracy
  • Monopoly of power by Tsar and Boyars
  • But it wasnt exactly like absolutism (Louis XIV)
  • European conceptions were missing
  • Like that spiritual authority is independent of
    state authority (separation of Church and State)
  • People have certain rights or claims for justice
    (English Bill of Rights, Declaration of the
    Rights of Man and Citizen)
  • Rule by law was substituted with ukase (arbitrary
    laws created by tsar), police action, and the
    army
  • Developing technology was replaced with importing
    technology and forcing reforms onto the
    population
  • the Russian empire was a machine superimposed
    upon its people without organic connection
    (bureaucracy pure and simple)
  • Those within Russia who were exposed to western
    ideals objected to the pure bureaucracy
  • poisoned with foreign ideas (liberty,
    fraternity, just and classless society, value of
    the individual, freedom of consciousness)
  • Huge government actually afraid of its own people
  • Press and universities were censored

9
The Severity of Russian Serfdom
  • 2nd fundamental institution was serfdom
  • Majority of population were serfs
  • Resembled American slavery
  • Serfs were owned, could be bought and sold, used
    in occupation other than agriculture (factories,
    mechanics, evening migrating city workers)
  • Serfs who had some mobility had to pay fees to
    the lord
  • Serfs depended on the personality or economic
    circumstances of their owners (paternalistic)
  • Gentry served as local government of sorts
  • Law did little to interfere with gentry privilege
    over his serfs
  • Many conservatives and liberal Russians began to
    feel that serfdom must end (mid 1800s)
  • Wasnt profitable anymore
  • Made the muzhiks into illiterate and stolid
    drudges, without incentive, initiative,
    self-respect, or pride of workmanship
  • Made for very poor soldiers

10
Western Ideas and Education
  • 3rd fundamental institution (arose in mid 1800s
    was the intelligentsia
  • Educated Russians were full of Western Ideas
  • Estranged from the government, from the Church,
    from the uneducated peasants (unlike England and
    France)
  • And felt some guilt for the condition of the
    peasants
  • Westerizer Alexander Pushkins mother sent 2 to
    Siberia for not bowing as she passed by
  • Became intelligentsia felt themselves a class
    apart
  • Free to think, not free to do much
  • Made up of students, university graduates, people
    who had time to read
  • tended to adopt sweeping all-embracing
    philosophies
  • Headed movement called populism
  • Believed intellectuals should play a large role
    in society
  • exaggerated view of influence thinkers have had
    on historical events
  • Land and Freedom- chief radical society
  • 1870s hundreds of students went to the
    countryside to live with and teach the peasants
    their role in upcoming revolution
  • Most turned over to police
  • 1879 split into the Peoples Will (terrorist
    group)

11
The Emancipation Act of 1861 Other Reforms
  • 1855 Alexander II became tsar and sought the
    support of intelligentsia
  • He eased the controls on the universities
  • Censorship was reduced and followed by a great
    outburst of public opinion
  • Polar Star of Alexander Herzen (a revolutionary)
    in London gained wider audience
  • One point of agreement was the emancipation of
    the serfs
  • Even reactionary Nicholas I (who hated liberalism
    and used the Third Section (secret political
    police) wanted to alleviate serfdom
  • How to achieve the goal of emancipation was
    unclear
  • Alexander II set up a special branch of gov to
    figure this out
  • Needed to avoid throwing the labor system into
    chaos
  • Did not want to ruin the gentry class
  • Serfdom was abolished by an imperial ukase of
    1861 decree
  • Subjects of the government not of their owners
  • No longer could forced or unpaid labor be demanded

12
Act of Emancipation of 1861
  • It did
  • Allocated about 50 of cultivated land to gentry
    and 50 to former serfs
  • Serf had to pay redemption to gentry
  • It did not
  • Weaken the gentry
  • Now had possession of ½ arable land, received
    redemption , free of serf responsibility

13
Land allocation
  • Peasants did not own property in western sense
    (private individual)
  • Peasant land became Mir or village (collective)
    property
  • Village was responsible to the gov for payment of
    the redemption
  • Could demand forced labor from members who
    defaulted on their portion of the redemption
  • Could prevent peasants from moving away (would
    leave them with burden of paying redemption)
  • Mir periodically reassigned lands to village
    members (depending of family size) supervised
    cultivation (Open field Three Field system)
  • Land could not be sold outside the village
  • Discouraged the investment of outside capital
  • Result Agriculture in Russia would lag behind
    the technical advancements of the west

14
Inequality Among Peasants
  • Most peasants belonged to a Mir
  • Kulaks
  • Came to mean "tight-fisted"
  • More well-to-do peasants
  • Owned and/or rented land from the gentry
  • hired other peasants to work
  • Led to growing resentment
  • Later labeled as class enemies by
    Marxist-Leninists
  • Later liquidated by Stalin in 1931
  • None possessed full individual freedom of action
    in the western sense in the late 1800s

15
Legal Reforms
  • Edict of 1864 allowed for
  • Public trials
  • Right to representation (with lawyers of their
    own choosing)
  • Class distinctions in judicial matters were
    abolished
  • clear sequence of lower and higher courts was
    established
  • Training for judges on state salaries
  • Jury trials

16
Political Reform
  • Another edict of 1864
  • established a system of provincial and district
    councils (IE. Local government)
  • Called Zemstvos
  • Members were elected by peasants and other
    elements
  • A group of Mirs made up a Volost
  • A group of Volost made up a Zemstvos
  • Took care of education, medical relief, public
    welfare, food supply and road maintenance
  • Developed a sense of civic responsibility among
    its members

Zemstvo having a dinner by Grigoriy Myasoyedov.
1872
17
Military Reform
  • Largest army humiliated in Crimean War
  • 25 year conscription service
  • Village held dirge-like procession for departing
    soldiers
  • Illiterate serfs did not know their left from
    their right
  • Told to use their bayonets before bullets
  • Often seized (impressments) serfs from families
  • Harsh brutal discipline
  • Edict of 1874
  • Lessened service to 6 years active (9 years in
    reserve

18
Bakunin and Anarchism
  • Mikhail Bakunin Ultra radical
  • Former army officer who left Russia frequented
    radical meetings with Georgia Sand and Karl Marx
    in Paris Germany
  • Participated in Rev of 1848 in Prague
  • Prisoner in Siberian labor camp
  • Broke with LaSallian Socialist and Marxist at the
    First International in Geneva (1866)
  • Believed there was no compromising with existing
    government
  • Believed that violence was necessary
  • Marxism rejects terrorism because socialism
    needed no prodding (it was inevitable)
  • Bukunins pamphlet called Peoples Justice called
    for terrorism against tsarist officials and
    liberals too!
  • Catechism of a Revolutionist stated
  • that true revolutionary is devoured by one
    purpose, one thought, one passionthe
    revolution.
  • Everything that promotes the success of the
    revolution is moral, everything which hinders it
    is immoral.

Bakunin speaking to members of the IWA at the
Basel Congress in 1869
19
The Peoples Will
  • In order to stem the rise of radical socialist
    the Czar turned to the liberalism 1880
  • Liberals demanded follow through with earlier
    reforms
  • Czar abolished the secret police (Third Section)
    of Nicholas I
  • Allowed more freedom of the press
  • Agreed to a pseudo-parliamentary system on March
    13, 1881
  • March 13, 1881 Alexander II was assassinated by
    the Peoples Will

The assassination of Alexander II. Drawing by G.
Broling 1881
20
Alexander III
  • Alexander III (1881 to 1894)
  • Abandoned his fathers idea of parliamentary-like
    gov
  • Brutally resisted liberal and revolutionary
    interests
  • He did allow peasant emancipation, judicial
    reform and zemstvos to continue
  • Even Russia (with autocracy on the right
    revolutionaries on the left) was caught up in the
    liberalism of the times

21
Russia after 1881 Reaction and Progress
  • Alexander III tried to stamp out revolutionism
  • Revolutionaries were exiled
  • Peoples Will was crushed
  • Jews were subjected to pogroms (part of
    tri-partite approach)
  • Government adopted policy of Russification
  • Poles, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Armenians,
    Germans in the east, Muslims in the south central
    regions subjected to forced assimilation into
    Russian culture

22
Konstantin Pobiedonostsev, Reactionary
procurator of Holy Synod of Russian Orthodox
Church adviser to 3 Tsars main proponent of
Russification Saw West as a doomed
culture Attacked rationalism, liberalism Said
Slavs had unique character Hoped for a theocratic
utopia where clergy protected masses from poison
of the West  
23
Industrialization before 1914
  • Russia began to industrialize during the 1880s
  • Financed by European capital
  • 4 billion in Russia by 1914
  • Count Witte
  • reform minister
  • put Russia on gold standard
  • made Ruble convertible into other currencies
  • Railway mileage doubled between 1888-1913
  • Exports and imports increased
  • Ex400 million rubes (1880) to 1.6 Billion in
    1913
  • Imports rose 5xs same period
  • continued to lag behind in industrial development
  • No machine tool industry or chemical plants

Sergei Yulevich Witte
24
Industrialization before 1914 Continued
  • Unique feature of Russia proletariat (factory
    worker) was that it was highly concentrated into
    large factories (500)
  • Was easier for workers to mobilize politically
  • Russian business class was weaker than in the
    west
  • Why?
  • Much of Russias largest industries were foreign
    owned
  • Large percentage of the economy was owned by the
    Tsarist government
  • Largest state operated economic system in the
    world
  • Government was deeply in debt to the West

The shell-shop of the Putilov works, St
Petersburg 1903
25
Tsarist Russia (1900)Orthodoxy, Autocracy,
Nationalism
Peasant Demands
Liberal Cadets Demands
Proletariat demands
Radical Intelligentsia
26
Political Parties (1900)
  • Political Parties began to emerge by 1900
  • Included
  • Constitutional Democrats
  • Social Revolutionaries
  • Social Democrats
  • reflected mounting discontent
  • Not parties in western sense
  • not organized to get a candidate elected
  • No elections in Russia except Zemstvo
  • Parties were really propaganda agencies
  • Worked underground
  • Popular unrest began to grow in 1900
  • Peasants were trespassing on gentry lands
  • local insurrections against landlords
  • local insurrections against tax collectors
  • Factory workers refused to work at times

27
The Kadets
  • Constitutional Democratic Party (1905)
  • Named derived from abbreviation of Constitutional
    Democrats (KD)
  • Formed by business, professional class and
    capitalistic landowners, lawyers
  • Liberal, progressive, constitutionalists
  • Came to favor constitutional monarchy
  • Not connected to issues/concerns of the urban
    worker or peasant
  • Remember Frankfurt Assembly in 1848

Later disparaged as party controlled by Jews in
this anti-Semitic poster by the Bolsheviks
28
Social Democratic Labor party
  • Founded by Marxists in 1898
  • Not much different than other Social
    Revolutionaries except
  • More inclined to an international movement
  • Expected world revolution to break out in West
  • Admired German Social Democratic (Lassalians)
  • More oriented toward Europe
  • Many of their spokesmen lived there in exile
  • Thought Russia must develop capitalism and an
    industrialist proletariat, (class struggle)
    before revolution (Orthodox Marxist)
  • Leaned toward the urban proletariat as a support
    base
  • Ridiculed the mir and abhorred the Social
    Revolutionaries
  • Disapproved of sporadic assassination, terrorism
  • Seemed less dangerous (to Russian police) than
    Social Revolutionaries

29
Social Revolutionary Party (1900)
  • Derived from the Peoples Will
  • favored a catastrophic overthrow of the tsardom
  • Had mystical faith in the might of the Russian
    people (peasants)
  • Saw the mir as a viable form of communism
  • Like Marx and Engles but didnt think that urban
    proletariat was only true revolutionary class
  • Didnt think that capitalism and its evils were
    necessary for Russia to move into revolutionary
    socialism
  • They believed
  • Russia skip capitalism and go directly to a
    socialistic society
  • Will emerge after 1905 as the Bolsheviks

30
Tsar Policy
  • Government refused to make any concessions
  • 1894 Nicholas II
  • Had narrow outlook
  • Little Father was taught by Pobiedonostsev
    (Pobie) that any criticism as un-Russian
    democracy was "the insupportable dictatorship of
    vulgar crowd".
  • Pobedonostsev condemned elections, representation
    and democracy, the jury system, the press, free
    education, charities, and social reforms
  • Nicholas II
  • Similar to Louis XVI (Family man, trained to
    rule, but too young, too indecisive)
  • Promoted autocracy
  • God-given, best and only form of gov in Russia
  • With growing discontent Nick needed a distraction
  • Plehve, the Chief Minister hoped for quick war
    with Japan that would forge patriotism

31
Russo-Japanese Rivalry
  • Russia and Japan are opposed to each others
    interests in Manchuria
  • Japanese need natural resources
  • Russians wanted a rail way to Vladivostok
  • Russia needed a distraction from criticisms of
    Tsardom at home
  • Tsars advisors were racist and didnt believe an
    Asian nation could mount an fight against the
    Russia Bear
  • Russo-Japanese War (1904)
  • Japan attacked Port Arthur
  • Armies entered Manchuria
  • Battle of Mukden 624,000 men were engaged
  • Largest battle ever
  • Russia was defeated on land
  • Russians sent the Baltic fleet to Japan
  • Tsushima Strait the Russian fleet was destroyed
  • Russia was defeated at sea
  • Lost 2 of 3 fleets

The Russian Navy socks the Japanese Fleet in the
kisser.One of many over-confident pre-war
Russian propaganda cartoons
32
Treaty of Portsmouth
  • T. Roosevelt
  • Japan received Port Arthur
  • Preferred position in Manchuria
  • Southern half of the island of Sakhalin
  • Consequences of Japanese victory
  • Russian government shifted its attention back to
    Europe and the Balkans provoking WWI
  • Tsarist government weakness was exposed
  • Led to widespread discontentment

33
Bloody Sunday 1905
  • Police allowed a priest, Father Gapon to lead St.
    Petersburg factory workers in hope of a counter
    propaganda move
  • Only recently uneducated peasants they believed
    that Little Father would rectify the evils
  • Asked for 8 hr. workday, minimum wage (1 ruble),
    recall of bad officials, a Constituent Assembly
  • 200 thousand unarmed men, women, children marched
    to Winter Palace on Sunday (1/1905)
  • Sang God save the Tsar
  • Troops shot and killed hundreds

34
(No Transcript)
35
Reactions to Bloody Sunday
  • Dissolved the moral bond between the people and
    the Tsars government (Little Father)
  • Tsar was force behind their grievances
  • Political strikes broke out
  • Councils or soviets were formed in Moscow and St.
    Petersburg
  • Peasants erupted in revolt
  • Burned manor houses, beating up land owners
  • Remember the Great Fear
  • Social Revolutionaries tried to direct the
    peasant revolts
  • Constitutional Democrats tried to seize
    leadership of the revolution
  • All wanted more democratic representation
  • 8/1905 the Tsar calls for an Estates General
  • Peasants, landowners and city people would vote
    as separate classes
  • Revolt continued as St. Petersburg Soviet
    (workers council) led by Mencheviks called for a
    general strike in October
  • RR stopped, banks closed, newspaper stopped
  • Paralyzed government

36
(No Transcript)
37
The October Manifesto
  • Tsar issued the October Manifesto
  • Called for a constitution, civil liberties, and a
    Duma to be elected by all powers alike with
    powers to enact laws
  • Tsar hoped to split the opposition (which it did)
  • Constitutional Democrats moved to solve problems
    in the Duma
  • Liberals feared the revolutionaries
  • Revolutionaries (correctly) believed that the
    October Man was a deception which the Tsar would
    renege on
  • Peasants and workers were not satisfied
  • Peasants wanted more land and less taxes
  • Workers wanted a shorter working day and a living
    wage
  • Middle-class liberals were pacified
  • Mutinies at Kronstadt and sailors on Black Sea
    fleet
  • Order is demanded by middle class liberals
  • Peace was made with Japan
  • Troops were moved back to keep order
  • Revolution was pushed underground

38
The Results of 1905 The Duma
  • 1905 Revolution made Russia into a parliamentary
    state
  • 1906-1916 Russia was a Pseudo/semi constitutional
    monarchy
  • Nicholas II announced the Duma would have no
    power
  • Over foreign policy
  • The Budget
  • Or government personnel
  • Tsar would not allow any real participation in
    government by the public
  • Right wing opposition favored autocracy, Orthodox
    Church
  • Formed the Black Hundreds and terrorized peasants
    to boycott the Duma
  • Left wing had formed Social Revolutionaries and
    Social Democrats (Bol and Men) urged workers to
    boycott Duma

39
1905-1917 elsewhere and on outline
40
Europe on Eve of WWI
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