NATURE OF GOVERNMENT- nature of gov essay Flashcards
Ideology, Gov structure, Repression
Alexander II Ideology
Autocratic – belief of being father of people, accountable for their welfare, appointed and answerable only to God.
Looked as though diluting autocracy with intro of reformedZemstvas (only local councils however, and never altered central gov and his own autocratic position)
Emancipation of the Serfs 1861 arguably did not impact autocracy at all! (49 years redemption payments revealed this reform was not as liberal as it was initially believed to be. Ensured it kept favour of nobility)
Alexander II Ideology STATS
Emancipation of the Serfs 1861 set 23 million peasants free
49 year redemption payments with a life expectancy of 35 years
Nobility lost 40% of their land
Alexander II Government Structure
Changed little centrally
Local gov change as introduced Zemstvas in 1864 which were regionalcouncilsincharge of education andco-ordinatingfamine relief, elected by landowners, peasants and urban dwellers. Peasants could vote for their representative (clear elements of representation that had never existed for peasants before)- had a say on who governed Russia.
HOWEVER had to have land qualification to sit on Zemstva(74% nobility) so arguably little change to nobility ruling over peasantry as before- only wealthy can govern
But had the challenge of the ThirdElement (doctors, lawyers,teachers) who demanded central gov reworked in style of Zemstvas.
Less of a change than the Dumas as the zemstvas were regional as opposed to be national. Change to previous Mir (village elders)
Alexander II Gov Structure STATS
74% of Zemstva members were nobility
Judiciary reformed with no more show trials in 1864
Alexander II Repression
-‘glasnost’ (openness) for first time. 1865 Censorship relaxed but gov could remove publications of a ‘dangerous orientation’.
Increase in newspapers, periodicals (1855 1020 books published, 1894 10,691 published including revolutionary texts)
Replaces Third Section with softer Okhrana in 1880, wants less oppression to be used- Liberal, reformist
However, as assassination attempts rose, after 1864 gave Okhrana more power - methods used were arrest, imprisonment and exile
Okhrana is ineffective; fails to intimidate population and protect Tsar (assassinated March 1881)- attempted repression not enough
Alexander II repression STATS
Trial of the 193: a series of trials from 1877-8 of 193 students and other “revolutionaries” charged with populist “unrest” saw a number of arrests
Massive rise of intelligentsia enthralled in utopian ideas of Socialism and Communism shows how lax he was.
Massively repressive in Empire with Ukraine seeing their university clamped down on.
Alexander III Ideology
Autocract – Reactionary due to seeing father assassinated 1881 and believed this was due to reforms.
Introduced Manifesto of Unshakeable Autocracy 1881 declaring him God ordained right to rule.
Very repressive with 1881 Russification (crushing/repressing national minorities’ cultural independence)
Alexander III Ideology STATS
Very repressive with 1881 Russification with pogroms of Jews
Alexander III and the zemstvas Gov Structure
Little change to central gov. AIII abolished the Council of Ministers (an advisory body appointed by him that advised him)
1864 Zemstvas introduced as regional councils elected by landowners, peasants and urban dwellers provided important services such as education, public health and transport.
Introduced Land Captains 1889 to managelocal gov problems became the primary judicial body for local government. Repressive.
Alexander III Repression
Reactionary leader killing 8 members of the peoples will. Extending of the powers of the secret police (Okhrana) after AII had relaxed them.
14 newspapers critical of govt were closed down- censored the opposition
1sttime Secret Police killed opposition over method of exiling to Siberiaset the tone for the next Tsar and the Commissars.
Nicholas II Ideology
Movement towards constitutional monarchy (monarchy and parliament) w/ October Manifesto (1905) This introduced the duma
BUT FundamentalLaws (1906) reinforced supreme authority and showed true ideology of asserting to autocracy- undermined decomcracy previously introduced (power to disband Duma)
Nicholas II and Dumas Gov structure
To appease liberals and end 1905 Rev Nicholas II introduced the OctoberManifesto in 1905, a Duma with politicalpartieslegalised for first time. But tsarstill had total central gov control.
Duma introduced which was a central government body who could discuss and block tsarist policy BUT could not propose any policy.Tsar could disband the Duma whenever and rule by himself when they were not in session (fundamental laws)
Duma favoured those with property and discriminated against workers or peasant representation.
4thDuma opposed dissolution and opposed the Tsar and half the members became the P.G.
Fundamental laws 1906 reasserted Tsar’s autocratic rights to disband the Duma
Nicholas II Gov Structure STATS
Duma 1905 October Mainfesto with political paties legal for first time
But only lasted 12 years and tsar still had total control
Couldn’t pass legislation and “electoral college” system discriminating those without property.
Nicholas II Repression
Reverted to ‘glasnost’ (like AII) led to expansion of the press 1894, periodicals in circulation increased 3 fold between 1900-1914
Publishers could still be fined, closed down if producing subversive material
Political matters in Duma began to be reported on and ‘penny papers’ created for ordinary man to read/buy.
Bloody Sunday 1905 saw over 200 killedshowed repressive force HOWEVER army defected and joined 1917 rev showing little effective control
Used system of exile significantly more 1905 6,000 were penal labourers 1910 30,000 penal labourer. Throughout the 1880s and 90s hundreds of prisoners died on their way to Siberia.
PG Ideology
Pseudo-democracy (quasi-democratic). No elections in 6 months and govt formed from last Duma, not elected. Kept postponing them.
Seen as illegitimate and continued to postpone Constituent Assembly (held in Jan 1918 under Bolsheviks) because of this made little changes to gov.
Issued 3rd March Statement which showed Liberal ideology and gave a number of reforms including freeing of all political prisoners.
Had difficult power balance with Petrograd Soviet.