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Nicholas I (1825-1855)

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Nicholas I (1825-1855) Russia in the deep freeze The Holy Alliance 1812 Napoleon invades Russia. 30 March 1814 Russian troops enter Paris. 1814-15 Congress of Vienna ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nicholas I (1825-1855)


1
Nicholas I (1825-1855)
  • Russia in the deep freeze

2
(No Transcript)
3
The Holy Alliance
  • 1812 Napoleon invades Russia.
  • 30 March 1814 Russian troops enter Paris.
  • 1814-15 Congress of Vienna victorious allies
    divide up Europe,
  • Russia gained Duchy of Warsaw and Finland.
  • Europe divided among great Empires Russia,
    Austria, Prussia.

4
Nicholas and the Decembrists
  • Seeds of revolution left smouldering in Europe
    Greece, Italy.
  • Russian officers form secret societies with the
    goal of overthrowing the Russian autocracy.
  • December 14, 1825, on the death of Alexander I, a
    coup is attempted.
  • Nicholas faces down the revolutionaries and they
    are arrested.

5
Consequences of Decembrist revolt
  • Five ringleaders were hanged (Ryleev, Kakhovsky,
    Muravov-Apostol, Pestel, Bestuzhev-Riumin).
  • Many noble conspirators sent to Siberia.
  • Famous Decembrists wives followed them into
    exile.
  • Decembrist uprising becomes a non-event, not to
    be mentioned.
  • Decembrists became the forerunners of revolution
    in Russia.

6
The five who were hanged
7
Listopad
  • In November (Polish listopad) 1830 the Poles rise
    up against Russian rule.
  • The revolt is viciously suppressed and Poland
    ceases to exist as an entity.

8
Battle of Stoczek, 1831
9
Result of November uprising
  • Many Poles exiled inside Russia, esp. Siberia.
  • Polish exiles gather in Paris around the poet
    Adam Mickiewicz.
  • The image of Nicholass Russia suffers greatly.

10
Nicholas takes control
  • Emperor creates a vast network of spies.
  • All signs of dissent suppressed.
  • Strict censorship imposed.
  • Universities tightly controlled.
  • Philosopher Alexander Chaadaev declared insane.
  • Official doctrine is Orthodoxy, Autocracy,
    Nationalism.

11
Russian Society under Nicholas
  • Noblemen (???????) small, landowning class...

12
Pavel FedotovAn Aristocrats Breakfast, 1849
13
Courtship of a Major, 1848
14
Nicholass Russia
  • Bureaucrats

15
Newly awarded morning of an official who has
just been awarded his first medal
16
Russian Society under Nicholas
  • Peasants (?????????) the vast majority

17
Peasants eating dinner
18
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19
Russian Society under Nicholas
  • The clergy (???????????)

20
Religious procession, Kursk province, 1880-1883
Ilya Repin
21
Russian Society under Nicholas
  • Town-dwellers (??????) and Merchants (?????)

22
The Intelligentsia (????????????)
  • Raznochintsy (individuals of no particular
    class).
  • Selflessly devoted to ideas, idealistic.
  • Fantastic projects for the future of Russia.
  • Grew into the revolutionary class that created
    the Bolshevik revolution.
  • Not to be thought democratic or freedom-loving.

23
Vissarion Belinsky(1811-1848)
  • Critic, thinker, demanded that
  • literature be a truthful
  • representation of life.
  • The fate of the individual, of
  • the person, is more important
  • than the fate of the whole
  • world.
  • Died of tuberculosis.

24
Seeds of dissent
  • Small but influential class of the intelligentsia
    discuss endlessly the situation.
  • Dissenters gather abroad Alexander Herzen in
    Paris, then London, Mikhail Bakunin (anarchist)
    and Peter Kropotkin.
  • Berlin, where Hegel was professor of philosophy,
    becomes a magnet.

25
Whither Russia?
  • The issue in Russia in the 19th century was
    progress and change evolution or revolution.
  • Russia was seen as a backward, corrupt and unjust
    society.

26
The Westernizers(?????????)
  • Westernizer camp promoted change along western
    lines Russia should follow in the footsteps of
    the West.
  • Tended to be atheist believed in socialism,
    progress, womens rights demanded the liberation
    of the serfs.

27
Slavophiles(???????????)
  • Believed Russia should follow a distinct path as
    opposed to the corrupt West.
  • Proponents of Orthodox religion.
  • Believed in sobornost the collectivist idea as
    practised in the peasant commune.
  • Saw the role of Russia as protector of brother
    Slavs.

28
1848
  • The year of revolution in Europe France,
    Germany, Hungary and Italy.
  • Nicholas sends troops to put down the Hungarian
    revolutionary forces.
  • Pan Slavic conference in Prague.
  • Communist manifesto published.

29
An empire in need of change
  • Crimean war of 1853-1856.
  • France and England invade the Crimea in the South
    of Russia.
  • The war arises over growing Russian presence in
    the Black Sea, threatening the Ottoman (Turkish)
    Empire.

30
The End of Nicholas
  • Nicholas dies 2 March 1855.
  • He leaves the Empire frozen in time.
  • The failure of the Crimean war shows Russias
    technological backwardness the need for modern
    weaponry and railroads to transport troops and
    materiel.
  • His son Alexander II ends the war and begins a
    program of dramatic reforms in Russia.
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