Thursday, April 30, 2015

19th Century Imperial Russia

Source: www.kingsacademy.com

1796 - 1894






     Next in line was Alexander I.  Tsar Alexander is best known for defeating Napoleon.  After the two had a dispute, Napoleon decided to invade the Russian Empire, marching his army all the way into Moscow.  This ended poorly for the French, as not only were they decimated on Russian soil, but they were chased all the way back to Paris, ultimately leading to Napoleon’s demise.  Alexander was labelled the “savior of Europe,” and in 1815 he was placed in charge of redrawing the map of the entire continent.  As much as Europe was booming economically during the Industrial Revolution, the progress was much less apparent throughout the Russian Empire, due primarily to their retention of serfdom.


Source: www.allposters.com
     In 1825, Tsar Alexander I was replaced by his younger brother, Nicholas I, who would rule for 30 years.  The well-educated Russian officers in his army, who saw much of Europe during the Napoleonic Wars, decided that it was time for a change in Russia, due to their experiences in Western Europe, and led an uprising at the start of Tsar Nicholas’ reign.  Unfortunately for them, however, this revolt was abruptly squashed, and led the newly appointed Tsar even further in the opposite political direction they had hoped for.  Government regulations and censorship increased at a rapid rate in order to prevent future attempts at a revolution.  During his reign, hundreds of thousands of potential revolutionaries were sent to Siberia.  Towards the end of the 1820’s, successful wars ceded more territory to the Russian Empire, including Dagestan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Nakhchivan, and several cities in northeastern Anatolia.  As the first half of the 19th century came to a close, there was somewhat of an internal conflict between those who wanted Russia to return to the ways of its past, and those who wanted Russia to become more modernized like Western Europe.


Source: www.romanovfamily.org
     After Nicholas’ death in 1855, Alexander II took over the throne.  Six years later, in 1861, Alexander II did something that many historians believe to be the most important event in Russian history during the 19th century.  Rather than waiting around for the inevitable uprising and revolution of the over 23 million serfs throughout the Empire, Alexander II decided to abolish serfdom, emancipating all the serfs in Russia.  Unfortunately for Alexander II, this did not effectively silence any talk of revolution.  The way in which the lands were divided up and collectively “owned” by communities, as well as taxes that had to be paid by the former serfs to the government, which were then distributed to their former land owners, still left the emancipated serfs at the bottom of the totem pole.
Source: www.library.yale.edu
     After invading Outer Manchuria from 1858-1860, and selling Alaska to the United States in 1867, Russia had another conflict with the Ottoman Empire in the 1870’s.  With their political interests in mind, and acting on the behalf of Bulgaria and Serbia, Russia went to war with the Ottoman Empire in 1877.  Less than a year later, the Ottoman Empire surrendered as Russian troops neared Constantinople.  However, after threats from Britain to declare war on Russia, should they have signed the proposed Treaty of San Stefano, the treaty was never signed.  On the plus side though, Alexander II had aided Serbia, Romania, and Montenegro in the gaining of their independence from the Ottomans, while simultaneously gaining the provinces of Batumi, Ardahan, and Kars in the South Caucasus as new territories for Imperial Russia.


Source: russiapedia.rt.com
Source:pictify.com
     Alexander II was assassinated in 1881, passing the throne on to his son, Alexander III.  Alexander III despised Western Europe, and spent his entire reign reviving the old traditions.  He made extreme efforts to shut Russia off from Western Europe, and was responsible for a conquest of Central Asia.  He also went after China for more territory.  Alexander III’s structural reform was essentially his biggest contribution to the Empire, and he was eventually succeeded by his son, Nicholas II, in 1894.

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