1 / 11

Pan-slavism

14 th March. Pan-slavism. 1848 Panslavic conference in Prague in Bohemia Initially anti Russia Independence of Serbia – motivated by the nationalistic feelings of the revolutions of 1848 / liberalism Southern slavs desired unity and looked to Russia for support. 14 th March. Pan-slavism.

Download Presentation

Pan-slavism

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. 14th March Pan-slavism 1848 Panslavic conference in Prague in Bohemia Initially anti Russia Independence of Serbia – motivated by the nationalistic feelings of the revolutions of 1848 / liberalism Southern slavs desired unity and looked to Russia for support

  2. 14th March Pan-slavism Defeat at Crimea (1856) turns general romantic slavophilia into a more militant pan-slavist movement – as humiliation at hands of Western European powers

  3. 14th March Pan-slavism Danilevsky a foremost proponent – he wrote ‘Russia and Europe’ and argued that they had very distinct cultures and either Russia would go under or maintain a distinct identity 1871

  4. 14th March Pan-slavism Russo-Turkish war 1877-78 Proposed creation of ‘Big Bulgaria’ – motivated by pan-slavic ideas Proposal overturned at the Congress of Berlin 1878

  5. 14th March Russification The usually involuntary adoption of Russian language or culture by otherwise non-Russian populations

  6. 14th March Russification No completely policy. Rather, depending on the Tsar and the historical context. Alexander III (1881 – 1894) was the Tsar who pushed through Russification the most.

  7. 14th March Russification • Following divisions of Poland by stronger neighbours (Russia, Prussia) in the C18th Poland became part of the Russian empire. • Following the revolt in Poland in 1863, on nationalist grounds, the Russification of Poland was accelerated. • Banning of Polish language in public 1864 • Outlawing of Polish in schools and official offices in the 1880s

  8. 14th March Russification Poles / Roman Catholics banned from official position In Poland : Flying university 1805 – 1905 A secret, ‘underground’ educational network that taught students in Polish with leading scholars involved. Known as flying or floating university Aims of Russification? A strong, unified state? Alexander III’s aims of ‘Autocracy, Orthodoxy, Nationalism’ Notice links between motivation of domestic policy and foreign – underlying belief in tradition and the single authority provided for by Tsarism.

  9. 14th March Anti-Semitism

  10. 14th March Russian expansion Look at Ukhtomskii source. Qs – What is the context of the source? What possible factors / motivations are suggested for Russia expansion to the East?

More Related