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Alexander II - reforms. 1855 - 1871. Defeat in Crimean war. Defeat proved Russia was backward and had to change Treaty of Paris – Black sea closed to Russian navy - land lost to the West of
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Alexander II - reforms 1855 - 1871
Defeat in Crimean war • Defeat proved Russia was backward and had to change • Treaty of Paris – Black sea closed to • Russian navy - land lost to the West of Black sea - the Straights closed to warships
Emancipation of the serfs • Peasants became free with small amounts of land • Nobles received 80 % compensation from state and kept most land • Peasants had to pay for freedom • All land administered by the MIR • MIR controlled peasants
emancipation • Peasants not pleased • Still under landlords control • Alexander lost the opportunity to win the support of the peasants
Other reforms Aim – keep control of Russia by making some changes
Reforms • District government – ZEMSTVA – councils • 1870 – town councils set up • Law courts reformed • 1874 – army reformed • Education • Censorship relaxed • National minorities – some relaxation
Power still lay in the hands of the Tsar …..and he could change his mind!
Alexander II – stops reforms • 1866 assassination attempt • Feels no more need for reform • Stops reforms
Alexander II – later in the reign • He became more interested in Pan Slavism – especially helping Bulgaria • Russian expansion in Asia – towards India and the Pacific coast • Becomes worried about the threat from revolutionaries – uses the Okhrana
The growth of discontent • Reforms left people wanting for more! The new openness aroused expectations that the Tsar would not satisfy. • It made people criticise the autocracy • Growth of opposition groups – students and intellectuals – eg Karakosov!
Alexander III - reaction • Reforms reversed • Russification • Slavism was more popular – keep the autocracy strong!