Saturday, July 20, 2019
Revo Of 1905 :: essays research papers
 At the turn of the twentieth century, Russia was a curious society, still stratified  into nobility and peasantry. The Russian people seemed to be as immovable as  the dark ground which they farmed, welded to the ground by centuries of  struggle. While the Europeans fought political battles, the Russians wrestled  against the cold and starvation. Four decades earlier, Czar Alexander II signed  the ``Emancipation Manifesto'' which freed the serfs from ownership by the  nobles.1 He had hoped to finally bring Russia out of the dark ages. His  bureaucracy continued to elevate the peasants by making all classes of society  equal under the law and increasing the availability of education.2 Nevertheless,  the Dark People of Russia remained in their darkness, understanding little  besides their own existence in the context of their communes. The commune  oriented nature of the Russian peasants made Russia a prime target for  Marxist revolutionaries. The uniquely backward culture of Russia spawned a  singularly Russian form of Marxism, Narodnichestvo. Russian intellectuals of  the 19th century felt that the socialist revolution must come from the uprising of  the rural peasant masses, rather than through the proletariat of the cities. The  peasants were remarkably unreceptive to revolutionary agitators. They were  blind to events outside of their own commune. More often than not, the  agitators were run out of town by suspicious peasants. 3 By 1900, the remnants  of the Narodonik philosophy had melted into the Social Republican party. 4 The  ``Emancipation Manifesto'' had marked the beginning of the end for the nobility.  Deprived of their serfs and unable to gain any power in the government, the  Nobles were forced to sell off their land, little by little, to support their lifestyle.  For a government supported by nothing more than the momentum of history  and tradition, the decline of the nobility foreshadowed the destruction of the  autocracy. At the turn of the century, the Czar had very little support outside  his own bureaucracy. Young Nicholas II, heir to the throne in the late 1800's,  inspired hope in those rallying for governmental reform. Zemstvos and volosts,  local governments elected by nobles and peasants, hoped that Nicholas would  at least allow these legislatures to have an advisory function for the Czar. 5  They were sadly disappointed once Nicholas II ascended the throne. Upon the  death of Alexander III, the zemstvo of Tver petitioned Nicholas II to allow  local representative bodies ``to express their opinion on questions of concern to  them, in order that. . . the Russian people might reach the height of the throne.  . .''. Nicholas replied, ``I am extremely astonished and displeased with this    					    
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