Chapter 18 Notes
- I. Introduction
- A. Land empire created between 1450-1750
- 1. Involved limited commercial exchange
- 2. Altered balance of power Asia/Europe
- 3. Expanded eastward into Asia
- B. Link to Eastern Europe
- 1. Some regional kingdoms
- 2. Conflict with Poland and Lithuania
- C. Changes of nation
- 1. Sense of separate identity
- 2. Reaction to Western influence – accept it, select from it, shun it
- C. Changes of nation
- A. Land empire created between 1450-1750
- II. Russia’s Expansionist Politics Under the Tsars
- A. First step – Break free from Mongol control
- 1. Moscow princes strong as tax collectors
- 2. Ivan III – Ivan the Great – large army – 1462 frees chunk
- i. Utilized support for Orthodox Church
- ii. Played off nationalism
- iii. 1480 totally freed of Mongol control
- B. Need for Revival
- 1. Basic Russian Values
- i. Under Mongols
- 1. Some adopted dress
- 2. Christianity maintained
- 3. Arts diminish
- 4. Economic hit – trade down/manufacturing limited
- a. Purely agricultural economy
- i. Under Mongols
- 2. Centralized Rule
- i. With imperial mission – make an empire
- ii. Connection to Byzantine Empire – married niece of empero
- 3. “Third Rome” – Caesar – Tsar
- 4. Ivan IV – Ivan the Terrible
- i. Killed many nobles (boyars) for alleged conspiracy
- 1. Nobles couldn’t stand up for selves – no tradition
- i. Killed many nobles (boyars) for alleged conspiracy
- 1. Basic Russian Values
- C. Patterns of Expansion
- 1. Central Asia
- i. Why? Push back Mongols
- ii. Vast plains easy to conquer/stage battles
- iii. Cossacks – Russian pioneers – horse + farm
- 1. Took over then settled lands
- 2. Skilled horsemen – think American cowboys/Mongol
- 2. Usages of expansion
- i. Land given to nobles for allegiance
- ii. Further east opened new trading relationships
- 3. Eliminated independent Central Asia
- i. Nomads gone
- ii. Diverse peoples added to Russia – multicultural empire
- 1. Like Mughal Empire/Ottoman Empire
- 2. Large Muslim minority
- 1. Central Asia
- D. Western Contact and Romanov Policy
- 1. Carefully managed contacts with the west
- i. Early contacts with British merchants
- ii. Imported Italian artists/architects to work on churches/palaces – onion
- ii. Nobles look to west for style/art/status - precedent
- 2. Conflict over heir to the throne
- i. After Ivan IV – Time of Trouble – disputes for throne – boyars
- ii. Romanov Dynasty chosen by boyars
- 3. Romanov’s reestablish order
- i. Stopped Swedish/Polish attacks
- ii. Expanded empire
- 1. Met Ottoman Empire
- 2. Part of Ukraine
- 4. Alexis Romanov’s new powers
- i. Abolished noble assemblies – think Louis XIV
- ii. State control of Orthdox faith – get rid of superstitions of Mongol era
- 1. Exiled to Sibera – Old Believers
- 1. Carefully managed contacts with the west
- A. First step – Break free from Mongol control
- III. Russia’s First Westernization
- A. Introduction
- a. Unusually agricultural existence
- i. Peter the Great extended tsarist control
- ii. Expanded territory
- ii. Imitated Western forms
- b. Peter the Great – exceptional leader
- i. Traveled to west in disguise – picture 6’8” guy in disguise
- ii. Visited manufacturing centers – empires for alliances
- 1. Gained interest – brought back artisans, scientists
- a. Unusually agricultural existence
- B. Tsarist Autocracy of Peter the Great
- a. Autocrat
- i. Put down revolts with cruelty
- 1. Organized military
- ii. Devalued parliament
- ii. Recruited bureaucrats from outside nobility
- iv. Secret police to watch bureaucrats/prevent dissent
- 1. Chancery of Secret Police to 1990
- i. Put down revolts with cruelty
- b. Foreign policy
- i. attacked Ottoman Empire, but didn’t win a ton of battles
- ii. weakened Sweden – sea port
- ii. shifted capital to St. Petersburg
- a. Autocrat
- C. What Westernization Meant
- a. Political changes
- i. Small bureaucratic departments (think Ministries or Departments)
- ii. Military
- 1. Improved weaponry
- 2. First Russian navy
- ii. Got rid of nobility for advisors – got specialized people
- iv. Tsar-appointed local magistrates – can control provinces
- v. Systemized law codes/tax system (stuff China did 2000 years ago)
- vi. New training institutes for bureaucrats
- b. Economic changes
- i. Metallurgy and mining
- ii. Unlike W. Europe, didn’t urbanize, develop middle class
- 1. Serfs used for manufacturing – nobles rewarded
- ii. economics funded military
- c. Cultural changes
- i. Power to upper class women
- 1. stopped the pass the whip ceremony (whipped?)
- 2. wear Western clothing
- 3. Attend public events
- 4. Peasant relations stayed the same
- ii. Take power from elite
- 1. shave beards, wear western clothes – Mongol connection
- 2. altered appearance
- i. Power to upper class women
- d. Borrowing from the West
- i. Education in math/sciences
- ii. Western cultural zone
- 1. imported ballet from France
- 2. Christmas trees from Germany
- e. To what extent was West imitated? Selective
- i. Didn’t change poor
- ii. Not wage labor, but serf (slave/coerced) labor
- ii. Economics for military purposes not for commercial expansion
- iv. Ideas to strengthen aristocracy, not create political rebellions
- f. Hostile Responses
- i. Peasants resented nobles – some didn’t speak Russian
- ii. Elite discouraged Western change – losing Russian identity
- ii. Set precedent for cycle of enthusiasm > revulsion
- a. Political changes
- D. Consolidation Under Catherine the Great
- a. Weak rule following Peter the Great
- i. Military leaders fought for power
- ii. Anti-western leaders emerged
- ii. Peter the Great’s daughter’s nephew – Peter III – mentally challenged
- 1. Wife Catherine – German princess – takes over
- a. Put down rebellions
- b. Centralized power
- c. Used Pugachev Rebellion as an excuse for more power
- 1. Wife Catherine – German princess – takes over
- b. Catherine II – fascinating women rulers
- i. Hated husband/son
- ii. Helped overthrow husband
- ii. Enlightened leader + realist/needed to centralize
- iv. Active personal life – doubt you need to know that
- c. Selective westernizer
- i. Brought some ideas of French Enlightenment
- ii. Brought some reformers to discuss law codes
- d. Image vs. Reality – centralized authority – serf life gets worse
- i. New powers to nobility – could increase punishment
- 1. Nobles then gave more power to central authority
- 2. Became service aristocracy – sold out?
- ii. Role of landlord
- 1. Requisition peasant labor
- 2. Levy taxes
- 3. Impose punishments
- i. New powers to nobility – could increase punishment
- e. Fading from Western influence – still selective
- i. Improved St. Petersburg
- ii. Encouraged nobles to travel
- ii. Closed Russia after French Revolution – hmmm…why?
- 1. Censored intellectuals – here’s a pattern/precedent
- f. Russian expansion
- i. Fought Ottoman Empire
- ii. Extended holdings all the way down to modern day Alaska, Oregon, N. California
- g. Russia’s interests in Europe
- i. Divided Poland between Austria and Prussia
- 1. Poland’s parliament kept crippling gov’t flexibility
- ii. Set precedent of involvement in W. Europe
- 1. Eventually, Russia would stop Napoleon
- i. Divided Poland between Austria and Prussia
- h. Success by 1800 – summary – here’s what they accomplished
- i. Won independence
- ii. Centralized gov’t
- a. Weak rule following Peter the Great
- A. Introduction
- IV. Themes in Early Modern Russian History
- A. Introduction
- a. Nobility extremely important
- b. Two types
- i. Great landowners/absentee owners living in the cities – westernized
- ii. Smaller owners live out in the countryside – less Westernized
- B. Serfdom: The Life of East Europe’s Masses
- a. Nobles power over serfs increases
- i. Free farmers before
- ii. Fell into debt – repay through servitude
- 1. worked land, but didn’t own it
- ii. Gov’t encouraged process – why?
- 1. Made nobles happy – won’t revolt
- 2. Method of controlling masses, when bureaucracy wasn’t effective
- b. Serf laws
- i. 1649 – hereditary status – born a serf – can’t escape
- c. Similarity to slavery
- i. Bought and sold
- ii. Gambled away
- ii. Punished by masters
- iv. Differences
- 1. nation enslaved own people, not outsiders
- 2. relied on community ties (see precedent for commun-ism)
- d. Similarity to Eastern Europe
- i. Nobles in Poland, Hungary benefited from system
- 1. Supported political control
- 2. Allowed them to have distinctive/Western life
- i. Nobles in Poland, Hungary benefited from system
- e. Eastern Europe subordinate to the West
- i. Russian grain traded for luxury items for nobility
- f. Life of serfs on estates
- i. Whole villages could be sold for manufacturing jobs
- ii. Poor/illiterate
- 1. Paid high taxes/obligations – impossible to escape
- ii. Catherine the Great created model villages to show off
- a. Nobles power over serfs increases
- C. Trade and Economic Dependence
- a. Classes between serfs and landlords
- i. Prevented emergence of merchant class
- 1. Western European merchants lived in Russian cities/controlled trade
- i. Prevented emergence of merchant class
- b. Success of Russia’s social and economic system
- i. Enough money to support empire
- ii. Exported furs/commodities to central Asia – balanced trade
- ii. Significant population growth
- 1. Surprising considering harsh climate
- c. Limitations of Russia’s social and economic system
- i. Man labor not technological innovation
- 1. No motivation – extra profit just goes to lord
- ii. Manufacturing lagged behind w. Europe
- i. Man labor not technological innovation
- a. Classes between serfs and landlords
- D. Social Unrest
- a. System leads to protests
- i. Western-oriented aristocrats push for change – end of 18th century
- ii. Peasants – loyal to tsar, but resented lords
- b. Peasant Rebellions
- i. Pugachev rebellion – Cossack chieftain – promised
- 1. End to serfdom
- 2. End to taxation
- 3. End to military conscription
- 4. End to landed aristocracy
- ii. Eventually put down after roaming Southern Russia
- 1. Cut into pieces in Moscow square
- i. Pugachev rebellion – Cossack chieftain – promised
- a. System leads to protests
- E. Russia and Eastern Europe
- a. Eastern Europe
- i. Changing boundaries
- ii. More embracing of enlightenment/scientific revolution – contributed scholars
- b. Nationalities lose autonomy
- i. Hungary part of German Hapsburgs
- ii. Czech part of Hapsburgs - Bohemians
- c. Decline of Poland
- i. Link to west – Catholic
- ii. Political aristocrats chose weak kings on purpose
- 1. Vetoed reform efforts
- ii. Poland split into three parts
- a. Eastern Europe
- A. Introduction
- V. Global Connections
- A. Why so significant?
- a. Huge land empire – 10 time zones
- b. Different from w. Europe, but huge impact
- A. Why so significant?
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