Russia Under the Old RegimeThe theme of this book is the poliltical system of Russia. It traces the growth of the Russian state from its beginnings in the ninth century to the end of the nineteenth, and the parallel development of the principal social orders: peasantry, nobility, middle class and clergy. The question which it poses is why in Russia -- unlike the rest of Europe to which Russia belongs by virtue of her location, race and religion -- society has proven unable to impose on political authority any kind of effective restraints. After suggesting some answers to this problem, I go on to show how in Russia the opposition to absolutism tended to assume the form of a struggle for ideals rather than for class interests, and how the imperial government, challenged in this manner, responded by devising administrative practices that clearly anticipate those of the modern police state. - Foreword. |
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Page 1
... Slavs , they had inhabited a region whose boundaries cannot be determined even with approximate precision but which is believed to have lain north of the Carpathian mountains between the Vistula or Oder to the west and what is today ...
... Slavs , they had inhabited a region whose boundaries cannot be determined even with approximate precision but which is believed to have lain north of the Carpathian mountains between the Vistula or Oder to the west and what is today ...
Page 34
... Slavs , Rus ' lost its ethnic connotation and came to designate all the people manning the fortress - cities and involved in the annual expeditions to Constantinople . From such usage , it re- quired only a minor shift for ' Rus ' ' to ...
... Slavs , Rus ' lost its ethnic connotation and came to designate all the people manning the fortress - cities and involved in the annual expeditions to Constantinople . From such usage , it re- quired only a minor shift for ' Rus ' ' to ...
Page 358
... Slavs : historical role , 265-6 ; migrations , 2 , 27 ; origins , 1-2 ; settlements , 28 ; territorial divisions , 2 see also Eastern Slavs slobody : lose tax immunities , 208 Slovene ( Sloviane ) , early name for Slavs , I Slóvo i délo ...
... Slavs : historical role , 265-6 ; migrations , 2 , 27 ; origins , 1-2 ; settlements , 28 ; territorial divisions , 2 see also Eastern Slavs slobody : lose tax immunities , 208 Slovene ( Sloviane ) , early name for Slavs , I Slóvo i délo ...
Contents
The Genesis of the Patrimonial State in Russia | 27 |
F Boyars and boyar land | 47 |
The Triumph of Patrimonialism | 58 |
Copyright | |
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administration Alexander appanage authority became began boyars bureaucracy Catherine Catherine II cent central CHAPTER Christianity cities civil clergy Code common constituted country's crown dvoriane dvorianin dvorianstvo economic eighteenth century élite Emancipation Emperor empire estates favour foreign Golden Horde historians household imperial Russia income industry inhabitants institutions intellectual intelligentsia Ivan Ivan III Ivan Iv labour land landlords living major manufacture merchants mestnichestvo middle military monarchy monasteries Mongol Moscow Muscovite Russia Nicholas nineteenth century Novgorod officials Old Believers patrimonial Peter police political pomestia population posad princes provinces radical ranks reforms regime reign Rossii rulers rural Russian church Russian peasant secular serfdom serfs service class servitors seventeenth century sixteenth century slaves Slavophiles social society soul tax sovereign St Petersburg status Table of Ranks territory tiaglo tion trade tsar urban village votchiny wealth western Europe zemstva