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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 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 • Remember from Ch. 14 that Moscow would become the center for resistance of Mongol rule
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
Light Green = land held by the end of Catherine the Great’s reign
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
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)
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?
Ivan IV (the Terrible) 1533-1584 expanded borders and terrorized boyars Ivan IV got his nickname after murdering his eldest son
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
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
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
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
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
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
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)
Themes in Early Modern Russian History • Serfdom • Economic dependence on the more industrially developed West • Social Unrest • Influence/control over Eastern Europe
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
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
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
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
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.”