Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Alexander III Reform
and Consequences
Anmerkungen:
- Topic: Red
Reform: Orange
Consequence: Yellow
- Education
- universities cannot appoint new
professors, government approve
new syllabuses, can’t learn
History without Minister of
Education permission
- Restriction and censorship,
prevent bad knowledge from
spreading
- Religion
- Preach tsar first, **confession
info passed onto police instead of
never being shared
- Rebellion/dangerous
information more difficult to be
self-contained, teach loyalty
- Local government
- Reverse zemstva power- give Ministry
of the Interior power (tax raise power,
appoint new peasants)
- 1889 zemstva power
removed
- No local power
- People have power to support
Alexander III, but with little power in
general
- Local justices replaced with land
captains who report to Minister of the
Interior
- Only Minister of the Interior can
remove land captains, land captains
get draconian rights
- Officers to exile,
flogging, death
penalty
- Government power increased
at a local level
- Jews
- Anti-Jewish Pogroms 1881-1884
- Anti-Jewish riots, mass migration and
Zionist movement
- Quiet order decree
Anmerkungen:
- “14 August 1881: “Decree about measures for the preservation of state
order and public quiet and the placement of certain places in a position of
reinforced surveillance””
- Police send to exile without trial, close
schools/papers/printing houses/private
busi, temporary but used up to 1917
- People have decreased freedom, judicial system
- Peasants
- Redemption payments
reduced
- Government get less at a time,
peasants easier pay to a degree, still
leave all parties in debt
- Peasants selling land
loosened
- Peasants can move more freely, government
less control which could cause more issues
- Land captains to oversee peasant
communities
- Peasants still have landowner
like control dictating their actions
and lives
- Russification
- Nationality
policy
- Other nationalities begin
to hate Russian
leadership and efforts,
lose their culture