Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Tsarist Russia
1861 - 1917
- Alexander II
1855-1881
- Emancipation of the Serfs 1861 sets serfs free
from their legal bind with the land
- Many Serfs actually worse off - forced to pay redemption
payments that plunged them into poverty
- Largely seen as result of defeat in Crimean War in 1850s
- Known as the 'Great Reformer'
- Backwards economy lagging far behind the rest of Europe
- Assassinated by 'The People's
Will' in bomb attack in 1881
- Alexander III
1881-1894
- Highly repressive and conservative
- Policy of Russification enforces Russian culture and language
over the Empires different ethnicities
- Press control and government supervision over universities
- Government arrest and execute student Alexander Ulyanov in 1887 - elder brother of Lenin
- Appoints Konstantin Pobedonostsev as chief minister
- Issues Manifesto in 1881 - claims that all
power in Russia lies with the Tsar
- Economic
development under
Nicholas II
- Sergei Witte
- Becomes Minister of Finance in 1891
- Extensive restructuring of Russian economy
with emphasis of industrial materials
- Coal production increases
from 5.9 million tons in 1890, to
16 million in 1900
- Oil production increases from
3.9 million tons in 1890, to
10.2 million in 1900
- GDP rises 96% between
1898 and 1913
- Huge extension of Russian railway network
- Trans-Siberian Railway
- Put the Rouble on the Gold Standard to encourage investment
- Secures millions of dollars worth of European loans
- Peter Stolypin
- Agrarian reform seeks to replace strip
farming with more western methods
- Abolished redemption payments for peasants and granted
them the ability to leave their 'commune' on their own will
- By 1915 50% of peasants owned their own land, up from 20% in 1905
- Population growth in towns and cities led to cramp, poor
conditions - breeding ground for social unrest
- The 1905 Revolution
- Causes
- Russian defeat in 1904-05 Russo-Japanese
War was national humiliation
- Heavy political oppression
- High levels of taxation and bad harvests, plus squalid urban conditions
- Events
- 'Bloody Sunday' - Father Gapon leads a peaceful march to the
Winter Palace to present petition against poor conditions
- Soldiers open fire and up to 200 protestors killed
- Disorder spreads with strikes occurring in all major
cities with attacks on public buildings
- Potemkin Mutiny - crew of battleship Potemkin mutiny against Captain
- Establishment of St. Petersburg 'Soviet' (workers
committee) in October to organise protest
- Aftermath
- Tsar issued the October Manifesto
- Allowed the creation of a 'Duma' - a form of
parliament with law making powers
- Tsar ruled that peasants no longer had to pay
mortgage payments - appeasement
- Only a minor role played by Lenin and
revolutionaries - more sporadic than controlled
- The First
World War
- Repercussions
- Rasputin becomes advisor
and doctor to Tsarevich
- Holds significant power over the Tsarina and royal
court - Tsarina becomes increasingly unpopular
- Huge economic toil on the country - inflation increases
200% and huge loss of life and food production
- Political - Tsar refuses to listen to the Duma and brands
them traitors. Government becomes even less popular
- Discontent, economic turmoil, humiliation and political
unrest lead to the events of the February Revolution in
1917 - Tsarist Russia is coming to an end.
- Military
Performance
- The War begins well for Russia - advances
made in eastern Austria and Germany
- Advance halted at Battle of Tannenburg
1914 - only 10,000 troops escape the battle
- After loss of Poland, Nicholas takes over as
Commander in Chief in September 1915
- Poor commander - Brusilov Offensive 1916 ultimately
fails and leads to huge casualties and mass retreat
- Initial patriotism and rallying
behind the Tsar
- Political Parties
under Nicholas II
- The Socialist
Revolutionaries
- Led by Victor Chernov
- Followed the ideas of 'Russian Populism' - Russia's future lies with
the peasants in independent democratic communes
- Terrorist wing responsible for murder of Plehve, Minister of the Interior in 1904
- Disorganised and fractured between Left and Right
- The Social
Democrats
- Followed the ideas of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels -
The Communist Manifesto
- At Second Party Congress 1903, Lenin forces split
between Bolsheviks and Mensheviks
- Bolsheviks
- Party membership exclusive to dedicated revolutionaries
- Democratic Centralism - power was in obedience
- Mensheviks
- Membership open to all and alliance with other parties
- Populist movement is the
forerunner of the political parties
formed in early 1900s
- The Liberals
- Kadets - businessman and professionals
wanting constitutional monarchy
- Repression under
Peter Stolypin
- Minister of the Interior
1906-1911
- Extensive use of field court martials to combat
revolutionary aftermath - 1100 executions
between 1906-1907
- The noose became known as 'Stolypin's Necktie'
- Forces closure of thousands of anti-government newspapers and
convicted 16,500 people of polictical crimes between 1908-1909 alone
- The Dumas
1906-1914
- Duma - the Russian parliament
permitted in the October Manifesto
- 1st Duma - Huge demand for reform, yet closed
by Tsar after 72 days with minimal reform passed
- 2nd Duma - Stolypin passes land reform, yet closed
after 3 months due to unwelcome criticism of military
- 3rd and 4th Dumas - Election to 3rd Duma restricted to
wealthy to ensure government support. Reforms still
passed however, such as a commitment to provide
universal primary education