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Chapter 18

Chapter 18. The Rise of Russia. Themes of the Chapter. Territorial state huge land empire Power of the tsars & the Romanov Dynasty (1610-1917) Dominant aristocracy Reliance on coercive labor systems Lack of a merchant class Dependence on the West. Russia Under the Czars.

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Chapter 18

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  1. Chapter 18 The Rise of Russia

  2. Themes of the Chapter • Territorial state huge land empire • Power of the tsars & the Romanov Dynasty (1610-1917) • Dominant aristocracy • Reliance on coercive labor systems • Lack of a merchant class • Dependence on the West

  3. Russia Under the Czars • Remember from Ch. 14 that Moscow would become the center for resistance of Mongol rule

  4. The Need for Revival (The Ivans) • Mongol Rule = limited cultural development, economic stagnation, dependence on peasant labor. • Ivan III (the Great) 1462-1505 • reclaims early Roman, Byzantine Christian traditions • Emphasis on military rule • Begins an expansionist policy

  5. Light Green = land held by the end of Catherine the Great’s reign

  6. Policies toward Native Peoples • Siberia is home to 26 ethnic groups, who responded to Russians in different ways • Russian gov’t uses cossacks and westerners (fur trade) to inhabit the area, but many inhabitants are social misfits • Russians wanted tribute in the form of furs, and resorted to violence to get it • By 1763, 420,000 Russians live in Siberia

  7. Patterns of Expansion • Focused on Central Asia (lack of natural barriers made expansion easier) • Volga River (Astrakhan) becomes a bustling center for Eurasian trade • Tsars use new lands to reward faithful nobles/bureaucrats • New trade contacts w/Asia (Ottomans, Iran and India)

  8. Question Slide • Compare contrast the map of the Mongol Empire & Russian Empire on the next two slides: • How accurate was the Russian claim that it was the heir of Chinggis Khan and the unifier of Central Asia? How were the empires different?

  9. The Mongol Empire

  10. The Russian Empire

  11. Ivan IV (the Terrible) 1533-1584 expanded borders and terrorized boyars Ivan IV got his nickname after murdering his eldest son

  12. Western Contact • Tsars eager to make up for cultural isolation from Mongol polices by increasing contacts with Western Europe. This included: • Diplomatic missions to Europe • Western merchants establishing Russian trade centers • Using foreign artists to design Russian churches/public buildings

  13. Romanov Policies • Time of Troubles = Ivan IV’s death (no heir) leads to a boyar power struggle • Romanov Dynasty (1613-1917) begins when boyars choose a Romanov to be Tsar • Michael= stabilizes gov’t, expands borders, drives out foreigners • Alexis = limits the power of nobility; resumes state control over the church

  14. Russia’s 1st Westernization • 17th c. Russia = unusually agricultural compared to Europe & Asia • Peter the Great begins policies of westernization while continuing to old polices of expansion and tsarist control

  15. Peter the Great (1689-1725) • Autocrat: • Used capital punishment, suppressed power of nobility, used secret police, militaristic • Westernization • Political = streamlines bureaucracy • Economic= built up mining/ iron industry • Social = encourages western styles among the upper classes (did not encourage gender equity); education for nobility

  16. Results of Westernization • Changes were selective (did not impact the lower classes) • Serf labor expanded • Encouraged the autocratic state; didn’t challenge it • Widespread resentment as people clung to Russian traditions

  17. Catherine the Great (1762-1796) • Claims power from husband after many years of weak rulers • Expands tsarist power (puts down the Pugachev Rebellion) • Enlightened Despot = courts Enlightenment ideals while being a traditional Russian ruler • Selective Westernizer = picks and chooses what she wants from the West

  18. Her Policies • Political = increases power of nobility over the serfs, censors revolutionary ideas, crushes rebellions • Economic = further entrenches Russia into serfdom • Territorial= campaigns against the Ottoman Empire, claims Siberia and Alaska, claims part of Poland • Cultural = patronized Western art, architecture and clothing styles, but avoided other influences (French Revolution)

  19. Palace of Catherine the Great

  20. Themes in Early Modern Russian History • Serfdom • Economic dependence on the more industrially developed West • Social Unrest • Influence/control over Eastern Europe

  21. Serfdom • Before Mongols, peasants were relatively free • 16th c. = serfdom used to appease nobles and extend state control • 1649 = serfdom become hereditary • 17th & 18th c. = laws tie serfs to land, give nobles great rights • Serfs were almost slaves

  22. Peasants in Russian village

  23. Trade & Economic Dependence • 95% of population is rural; few are artisans or merchants • Little incentive for agricultural or industrial innovation • Still manages to support nobility and a growing population

  24. Social Unrest • 17th c. = revolutionary and Enlightenment ideals increase peasant discontent (Pugachev Rebellion) • 18th c. = reformers called for an end to serfdom and increased innovation • Tsars made few changes

  25. Eastern Europe • Borders in this area fluctuate • Easter region help spread revolutionary Enlightenment ideas & take part in the Reformation • Still, E. Europe remains a place w/ a weakened central government and little economic development

  26. Russia and the World • Becomes an absolute monarchy characterized by a “dominant aristocracy, coercive agricultural labor systems, and the absence of a a substantial merchant class.”

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