1st Februrary 1856Russia defeated in the Crimean War(1853-1856)
1860State Bank established
3rd March 1861Alexander II signs the emancipation edict abolishing serfdom
January 1863January uprising. Poles refused conscription and were dissatisfied because they weren't emancipated.
1863 Universities allowed to be self-governing bodies
1863The novel 'what is to be done' by Nikolai Chernyshevsky, an imprisoned revolutionary who was smuggled out. Book greatly affected Lenin
1864 Zemstva formed with responsibility for providing local services including health & education.
1865 Censorship reforms introduced with more relaxed guidelines
1864Judicial reforms introduced
1865Alexander II's heir Nicholas died of meningitis, making Alexander III heir.
April 1866Alexander II's attempted assassination attempt failed
July 1886Alexander II took a mistress, Catherine Dolgorukov
1886 (after July)Alexander III married Princess Dagmar of Denmark. She converted to Orthodoxy and took the name Maria Feodorovna. She was highly influential on Alexander III
1866 Many nobles & ministers felt that the reforms had gone too far, by allowing an influx of Western ideas. They persuaded Alexander to replace liberal ministers with more conservative ones.
1869Trial by Jury removed for political crimes
1869Catechism of a Revolutionary by Mikhail Bakunin and Sergei Nechaev was published. It argued for opponents of autocracy to keep up the struggle and press for revolution
1869Karl Marx's 'communist manifesto' translated into Russian.
1870(Elected town councils) Duma's were introduced to urban areas.
1870-1873Railway mania saw substantial Gov. investment in railway construction.
1871Dimitri Tolstoy, minister for education, insisted on a return to a classical curriculum. Universities were forbidden from including any subjects that encouraged critical thinking
1871Oil was pumped from sea port Baku
1872The Donetsk iron works was established
1872Karl Marx’s Das Kapital was published
1874- Military reformmilitary service extended to all classes, inhumane punishments abolished, military colleges set up and modern weapons introduced.
1874Populist ‘Go to the People’ campaign spread by nihilists and narodniks. Their aim was to persuade peasants to rise up against the regime by stirring up resentment at their lack of land and the taxes they had to pay.
Autumn 1874More than 1,500 exponents of the Populist Movement had been arrested.
1874Another Populist ‘Go to the People’ campaign failed.
1877Trial of the 193 – populists were put on trial as populist revolutionaries who spread propaganda against the Russian government
1877A number of Populists that had evaded capture set up ‘Land and Liberty’ but it soon became clear that the peasants were not interested in joining a full scale revolution.
April 1877Russo-Turkish War began. Russia declared war on Turkey in support of the Balkan States who were fighting against Turkish rule.
1878General Mezemtsev, head of the Third Section and Prince Kropotkin were assassinated by members of the ‘Land and Liberty’ group. The assassins escaped amid a wave of popular support.
March 1878 The war with Turkey ended with the signing of the Treaty of San Stefano. The Russians had secured autonomy for the Balkan States and created Bulgaria under Russian protection. However, Britain and Austro-Hungary protested against this and Bulgaria was split under the Treaty of Berlin.
1879‘Land and Liberty’ split into two groups – Black Partition and The People’s Will
1879The People’s Will declared that the Tsar had to be removed.
1879-1880A poor harvest in 1879 led to the 1880 famine
1880Alexander II married his mistress Catherine, 40 days after his wife's death.
1880Numerous arrests weekend the black partition group
13th March 1881Alexander II assassinated by the 'people's will' group
He was succeeded by his son, Alexander III who was much more conservative than his father.