Alex III Political Flashcards

1
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A
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2
Q

What in Alex’s childhood could have influenced his later rule?

A
  • Not born 1st in line, Brother Nicholas died in 1865
  • Influenced by his reactionary tutor Pobedonostev who viewed Liberalisation as a threat to the state as well as being a vocal anti-semite
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3
Q

What was Alexanders Personality

A
  • Suspicious of anything western
  • Appeared to others as crude and unintelligent
  • Bullied and abused Ministers
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4
Q

What evented started his reign

A
  • The gruseme assasination of his father
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5
Q
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6
Q

When did the reign of Alex III start

A

1881

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7
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8
Q

Why is it wrong to dismiss Alexander as a backwards looking reactionary

A
  • He was well aware of the need to modernise Russia economically
  • However unable to grow Russia Socially and politcally
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9
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10
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11
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12
Q

How did Alexander begin his reign

A
  • Public hanging of the revolutionary assasins
  • Published 1881 “Manifesto on Unshakable Autocracy”
  • Issued a Law on Exceptional measures (marshal law in localities and powers of imprisionment)
  • Abandoned the Loris-Melikov reforms of his father
  • Reforming ministers resigned
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13
Q

What was Alex’s policy of Russofication

A
  • Attempt by Alexander and Pobedonostev to merge all the races in Russia into a shared Russian National identity by enforcing the Russian Language and Culture
  • In 1885 Russian became offical language and Public office closed to people who could not speak it
  • Alex didn’t disingush between historically loyal minorites e.g Finns and historically rebellious e.g Central Asian Muslims
  • This increased opposition to ALex from many sections of Society
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14
Q

When was Russian made the offical language and public office closed to those who didn’t speak it

A

1885

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15
Q

How did Russofication affect Baltic Germans inc dates

A
  • 1885 to 1889 Russian enforced in state offices, schools, police and judicial system
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16
Q

How did Russofication affect the Polish

A

1885 All schools had to teach russian with the exception of the Polish language and religion

17
Q

How did Alex deal with revolt

A
  • He mercilessly Crushed revolt
  • Guriya, Georgia, 1892
  • Armenia 1886
18
Q

Why was Russofication neccesary

A
  • To counteract German “Germanification” near borders
  • Austria - Hungary was growing weaker and many in government viewed this as due to a failure to impose a unifiying national policy on its differnet nationalities
  • Aided Economic development
  • Used to strenghten autocracy by reducing prevalance of reformist mentalities
19
Q

Describe anti-semitism in Alex’s early reign

A
  • 1881 –> 1884 a series of Jewish pogroms in the pale of settlement
  • May laws of 1882 limited the settlement of jews and further limited their prospects of social progression
  • 1887 number of jews admitted to schools and university limited by quota 10% in Pale, 5% outside, 3% in the capitals
  • 1897 - Jews banned from participating in local elections
20
Q

What did Pobedonestsev say about the Jews

A
  • “One third should emigrate, one third assimilate, one third die”
21
Q

Who lead the Okrana between 1881 and 1884?

A
  • Vyacheslav von Plehve
22
Q

What was the importance of the 1882 statute on Police Survailance?

A
  • 1882 any area of the empire deemed to be an “area of subversion” police could search, arrest, detain, question, imprision or exile anyone who committed a crime, but also who they thought likey to commit crimes, knew or where related to people who committed crimes
23
Q

What event during Alex III’s reign promted the greatest calles for reform

A
  • Great Famine 1891/92
  • Tsarist Buerocracy failed to adequately react
  • Zemstva system mangaged most of the relief work
  • The famine was a turning point - Orlando Figes
  • By the mid 1890’s there was renewed calls in for a national advisory body
24
Q

What was the importance of Georgi Plekhanov

A
  • Leader of “Emancipation of Labour” group in Switzerland
  • Translated and smuggled Marxist writings into Russia
  • Limited impact at the time, the smuggler was arrested
  • However his development of the two-stage strategy was vital for advancing marxism in Russia
25
Q

What event arguably radicalised Lenin

A
  • Execution of his brother
  • Aleksandr Ulyanov
  • For creating bombs with the intent to kill Alexander III
  • Reformed the Peoples Will
  • March 1887
26
Q

Factors which suggest a growth in internal opposition did threaten Tsarism 1881 to 1894

A
  • Some terrorist plots in the 1880’s aimed at destablising Tsarism
  • Growth of towns and cities in the 1890’s and smuggling of Marxist documents meant marxist ideas could be more easily spread
  • Opposition was not eradicated but driven below ground, exiles continued to spread awareness from abroad, many would return
  • Famine 1891/92 refocussed attention on plight of the peasants. Polulist ideas returned around turn of the century in Uni students
  • Liberal ideas persisted in Intelligencia, late 1890’s marked return of liberal sentiment. Dinner parties were a forum for democratic debate umong the educated and businessmen
27
Q

Factors suggesting Internal oppostion did not threaten Tsarism

A
  • Harsh treatment of fathers killers in 1881 set tone for period of reaction
  • Statute of State security gave police arbitrary powers of arrest, Secret police prevented formation of even bengin student groups
  • Rural areas controlled through Land Captains from 1890
  • 1890 Zemstva act recuduced power of Zemstva
  • Any opposition that Existed was tiny and exerted little influence
  • Population remained overwhelmingly loyal to the Tsar