Corruption - Government
officials claimed to be
representative of the
Tsar thus acted as if they
had absolute power
No limitations of power
through law
Citizens had no right to free
speech or fair trial
Limited civil society
No trade unions
Religious
persecution
Tsar's isolation
Refused to to recognise Russia's problems, and his advisors were
unwilling to contradict him so he had very little understanding of the
poverty or corruption of Russia
Nationalism and Russification
Russification = aggressive promotion of
Russian culture and forceful suppression of
other national cultures
Response to nationalism throughout the
Empire which threatened the unity and control
- Ukraine, Finland, Georgia and Poland
The imposition of Russia as the official
government language and the justice system
of the Baltic states
Promotion of Russian culture
in schools
Suppression of other cultures
Establishing Russian-language universities such as Iur'ev University in Estonia
Consequences of Russification
Counterproductive
Backlash among groups who had been loyal to the Empire
Increase in Nationalism in Poland and Baltic
states became a powerful anti-government
force which later would feed into the 1905
Revolution
Anti-Polish, anti-Finnish and anti-Semitic feelings
and violence
Orthodoxy
Konstantin Pobedonostsev advised Nicholas to
promote Orthodoxy as an essential part of Russian
identity
Number of Parish clergy increased 60% between 1894-1902
Tenfold increase in church schools
Number of students they educated increased 15 times
Missionaries sent to Baltic, Protestant states
Number of conversions to Orthodoxy doubled from 1881-1902
Decline in Orthodox Church attendance in urban areas
Religious Persecution
Christian Denominations
Only Orthodox Churches
allowed to proselytise
Encourage conversion
Catholic and Protestant churches
closed and replaced with schools
ran by the government
Confiscation of Armenian Church property
Anti-Semitism
Education
Jews could make no more than 10% of universities within the
Pale of Jewish Settlement and 3% in Russia's major cities,
Moscow and St Petersburg
Very limited educational opportunities
Residency
The May Laws 1882-1905
Banned Jews from living in rural areas
Moscow and Kiev held campaigns to
expel Jews from cities
Violence
Pogroms increased dramtically
In 1903-1904 there were 49 in Russia
Emigration
Large numbers left Russia due to the violent anti-Semitism
To the US, Argentina, Peru
Government viewed it as a good solution
Okhrana
'All-powerful, all-knowing, all-capable'
Goal to infiltrate and arrest
opposition in order to destroy
threats to Tsarism
2,500 agents in 1900
Small but effective
Sergei Zubatov became head of Okrhana in 1896 -
Police Socialism. This provided sick pay, took control
of emerging unions and investigated complaints of
abuse at work
Experiment spread to other cities however
he was sacked and the policy ended in
1903
Universities
University statute of 1884: Banned
societies and clubs on campus,
encouragement of traditional subjects
and banning of women
Surveillance
By 1900...
Records on 55,000 people
Collections of 5,000
revolutionary
publications
20,000 photographs of suspected radicals
Opposition
Social Democrats
RSDLP formed 1898
Marxism
Argued capitalism exploited the proletariat
Inspired by Karl Marx (1818-1883)
Fundamental disagreement in
strategy caused division
Lenin and Bolsheviks believed thought the proletariat
in Russia were weak and uneducated and therefore
should have a vanguard party to lead a revolution on
their behalf
Mensheviks, Julius Martov and Fyodor Dan argued it should be a
mass party which educated and organised the proletariat
Socialist Revolutionaries
SRs formed in 1902
Focus on land reform
Importance of peasants in
society
Viktor Chernov was the leader
who though the peasants and
proletariat should overthrow the
Tsar
Revolutionary violence
Assassinations of The Tsar's education minister (Bogolepov) and the
Minister of the Interior (Vyacheslav von Phleve)
Reasons for Opposition Failure
Divisions - Liberals/Socialists and
Bolsheviks/Mensheviks
Repression
Lenin's Siberian exile
Okhrana
Illiteracy throughout Russian peasants
made it hard to influence them