Assassinated in March 1881
by the Peoples Will in
St.Petersburg
Emancipation
(freeing) of the
serfs in 1861
Known as the 'Tsar
Liberator'
Alexander III
Reactionary
(against
reform)
1881-1894
Temporary
regulations
Provincial governors and
officials to imprison people
without trail
Ban public meetings
Exile thousands of offenders to Siberia
Relied on tutor
Pobendonostev
Nationality
Russification
1885 Russian official
language
The rights of Russian majority were
put before majority groups
This INCREASED OPPOSITION
Autocracy
1889 elected Justices of the peace
were replaced by Land Captains
They could overrule the
zemstva (local council)
In 1890 the Tsar restricted the
right to vote for the zemstva in
the countryside
Orthodoxy
Rights and
privileges of the
Russian Orthodox
Church were
championed above
those of other
beliefs
Primary schools
came under
Church control
Nikolai Bunge 1881-1887
Created peasant land
banks
However too small to be effective
Ivan Vyshnegradsky 1887-1892
To raise money for
industrialisation
encouraged foreign investment
increased taxes
Foreigners were enticed to
invest with incentives
helped expansion of railway networks
growth of heavy industry in ukraine
oil production in Baku
Exported grain to finance his
policies, despite the major famine
Sergei Witte 1892-1903
Developed a policy of state
intervention
Foreign investment
1897 put the rouble on the
gold standard-guaranteeing
the currency's value
This encouraged western
countries (especially France
and Belgium) to invest heavily
in Russian industry
Increased from 200m
roubles in 1890 to
900m roubles in 1900
Railways
Trans-Siberian
railway 1891
Opened up the eastern
empire and advanced the
growth of new towns and
cities
A network of railways was
planned for western Russia to
link new industrial centres
Linked the oil refineries of Baku
to the Black Sea port of Batum
This helped stimulate the
growth of iron and coal
industries
Successes
Heavy industry meant massive
increases in production,
especially coal and iron
Output from the Baku oil
refineries increased
tenfold 1883-1900
Economy grew by 8% a
year in the 1890s
Failures
By 1914 trans-siberian only
partially finished and didnt
increase migration that much
Raised taxes in order to
provide money for
industrail developments
They squeezed the
peasants, making them
less likely to spend on
consumer goods
The government ran
up enormous debts
State control of industry meant that the middle
class grew slowly in the years before 1914
Witte didn't improve the state of agriculture
industry- even though taxes on peasants
accounded for 80% of the governments income
Opposition to Tsardom
Industrialisation didn't make
for a happy society
The gap between the rich
and the poor increased
Society became divided
between the countryside
and the town
Peasants
Most were still
paying redemption
payments
The nobles kept the best
land for themselves-leaving
the peasants with poor soil
Farming practices
hadn't evolved much
since the Middle Ages
e.g Old fashioned crop
rotation
Couldn't leave their village
without the permission of the mir
So weren't really free
Many peasants migrated to
towns to earn extra money
when they weren't needed
for sowing and harvesting
Unrest among
the peasants
grew as their
needs were put
after the need
to industrialise
Peasants resented the higher taxes
and were bitter about the lack of
government support during the famine
Urban workers
Earned barely enough to survive
from one week to the next
Factory hours were not regulated
by the state until Witte introduced
an 11 1/2 hour working day in 1897.
However, this law was often ignored
Factories were meant to be
inspected regularly, but safety
rules weren't usually followed
Rapid growth of towns meant
that workers lived in overcrowded
and insanitary tenements
Health and education services were
poor, creating more social inequality
Life expectancy were
under 30 years
Industrial labourers suffered the most
under Witte's industrialisation of Russia
They weren't allowed to form
a trade union and there were
no legal political parties to
represent their needs
Although town dwellers only accounted
for 20% of the population, they became
an increasingly radical force
Liberals
Economic
reforms led to the
growth of a new,
educated middle
class
They weren't completely opposed to Tsarism,
but they wanted the autocracy of the Tsars to
be replaced with a constitutional government
Nicholas II said that a constitutional
government was a 'senseless dream'
In 1903 liberals formed the league of Liberation,
which wanted a shorter working day, more land
for the peasants, and a elected parliament
Socialist Revolutionaries
SRs grew out of earlier
groups known as Populists
They believed revolution
would begin in the countryside
They tried unsuccessfully to convert
peasants into revolutionaries
They aimed to: Redistribute land to the peasants,
improve living and working conditions in towns and
overthrow Tsarism by force
The SRs used terrorism to advance their political aims. Between
1901 and 1905 SR terrorists assassinated several leading
politicians, including the Tsar's uncle, Governor of Moscow
Social Democrats
Followed the political
beliefs of Karl Marx
Tsar feared Marxism due to
its revolutionary principles
Later split and became the
Bolsheviks and Mensheviks
Didn't get far
Too small and ineffective
Major divisions between parties
Faced constant harassment
and violence from the okhrana
1905 Revolution
Long term causes
Towns and cities didn't have
good sanitation or water supplies
Pressure on food supplies
and famine
High taxes and redemption
payments=poor peasants
Political parties
growing
Committed to
autocracy
Short term causes
Bloody Sunday shocked
many Russians and badly
damaged the Tsars prestige
Workers went on strikes in
protest at the massacre
Affected railways, food
couldn't be delivered
Peasants revolted-illegally
taking land from the
owners
Humiliating defeats in
Russo-Japanese war esp. Port
Arthur Jan 1905
October Manifesto
Freedom of speech, religion
and press
An elected Duma, laws issued by the
Tsar needed approval of the Duma
In November a 2nd Manifesto was
published
improve land bank
abolish redemption payments
Tsar survived?
Army and
police loyal
No effective
opposition
Many revolutionary
leaders in exile
The Dumas 1906-1917
Fundamental law March 1906
Tsar had supreme
autocratic power
Tsar could govern by decree
(Article 87)
Laws proposed by the Duma
had to be approved by the
council of state and tsar
Government ministers were
appointed by the tsar
1st Duma April-June 1906
Trudoviks-represented peasants
and workers
Octobrists- moderate, loyal
to the tsar
Progressives-new party of
businessmen
Kadets-supported by intellectuals
and professionals
Demands: all male adults
vote, land reforms to benefit
peasants, political prisoners
released, ministers
answerable to Duma
demands refused
and duma dissolved
after 72 days
deputies gathered in Vyborg and
appealed to Russian people to protest
dissolution
2nd Duma
no. of Kadets
dropped
SRs, Bolsheviks and
Mensheviks joined
passed land reforms
by Stolypin
Constant
uproar
lasted 4 months
3rd Duma Nov 1907-June 1912
Duma of lords and
lackeys-peasants lost the vote
Octobrists largest party
present
right wing- prepared to work with government
further land
reforms
Universal health
insurance
Land Captains replaced by Justices of the peace
Universal primary
education
4th Duma Nov 1912-Feb 1917
Dominated by Octobrists
and other right-wing parties
Worked with the government until war in Aug 1914-suspended
Stolypin Prime Minister 1906-1911
Proposed agricultural reforms
Increase prosperity of
peasants to developed a class
of well-off agricultural workers
Increase crop
yield
Have fewer
famines
Make peasants more
content so less likely to
rebel against autocracy
Land Reforms
each peasant unconditional
right to land
Peasants could have their
own land holding without
interference
agricultural
education to
train peasants
sold crown land to
land banks
Emigration to Siberia
rural areas
overcrowded
offered incentives to
peasants who moved e.g
cheaper land
3 million peasants
relocated 1908-1913
Other Reforms
Redemption
payments ended
1907
Internal passports
abolished
Land captains replaced
by Justices of the Peace
Failures
Few peasants could
afford to separate
from the mir
still millions of hectares owned by the Tsar
Little change in farming technique
and not much increase in output
WW1
Armed Forces
enthusiasm shattered by 2
early defeats at Tannenburg
and Masurian Lakes
poor conditions,
inefficient food
supplies
Military
hospitals filthy
Transport
railways transported
troops and supplies
railways were overloaded in peacetime,
by 1916 the system had collapsed
food shortages in 1916
Economy
1914- Gold standard abandoned
Led to inflation
Peasants hoarded
grain
Nicholas and Alexandra
Sept 1915 appointed himself commander
in chief and left Alex in charge
Alex constantly changing ministers
causing instability in the govt
Political Opposition
1914 Duma suspended
1915 recall Duma
Had same demands as first Duma, Nicholas rejected
Progressive Bloc formed, continued
to press changes in the running war
Most political parties supported the war
Zemgor formed to help with war effort
Provided supplies for hospitals and
helped organise smaller industries
Nicholas was suspicious and refused to work with it