1 / 22

RUSSIAN ABSOLUTISM

RISE OF THE CZARS. RUSSIAN ABSOLUTISM. Medieval Russia. Russia came under the control of the Mongols Moscow rulers began to reassert themselves over Mongol rule 1505 – Prince of Moscow had become Czar Czar also served as head of the Orthodox Church

tangia
Download Presentation

RUSSIAN ABSOLUTISM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RISE OF THE CZARS RUSSIAN ABSOLUTISM

  2. Medieval Russia • Russia came under the control of the Mongols • Moscow rulers began to reassert themselves over Mongol rule • 1505 – Prince of Moscow had become Czar • Czar also served as head of the Orthodox Church • Associated with the Byzantine (Eastern) branch of Christianity

  3. St. Basil’s Cathedral, Moscow

  4. 16th & 17th Century Russian Society • Power tended to rest with the powerful Russian nobility (boyars) • Held land & controlled the serfs • the nobility struggled for control with the new czars • To gain control, the new czars used the nobility to serve the Russian state • Created a government bureaucracy • Mandatory military service • Nobles were the high-ranking military officers

  5. The Russian Peasantry • Vast majority of Russians were peasants & serfs • Cossacks were outlaw armies of peasants who often challenged the government & boyars • Major source of civil unrest & fear

  6. “Cossack on Duty” by Jozef Brandt

  7. The Romanov Family • 1613 – Michael Romanov selected Czar of Russia • He & his successors moved Russia toward a more autocratic rule • Total enserfment of the Russian peasantry accomplished in 1649 • Military service demands were relaxed for boyars • Change met with opposition & civil unrest • Cossacks challenged power of the state

  8. Peter the Great (r.1682-1725) • Committed to policy of Westernization for Russia • selective • political, economic, & cultural change • persuading Russians to change their life proved difficult • to impose his will, he became the most autocratic of Europe’s absolute monarchs • During his reign he…

  9. Built up Russian military • organization, 1st Russian navy, nobles as officers • Engaged in wars & some territorial expansion • Baltic & Black Seas regions • Maintained alliances with Austria & Poland against the Ottomans • Forced nobility into military or civil service for life • Established compulsory education for all young nobles • scientific academies • Standardized law code & tax system • taxes on peasants increase • Encouraged mining using serf labor

  10. Attempted to change traditional fashion • Boyars to shave beards & wear Western dress • Westernization of Russia kept in check • Peter’s orders • bureaucracy • Chancery of Secret Police • Policies encouraged the extension of serfdom

  11. Expansion under Peter the Great • Set out to extend Russia to the west & south • unsuccessfully fought Ottomans to gain warm-water port • Long war with Sweden that gave Russia land along Baltic Sea • Build new capital = St. Petersburg • Exploration of Bering Strait region (between Siberia & Alaska)

  12. Peterhof – Peter the Great’s Palace

  13. Catherine theGreat(r.1762-1796)

  14. An efficient, energetic empress who ruled in the tradition of absolute monarchs, Catherine… • Continued selective Westernization • welcomed philosophes, patronize arts & sciences • Reward nobles for service to the central government • given greater authority over peasants (taxation, justice) • Territorial expansion • partition of Poland (Russia gains eastern portion) • successful war against Ottomans • gain Crimea & warm-water port on Black Sea • Siberia & Alaska

  15. Suppression of Resistance • Pugachev Uprising

  16. Legacy of Russian Absolutism • Russian absolutism created an environment of social & political tensions in Russia that would last into the 20th Century • Russia would continue to struggle with modernization &Westernization • Absolutism would eventually fail as Russia moved toward socialism & communism in the late 19th & early 20th Centuries

More Related