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Alexander II of Russia

Alexander II (Russian: Алекса́ндр II Никола́евич, tr. Aleksándr II Nikoláyevich, IPA: [ɐlʲɪˈksandr ftɐˈroj nʲɪkɐˈlajɪvʲɪtɕ]; 29 April 1818 – 13 March 1881)[a] was Emperor of Russia, King of Poland and Grand Duke of Finland from 2 March 1855 until his assassination in 1881.[1]

Alexander II
Photograph, 1878–81
Emperor of Russia
Reign2 March 1855 – 13 March 1881
Coronation7 September 1856
PredecessorNicholas I
SuccessorAlexander III
Born(1818-04-29)29 April 1818
Moscow Kremlin, Moscow, Moscow Governorate, Russian Empire
Died13 March 1881(1881-03-13) (aged 62)
Winter Palace, Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire
Burial
Spouses
(m. 1841; died 1880)
Issue
among others...
Names
Alexander Nikolayevich Romanov
HouseHolstein-Gottorp-Romanov
FatherNicholas I of Russia
MotherCharlotte of Prussia
ReligionRussian Orthodox
Signature

Alexander's most significant reform as emperor was the emancipation of Russia's serfs in 1861, for which he is known as Alexander the Liberator (Russian: Алекса́ндр Освободи́тель, tr. Aleksándr Osvobodytel, IPA: [ɐlʲɪˈksandr ɐsvəbɐˈdʲitʲɪlʲ]). The tsar was responsible for other reforms, including reorganizing the judicial system, setting up elected local judges, abolishing corporal punishment,[2] promoting local self-government through the zemstvo system, imposing universal military service, ending some privileges of the nobility, and promoting university education. After an assassination attempt in 1866, Alexander adopted a somewhat more conservative stance until his death.[3]

Alexander was also notable for his foreign policy, which was mainly pacifist, supportive of the United States, and opposite of Great Britain. Alexander backed the Union during the American Civil War and sent warships to New York Harbor and San Francisco Bay ostensibly to deter attacks by the Confederate Navy[4] and sold Alaska to the United States in 1867, fearing the remote colony would fall into British hands if there were another war.[5] He sought peace, moved away from bellicose France when Napoleon III fell in 1871, and in 1872 joined with Germany and Austria in the League of the Three Emperors that stabilized the European situation. Despite his otherwise pacifist foreign policy, he fought a brief war with the Ottoman Empire in 1877–78, leading to the independence of the Bulgarian, Montenegrin, Romanian and Serbian states, pursued further expansion into Far East and the Caucasus, and conquered Turkestan, also approving plans leading to the Circassian genocide.[6] Although disappointed by the results of the Congress of Berlin in 1878, Alexander abided by that agreement. Among his greatest domestic challenges was an uprising in Poland in 1863, to which he responded by stripping that land of its separate constitution and incorporating it directly into Russia. Alexander was proposing additional parliamentary reforms to counter the rise of nascent revolutionary and anarchistic movements when he was assassinated in 1881.[7]

Early life

 
Grand prince Alexander Nikolaevich, 1830

Born in Moscow, Alexander Nikolayevich was the eldest son of Nicholas I of Russia and Charlotte of Prussia (eldest daughter of Frederick William III of Prussia and of Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz). His early life gave little indication of his ultimate potential; until the time of his accession in 1855, aged 37, few[quantify] imagined that posterity would know him for implementing the most challenging reforms undertaken in Russia since the reign of Peter the Great.[8]

His uncle Emperor Alexander I died childless. Grand Duke Konstantin, the next-younger brother of Alexander I, had previously renounced his rights to the throne of Russia. Thus, Alexander's father, who was the third son of Paul I, became the new Emperor; he took the name Nicholas I. At that time, Alexander became Tsarevich as his father's heir to the throne.

In the period of his life as heir apparent (1825 to 1855), the intellectual atmosphere of Saint Petersburg did not favour any kind of change: freedom of thought and all forms of private initiative were suppressed vigorously by the order of his father. Personal and official censorship was rife; criticism of the authorities was regarded as a serious offence.[9]

The education of the tsarevich as future emperor took place under the supervision of the liberal romantic poet and gifted translator Vasily Zhukovsky,[10] grasping a smattering of a great many subjects and becoming familiar with the chief modern European languages.[9] Unusually for the time, the young Alexander was taken on a six-month tour of Russia (1837), visiting 20 provinces in the country.[11] He also visited many prominent Western European countries[12] in 1838 and 1839. As Tsesarevich, Alexander became the first Romanov heir to visit Siberia[13] (1837). While touring Russia, he also befriended the then-exiled poet Alexander Herzen and pardoned him. It was through Herzen's influence that the tsarevich later abolished serfdom in Russia.

In 1839, when his parents sent him on a tour of Europe, he met twenty-year-old Queen Victoria and both fell in love. Simon Sebag Montefiore speculates that a small romance emerged. Such a marriage, however, would not work, as Alexander was not a minor prince of Europe and was in line to inherit a throne himself.[14] In 1847, Alexander donated money to Ireland during the Great Famine.[15]

He has been described as looking like a German, somewhat of a pacifist, a heavy smoker and card player.[16]

Reign

 
Procession of Alexander II into Dormition Cathedral from the Red Porch during his coronation
 
The coronation of Emperor Alexander II and Empress Maria Alexandrovna on 26 August/7 September 1856 at the Dormition Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin, painting by Mihály Zichy. The painting depicts the moment when the Emperor crowned the Empress.

Reforms

Encouraged by public opinion, Alexander began a period of radical reforms, including an attempt not to depend on landed aristocracy controlling the poor, an effort to develop Russia's natural resources, and to reform all branches of the administration.[9]

Boris Chicherin (1828–1904) was a political philosopher who believed that Russia needed a strong, authoritative government by Alexander to make the reforms possible. He praised Alexander for the range of his fundamental reforms, arguing that the tsar was:

called upon to execute one of the hardest tasks which can confront an autocratic ruler: to completely remodel the enormous state which had been entrusted to his care, to abolish an age-old order founded on slavery, to replace it with civic decency and freedom, to establish justice in a country which had never known the meaning of legality, to redesign the entire administration, to introduce freedom of the press in the context of untrammeled authority, to call new forces to life at every turn and set them on firm legal foundations, to put a repressed and humiliated society on its feet, and to give it the chance to flex its muscles.[17]

Emancipation of the serfs

Alexander II succeeded to the throne upon the death of his father in 1855. As Tsarevich, he had been an enthusiastic supporter of his father's reactionary policies. That is, he always obeyed the autocratic ruler. But now he was the autocratic ruler himself, and fully intended to rule according to what he thought best. He rejected any moves to set up a parliamentary system that would curb his powers. He inherited a large mess that had been wrought by his father's fear of progress during his reign. Many of the other royal families of Europe had also disliked Nicholas I, which extended to distrust of the Romanov dynasty itself. Even so, there was no one more prepared to bring the country around than Alexander II.[18] The first year of his reign was devoted to the prosecution of the Crimean War and, after the fall of Sevastopol, to negotiations for peace led by his trusted counsellor, Prince Alexander Gorchakov. The country had been exhausted and humiliated by the war.[19] Bribe-taking, theft and corruption were rampant.[20]

The Emancipation Reform of 1861 abolished serfdom on private estates throughout the Russian Empire. Serfs gained the full rights of free citizens, including rights to marry without having to gain consent, to own property, and to own a business. The measure was the first and most important of the liberal reforms made by Alexander II.

Polish landed proprietors of the Lithuanian provinces presented a petition hoping that their relations with the serfs might be regulated in a way more satisfactory for the proprietors. Alexander II authorized the formation of committees "for ameliorating the condition of the peasants," and laid down the principles on which the amelioration was to be effected.[9] Without consulting his ordinary advisers, Alexander ordered the Minister of the Interior to send a circular to the provincial governors of European Russia (serfdom was rare in other parts) containing a copy of the instructions forwarded to the Governor-General of Lithuania, praising the supposed generous, patriotic intentions of the Lithuanian landed proprietors, and suggesting that perhaps the landed proprietors of other provinces might express a similar desire. The hint was taken: in all provinces where serfdom existed, emancipation committees were formed.[9]

 
Leaving church in Pskov, 1864

Emancipation was not a simple goal capable of being achieved instantaneously by imperial decree. It contained complicated problems, deeply affecting the economic, social, and political future of the nation. Alexander had to choose between the different measures recommended to him and decide, if the serfs would become agricultural laborers dependent economically and administratively on the landlords, or if the serfs would be transformed into a class of independent communal proprietors.[9] The emperor gave his support to the latter project, and the Russian peasantry became one of the last groups of peasants in Europe to shake off serfdom. The architects of the emancipation manifesto were Alexander's brother Konstantin, Yakov Rostovtsev, and Nikolay Milyutin. On 3 March 1861, six years after his accession, the emancipation law was signed and published.

Additional reforms

 
The US$7.2 million check used to pay for Russian Alaska in 1867

A host of new reforms followed in diverse areas.[21][22] The tsar appointed Dmitry Milyutin to carry out significant reforms in the Russian armed forces. Further important changes were made concerning industry and commerce, and the new freedom thus afforded produced a large number of limited liability companies.[23] Plans were formed for building a great network of railways, partly to develop the natural resources of the country, and partly to increase its power for defense and attack.[9]

Military reforms included universal conscription, introduced for all social classes on 1 January 1874.[24] Prior to the new regulation, as of 1861, conscription was compulsorily enforced only for the peasantry. Conscription had been 25 years for serfs who were drafted by their landowners, which was widely considered to be a life sentence.[25] Other military reforms included extending the reserve forces and the military district system, which split the Russian states into 15 military districts, a system still in use over a hundred years later. The building of strategic railways and an emphasis on the military education of the officer corps comprised further reforms. Corporal punishment in the military and branding of soldiers as punishment were banned.[26] The bulk of important military reforms were enacted as a result of the poor showing in the Crimean War.

A new judicial administration (1864), based on the French model, introduced security of tenure.[27] A new penal code and a greatly simplified system of civil and criminal procedure also came into operation.[28] Reorganisation of the judiciary occurred to include trial in open court, with judges appointed for life, a jury system, and the creation of justices of the peace to deal with minor offences at local level. Legal historian Sir Henry Maine credited Alexander II with the first great attempt since the time of Grotius to codify and humanise the usages of war.[29]

 
Alexander II with his uncle, German Emperor William I on a hunting trip together, 1872

Alexander's bureaucracy instituted an elaborate scheme of local self-government (zemstvo) for the rural districts (1864) and the large towns (1870), with elective assemblies possessing a restricted right of taxation, and a new rural and municipal police under the direction of the Minister of the Interior.[1]

Under Alexander's rules Jews could not own land, and were restricted in travel. However special taxes on Jews were eliminated and those who graduated from secondary school were permitted to live outside the Pale of Settlement, and became eligible for state employment. Large numbers of educated Jews moved as soon as possible to Moscow, Saint Petersburg, and other major cities.[30][31]

The Alaska colony was losing money, and would be impossible to defend in wartime against Britain, so in 1867 Russia sold Alaska to the United States for $7.2 million (equivalent to $140 million in 2021 dollars). The Russian administrators, soldiers, settlers, and some of the priests returned home. Others stayed to minister to their native parishioners, who remain members of the Russian Orthodox Church into the 21st century.[32]

Reaction after 1866

Alexander maintained a generally liberal course.[33] Radicals complained he did not go far enough, and he became a target for numerous assassination plots. He survived attempts that took place in 1866, 1879, and 1880. Finally 13 March [O.S. 1 March] 1881, assassins organized by the Narodnaya Volya (People's Will) party killed him with a bomb. The Emperor had earlier in the day signed the Loris-Melikov constitution, which would have created two legislative commissions made up of indirectly elected representatives, had it not been repealed by his reactionary successor Alexander III.[34]

An attempted assassination in 1866 started a more conservative period that lasted until his death.[3] The Tsar made a series of new appointments, replacing liberal ministers with conservatives.[35] Under Minister of Education Dmitry Tolstoy, liberal university courses and subjects that encouraged critical thinking were replaced by a more traditional curriculum, and from 1871 onwards only students from gimnaziya schools could progress to university.[36][35] In 1879, governor-generals were established with powers to prosecute in military courts and exile political offenders. The government also held show trials with the intention of deterring others from revolutionary activity, but after cases such as the Trial of the 193 where sympathetic juries acquitted many of the defendants,[37] this was abandoned.[35]

Suppression of separatist movements

After Alexander II became Emperor of Russia and King of Poland in 1855, he substantially relaxed the strict and repressive regime that had been imposed on Congress Poland after the November Uprising of 1830–1831.[38][39]

However, in 1856, at the beginning of his reign, Alexander made a memorable speech to the deputies of the Polish nobility who inhabited Congress Poland, Western Ukraine, Lithuania, Livonia, and Belarus, in which he warned against further concessions with the words, "Gentlemen, let us have no dreams!"[40] This served as a warning to the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The territories of the former Poland-Lithuania were excluded from liberal policies introduced by Alexander. The result was the January Uprising of 1863–1864 that was suppressed after eighteen months of fighting. Hundreds of Poles were executed, and thousands were deported to Siberia. The price of suppression was Russian support for the unification of Germany.[citation needed]

The martial law in Lithuania, introduced in 1863, lasted for the next 40 years. Native languages, Ukrainian, and Belarusian, were completely banned from printed texts, the Ems Ukase being an example. The Authorities banned to use Latin script for writing Lithuanian. The Polish language was banned in both oral and written form from all provinces except Congress Poland, where it was allowed in private conversations only.

Nikolay Milyutin was installed as governor and he decided that the best response to the January Uprising was to make reforms regarding the peasants. He devised a program which involved the emancipation of the peasantry at the expense of the nationalist szlachta landowners and the expulsion of Roman Catholic priests from schools.[41] Emancipation of the Polish peasantry from their serf-like status took place in 1864, on more generous terms than the emancipation of Russian peasants in 1861.[42]

Encouraging Finnish nationalism

 
Monument to Alexander II "The Liberator" at the Senate Square in Helsinki, by sculptor Walter Runeberg. Erected in 1894, when Finland was still a Russian grand duchy.

In 1863, Alexander II re-convened the Diet of Finland and initiated several reforms increasing Finland's autonomy within the Russian Empire, including establishment of its own currency, the Finnish markka.[43] Liberation of business led to increased foreign investment and industrial development. Finland also got its first railways, separately established under Finnish administration.[44] Finally, the elevation of Finnish from a language of the common people to a national language equal to Swedish opened opportunities for a larger proportion of Finnish society. Alexander II is still regarded as "The Good Tsar" in Finland.[44]

These reforms could be seen as results of a genuine belief that reforms were easier to test in an underpopulated, homogeneous country than in the whole of Russia. They may also be seen as a reward for the loyalty of its relatively western-oriented population during the Crimean War and during the Polish uprising. Encouraging Finnish nationalism and language can also be seen as an attempt to dilute ties with Sweden.

Foreign affairs

During the Crimean War Austria maintained a policy of hostile neutrality towards Russia, and, while not going to war, was supportive of the Anglo-French coalition. Having abandoned its alliance with Russia, Austria was diplomatically isolated following the war, which contributed to Russia's non-intervention in the 1859 Franco-Austrian War, which meant the end of Austrian influence in Italy; and in the 1866 Austro-Prussian War, with the loss of its influence in most German-speaking lands.[45]

During the American Civil War (1861–1865), Russia supported the Union, largely due to the view that the U.S. served as a counterbalance to their geopolitical rival, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. In 1863, the Russian Navy's Baltic and Pacific fleets wintered in the American ports of New York and San Francisco, respectively.[46]

 
The Monument to the Tsar Liberator in the centre of Sofia, the capital of Bulgaria

The Treaty of Paris of 1856 stood until 1871, when Prussia defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War. During his reign, Napoleon III, eager for the support of the United Kingdom, had opposed Russia over the Eastern Question. France abandoned its opposition to Russia after the establishment of the Third French Republic. Encouraged by the new attitude of French diplomacy and supported by the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, Russia renounced the Black Sea clauses of the Paris treaty agreed to in 1856. As the United Kingdom with Austria[47] could not enforce the clauses, Russia once again established a fleet in the Black Sea. France, after the Franco-Prussian War and the loss of Alsace-Lorraine, was fervently hostile to Germany, and maintained friendly relations with Russia.

In the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) the states of Romania, Serbia, and Montenegro gained international recognition of their independence and Bulgaria achieved its autonomy from direct Ottoman rule. Russia took over Southern Bessarabia,[48] lost in 1856.

End of Caucasian War

 
Imam Shamil surrendered to Count Baryatinsky on 25 August 1859.

The Russo-Circassian War concluded as a Russian victory during Alexander II's rule. Just before the conclusion of the war the Russian Army, under the emperor's order, sought to eliminate the Circassian "mountaineers" in the Circassian genocide, which would be often referred to as "cleansing" and "genocide" in several historic dialogues.[49][50] In 1857, Dmitry Milyutin first published the idea of mass expulsions of Circassian natives.[51] Milyutin argued that the goal was not to simply move them so that their land could be settled by productive farmers, but rather that "eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself – to cleanse the land of hostile elements".[51][52] Tsar Alexander II endorsed the plans.[51] A large portion of indigenous peoples of the region were ethnically cleansed[53] from their homeland at the end of the Russo-Circassian War by Russia. A large deportation was launched against the remaining population before the end of the war in 1864 and it was mostly completed by 1867.[54] Only a small percentage accepted to surrender and resettle within the Russian Empire. The remaining Circassian populations who refused to surrender were thus variously dispersed, resettled, tortured, and most of the time, killed en masse.[55]

Liberation of Bulgaria

In April 1876, the Bulgarian population in the Balkans rebelled against Ottoman rule in Bulgaria. The Ottoman authorities suppressed the April Uprising, causing a general outcry throughout Europe. Some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians on the Continent, most notably Victor Hugo and William Gladstone, sought to raise awareness about the atrocities that the Turks imposed on the Bulgarian population. To solve this new crisis in the "Eastern question" a Constantinople Conference was convened by the Great Powers in Constantinople at the end of the year. The participants in the Conference failed to reach a final agreement. After the failure of the Constantinople Conference, at the beginning of 1877, Emperor Alexander II started diplomatic preparations with the other Great Powers to secure their neutrality in case of a war between Russia and the Ottomans. Alexander II considered such agreements paramount in avoiding the possibility of causing his country a disaster similar to the Crimean War.[43]

 
In 1877, Russian general Iosif Gurko liberated Veliko Tarnovo, ending the 480-year rule of the Ottoman Empire.

The Russian Emperor succeeded in his diplomatic endeavors. Having secured agreement as to non-involvement by the other Great Powers, on 17 April 1877 Russia declared war upon the Ottoman Empire. The Russians, helped by the Romanian Army under its supreme commander, King Carol I (then Prince of Romania), who sought to obtain Romanian independence from the Ottomans as well, were successful against the Turks and the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 ended with the signing of the preliminary peace Treaty of San Stefano on 19 February (3 March N.S.) 1878. The treaty and the subsequent Congress of Berlin (June–July 1878) secured the emergence of an independent Bulgarian state for the first time since 1396, and Bulgarian parliamentarians elected the tsar's nephew, Prince Alexander of Battenberg, as the Bulgarians' first ruler. For his social reforms in Russia and his role in the liberation of Bulgaria, Alexander II became known in Bulgaria as the "Tsar-Liberator of Russians and Bulgarians". A monument to Alexander II was erected in 1907 in Sofia in the "National Assembly" square, opposite to the Parliament building.[43] The monument underwent a complete reconstruction in 2012, funded by the Sofia Municipality and some Russian foundations. The inscription on the monument reads in Old-Bulgarian style: "To the Tsar-Liberator from grateful Bulgaria". There is a museum dedicated to Alexander in the Bulgarian city of Pleven.

Assassination attempts

In April 1866, there was an attempt on the emperor's life in St. Petersburg by Dmitry Karakozov.[56] To commemorate his narrow escape from death (which he himself referred to only as "the event of 4 April 1866"), a number of churches and chapels were built in many Russian cities. Viktor Hartmann, a Russian architect, even sketched a design of a monumental gate (which was never built) to commemorate the event. Modest Mussorgsky later wrote his Pictures at an Exhibition; the last movement of which, "The Great Gate of Kiev", is based on Hartmann's sketches.[citation needed]

During the 1867 World Fair Polish immigrant Antoni Berezowski attacked the carriage containing Alexander, his two sons and Napoleon III.[57] His self-modified, double-barreled pistol misfired and struck a horse of an escorting cavalryman.[citation needed]

On the morning of 20 April 1879, Alexander was briskly walking towards the Square of the Guards Staff and faced Alexander Soloviev, a 33-year-old former student. Having seen a menacing revolver in his hands, the Emperor fled in a zigzag pattern. Soloviev fired five times but missed; he was sentenced to death and hanged on 28 May.[citation needed]

The student acted on his own, but other revolutionaries were keen to murder Alexander.[58] In December 1879, the Narodnaya Volya (People's Will), a radical revolutionary group which hoped to ignite a social revolution, organised an explosion on the railway from Livadia[citation needed] to Moscow, but they missed the emperor's train.[citation needed]

On the evening of 5 February 1880 Stephan Khalturin, also from Narodnaya Volya, set off a timed charge under the dining room of the Winter Palace, right in the resting room of the guards a story below, killing 11 people and wounding 30 others.[58] The New York Times (4 March 1880) reported "the dynamite used was enclosed in an iron box, and exploded by a system of clockwork used by the man Thomas in Bremen some years ago."[59] However, dinner had been delayed by the late arrival of the tsar's nephew, the Prince of Bulgaria, so the tsar and his family were not in the dining room at the time of the explosion and were unharmed.[58]

Assassination

 
The explosion killed one of the Cossacks and wounded the driver.
 
The assassination of Alexander II, drawing by G. Broling, 1881

After the last assassination attempt in February 1880, Count Loris-Melikov was appointed the head of the Supreme Executive Commission and given extraordinary powers to fight the revolutionaries. Loris-Melikov's proposals called for some form of parliamentary body, and the Emperor seemed to agree; these plans were never realized.[citation needed]

On 13 March [O.S. 1 March] 1881, Alexander was assassinated in Saint Petersburg.[60]

As he was known to do every Sunday for many years, the emperor went to the Mikhailovsky Manège for the military roll call. He travelled both to and from the Manège in a closed carriage accompanied by five Cossacks and Frank (Franciszek) Joseph Jackowski, a Polish noble, with a sixth Cossack[61] sitting on the coachman's left. The emperor's carriage was followed by two sleighs carrying, among others, the chief of police and the chief of the emperor's guards. The route, as always, was via the Catherine Canal and over the Pevchesky Bridge.[citation needed]

The street was flanked by narrow pavements for the public. A young member of the Narodnaya Volya ("People's Will") movement, Nikolai Rysakov,[58] was carrying a small white package wrapped in a handkerchief. He later said of his attempt to kill the Tsar:

After a moment's hesitation I threw the bomb. I sent it under the horses' hooves in the supposition that it would blow up under the carriage... The explosion knocked me into the fence.[62]

The explosion, while killing one of the Cossacks and seriously wounding the driver and people on the sidewalk,[58] had only damaged the bulletproof carriage, a gift from Napoleon III of France. The emperor emerged shaken but unhurt.[58] Rysakov was captured almost immediately. Police Chief Dvorzhitzky heard Rysakov shout out to someone else in the gathering crowd. Dvorzhitzky offered to drive the Tsar back to the Palace in his sleigh. The Tsar agreed, but he decided to first see the culprit, and to survey the damage. He expressed solicitude for the victims. To the anxious inquires of his entourage, Alexander replied, "Thank God, I'm untouched".

Nevertheless, a second young member of the Narodnaya Volya, Ignacy Hryniewiecki,[58] standing by the canal fence, raised both arms and threw something at the emperor's feet. He was alleged to have shouted, "It is too early to thank God".[63] Dvorzhitzky was later to write:

I was deafened by the new explosion, burned, wounded and thrown to the ground. Suddenly, amid the smoke and snowy fog, I heard His Majesty's weak voice cry, 'Help!' Gathering what strength I had, I jumped up and rushed to the emperor. His Majesty was half-lying, half-sitting, leaning on his right arm. Thinking he was merely wounded heavily, I tried to lift him but the czar's legs were shattered, and the blood poured out of them. Twenty people, with wounds of varying degree, lay on the sidewalk and on the street. Some managed to stand, others to crawl, still others tried to get out from beneath bodies that had fallen on them. Through the snow, debris, and blood you could see fragments of clothing, epaulets, sabres, and bloody chunks of human flesh.[64]

Later, it was learned there was a third bomber in the crowd. Ivan Emelyanov stood ready, clutching a briefcase containing a bomb that was to be used if the other two bombers failed.[65]

Alexander was carried by sleigh to the Winter Palace[58] to his study where almost the same day twenty years earlier, he had signed the Emancipation Edict freeing the serfs. Alexander was bleeding to death, with his legs torn away, his stomach ripped open, and his face mutilated.[66] Members of the Romanov family came rushing to the scene.[citation needed]

The dying emperor was given Communion and Last Rites. When the attending physician, Sergey Botkin, was asked how long it would be, he replied, "Up to fifteen minutes."[67] At 3:30 that day, the standard of Alexander II (his personal flag) was lowered for the last time.[citation needed]

Aftermath

 
The Church of the Savior on Blood was built on the site of Alexander II's assassination.
 
Alexander II, also known as the Grand Duke of Finland, was well regarded among the majority of Finns.[68] Statue of Alexander II at the Senate Square in Helsinki, Finland, flowered on 13 March 1899, the day of the commemoration of the emperor's death.

Alexander II's death caused a great setback for the reform movement. One of his last acts was the approval of Mikhail Loris-Melikov's constitutional reforms.[69] Though the reforms were conservative in practice, their significance lay in the value Alexander II attributed to them: "I have given my approval, but I do not hide from myself the fact that it is the first step towards a constitution."[70] In a matter of 48 hours, Alexander II planned to release these plans to the Russian people. Instead, following his succession, Alexander III, under the advice of Konstantin Pobedonostsev, chose to abandon these reforms and went on to pursue a policy of greater autocratic power.[71]

The assassination triggered major suppression of civil liberties in Russia, and police brutality burst back in full force after experiencing some restraint under the reign of Alexander II, whose death was witnessed first-hand by his son, Alexander III, and his grandson, Nicholas II, both future emperors who vowed not to have the same fate befall them. Both of them used the Okhrana to arrest protestors and uproot suspected rebel groups, creating further suppression of personal freedom for the Russian people. A series of anti-Jewish pogroms and antisemitic legislation, the May Laws, were yet another result.[43]

Finally, the tsar's assassination also inspired anarchists to advocate "'propaganda by deed'—the use of a spectacular act of violence to incite revolution."[72]

In 1881, the Alexander Church, designed by Theodor Decker and named after Alexander II, was completed in Tampere.[73][74] Also, with construction starting in 1883, the Church of the Savior on Blood was built on the site of Alexander's assassination and dedicated in his memory.

Marriages and children

First marriage

 
Emperor Alexander II and his wife, Empress Maria, with their son, the future Alexander III by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky 1870

In 1838–39, the young bachelor, Alexander made the Grand Tour of Europe which was standard for young men of his class at that time. One of the purposes of the tour was to select a suitable bride for himself. His father Nicholas I of Russia suggested Princess Alexandrine of Baden as a suitable choice, but he was prepared to allow Alexander to choose his own bride, as long as she was not Roman Catholic or a commoner.[75] Alexander stayed for three days with the maiden Queen Victoria. The two got along well, but there was no question of marriage between two major monarchs.

In Germany, Alexander made an unplanned stop in Darmstadt. He was reluctant to spend "a possibly dull evening" with their host Louis II, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, but he agreed to do so because Vasily Zhukovsky insisted that his entourage was exhausted and needed a rest.[75] During dinner, he met and was charmed by Princess Marie, the 14-year-old daughter of Louis II, Grand Duke of Hesse. He was so smitten that he declared that he would rather abandon the succession than not marry her.[76] He wrote to his father: "I liked her terribly at first sight. If you permit it, dear father, I will come back to Darmstadt after England."[77] When he left Darmstadt, she gave him a locket that contained a piece of her hair.[76]

Alexander's parents initially did not support his decision to marry Princess Marie of Hesse. There were troubling rumors about her paternity. Although she was the legal daughter of Ludwig II, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, there were rumors that Marie was the biological daughter of her mother's lover, Baron August von Senarclens de Grancy.[76] Alexander's parents worried that Marie could have inherited her mother's consumption. Alexander's mother considered the Hesse family grossly inferior to the Hohenzollerns and Romanovs.[76]

In April 1840, Alexander's engagement to Princess Marie was officially announced.[78] In August, the 16-year-old Marie left Darmstadt for Russia.[78] In December, she was received into the Orthodox Church and received the names Maria Alexandrovna.[79]

On 16 April 1841, aged 23, Tsarevitch Alexander married Marie in St. Petersburg.

The marriage produced six sons and two daughters:

Alexander particularly placed hope in his eldest son, Tsarevich Nicholas. In 1864, Alexander II found Nicholas a bride, Princess Dagmar of Denmark, second daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and younger sister to Alexandra, Princess of Wales and King George I of Greece. In 1865, Nicholas died of cerebrospinal meningitis. Alexander was devastated by Nicholas' death, and his nephew Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia reflected that "his shoulders were bent, and he walked so slowly that we all felt as though his loss had robbed him of all his strength."[80]

Alexander's second son, Grand Duke Alexander became tsarevich and married the late Tsarevich Nicholas's fiancée. The couple married in November 1866, with Dagmar converting to Orthodoxy and taking the name Maria Feodorovna.[citation needed]

Alexander grew estranged from his second son, Grand Duke Alexander.[81]

Alexander's favorite child was his daughter, Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna. He reflected that his daughter had "never caused us anything but joy. We lost our eldest girl and we had so ardently wished for another – her birth was a joy and a delight, not to be described, and her whole life has been a continuation."[82] In 1873, a quarrel broke out between the courts of Queen Victoria and Alexander II, when Victoria's second son, Prince Alfred, made it known that he wished to marry the Grand Duchess. The tsar objected to the queen's request to have his daughter come to England in order to meet her,[83] and after the January 1874 wedding in St. Petersburg, the tsar insisted that his daughter be granted precedence over the Princess of Wales, which the queen rebuffed.[84] Later that year, after attending the engagement ceremonies of his second surviving son, Vladimir, to Marie of Mecklenburg-Schwerin in Berlin, Alexander II, with his third son, Alexei, accompanying him, made a visit to England.[85] While not a state visit, but simply a trip to see his daughter, he nevertheless partook in receptions at Buckingham Palace and Marlborough House, inspected the artillery at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich, reviewed troops at Aldershot and met both Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and the leader of the opposition, William Gladstone.[86] Disraeli observed of the tsar that "his mien and manners are gracious and graceful, but the expression of his countenance, which I could now very closely examine, is sad. Whether it is satiety, or the loneliness of despotism, or fear of a violent death, I know not, but it was a visage of, I should think, habitual mournfulness."[86]

In 1866, Alexander II took a mistress, Catherine Dolgorukova, with whom he would father three surviving children. In 1880, he moved his mistress and their children into the Winter Palace. Alexander's affair alienated all his children except Alexei and Marie Alexandrovna.[87] Courtiers spread stories that the dying Empress Marie was forced to hear the noise of Catherine's children moving about overhead, but their respective rooms were actually far.[88] In May 1880, Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna visited Russia to see her dying mother. She was horrified to learn that Catherine lived in the Palace and she confronted him.[89] Shocked by the loss of support from his daughter, he quietly retreated to Gatchina Palace for military reviews.[89] The quarrel, however, evidently, jolted his conscience enough to lead him to return to St. Petersburg each morning to ask after his wife's health.[89]

Empress Marie Alexandrovna suffered from tuberculosis. She succumbed to it on 3 June 1880.

Second marriage

 
Tsar Alexander II, photo by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky, 1881 (The Di Rocco Wieler Private Collection, Toronto, Canada)

On 18 July [O.S. 6 July] 1880, Alexander II married his mistress Catherine Dolgorukova morganatically in a secret ceremony at Tsarskoe Selo.[90] The action scandalized both his family and the court. It violated Orthodox custom which required a minimum period of 40 days mourning between the death of a spouse and the remarriage of a surviving spouse, eliciting criticism in foreign courts.[91] Alexander bestowed on Catherine the title of Princess Yurievskaya and legitimized their children.[91]

Before their marriage, Alexander and Catherine had four children:

In fiction

Alexander II appears prominently in the opening two chapters of Jules Verne's Michael Strogoff (published in 1876 during Alexander's own lifetime). The Emperor sets the book's plot in motion and sends its eponymous protagonist on the dangerous and vital mission which would occupy the rest of the book. Verne presents Alexander II in a highly positive light, as an enlightened yet firm monarch, dealing confidently and decisively with a rebellion. Alexander's liberalism shows in a dialogue with the chief of police, who says "There was a time, sire, when NONE returned from Siberia", to be immediately rebuked by the Emperor who answers: "Well, whilst I live, Siberia is and shall be a country whence men CAN return."[92]

The films Katia (1938) and Magnificent Sinner (1959) depict a highly fictionalized account of the Tsar's romance with the woman who became his second wife.

In The Tiger in the Well, Philip Pullman refers to the assassination – though he never names Alexander – and to the pogroms that followed. The anti-Jewish attacks play an important role in the novel's plot. Andrew Williams's historical thriller, To Kill A Tsar, tells the story of The People's Will revolutionaries and the assassination through the eyes of an Anglo-Russian doctor living in St Petersburg.

Oscar Wilde's first play Vera; or, The Nihilists, written in 1880—Alexander II's last year—features Russian revolutionaries who seek to assassinate a reform-minded Emperor (and who, in the play, ultimately fail in their plot). Though Wilde's fictional Emperor differs from the actual Alexander, contemporary events[which?] in Russia – as published in the British press of the time – clearly[original research?] influenced Wilde.

Alexander II's reasons to sell Alaska to the United States in 1867 are fictionized in the epilogue of the novel Forty-Ninth[93] by Boris Pronsky and Craig Britton, in a form of a letter to Catherine Dolgorukova. Prior to that, the book explores the events immediately after the first assassination attempt on the Tsar in 1866, as well as the relationship with his brother, Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich.

In nonfiction

Mark Twain describes a short visit with Alexander II in Chapter 37 of The Innocents Abroad, describing him as "very tall and spare, and a determined-looking man, though a very pleasant-looking one nevertheless. It is easy to see that he is kind and affectionate. There is something very noble in his expression when his cap is off."[94]

Ancestors

Honours

Domestic orders and decorations[95][self-published source?]
Foreign orders and decorations[95]

Arms

 
Lesser Coat of Arms of the Russian Empire

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Old style: 17 April 1818; 1 March 1881

References

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Sources

Further reading

  • Crankshaw, Edward (2000). The Shadow of the Winter Palace: The Drift to Revolution, 1825–1917. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0-306-80940-8.
  • Eklof, Ben; John Bushnell; L. Larisa Georgievna Zakharova (1994). Russia's Great Reforms, 1855–1881. ISBN 978-0-253-20861-3.
  • Lincoln, W. Bruce. The Romanovs: Autocrats of All the Russias (1983) excerpt and text search
  • Lincoln, W. Bruce. The Great Reforms: Autocracy, Bureaucracy, and the Politics of Change in Imperial Russia (1990)
  • Moss, Walter G., Alexander II and His Times: A Narrative History of Russia in the Age of Alexander II, Tolstoy, and Dostoevsky. London: Anthem Press, 2002. online Archived 12 January 2006 at archive.today
  • Mosse, W. E. Alexander II and the Modernization of Russia (1958) online
  • Pereira, N.G.O.,Tsar Emancipator: Alexander II of Russia, 1818–1881, Newtonville, Mass: Oriental Research Partners, 1983.
  • Polunow, Alexander (2005). Russia in the Nineteenth Century: Autocracy, Reform, And Social Change, 1814–1914. M E Sharpe Incorporated. ISBN 978-0-7656-0672-3.
  • Radzinsky, Edvard, Alexander II: The Last Great Tsar. New York: The Free Press, 2005.
  • Zakharova, Larissa (1910). Alexander II: Portrait of an Autocrat and His Times. ISBN 978-0-8133-1491-4.
  • Watts, Carl Peter. "Alexander II's Reforms: Causes and Consequences" History Review (1998): 6–15. Online

External links

  • "Alexander II (Obituary Notice, Monday, March 14, 1881)". Eminent Persons: Biographies reprinted from the Times. Vol. II (1876-1881). London: Macmillan and Co. 1893. pp. 268–291. hdl:2027/osu.32435022453492.
  • The Assassination of Tsar Alexander II from In Our Time (BBC Radio 4)
  • Alexander II – the Liberator. Russian-speaking forum.
  • Romanovs. Romanovs. The seventh film. Nicholas I; Alexander II on YouTube
Alexander II of Russia
Cadet branch of the House of Oldenburg
Born: 29 April 1818 Died: 13 March 1881
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Russia
Grand Duke of Finland

1855–1881
Succeeded by
King of Poland
1855–1864
Vacant
Annexation by Russia

alexander, russia, alexander, russian, Алекса, ндр, Никола, евич, aleksándr, nikoláyevich, ɐlʲɪˈksandr, ftɐˈroj, nʲɪkɐˈlajɪvʲɪtɕ, april, 1818, march, 1881, emperor, russia, king, poland, grand, duke, finland, from, march, 1855, until, assassination, 1881, alex. Alexander II Russian Aleksa ndr II Nikola evich tr Aleksandr II Nikolayevich IPA ɐlʲɪˈksandr ftɐˈroj nʲɪkɐˈlajɪvʲɪtɕ 29 April 1818 13 March 1881 a was Emperor of Russia King of Poland and Grand Duke of Finland from 2 March 1855 until his assassination in 1881 1 Alexander IIPhotograph 1878 81Emperor of RussiaReign2 March 1855 13 March 1881Coronation7 September 1856PredecessorNicholas ISuccessorAlexander IIIBorn 1818 04 29 29 April 1818Moscow Kremlin Moscow Moscow Governorate Russian EmpireDied13 March 1881 1881 03 13 aged 62 Winter Palace Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireBurialPeter and Paul Cathedral Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireSpousesMarie of Hesse and by Rhine m 1841 died 1880 wbr Catherine Mikhailovna Dolgorukova morganatic m 1880 wbr Issueamong others Grand Duchess Alexandra Nicholas Alexandrovich Tsarevich of Russia Alexander III Grand Duke Vladimir Grand Duke Alexei Maria Duchess of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Grand Duke Sergei Grand Duke PaulLegitimized Prince George Yuryevsky Princess Olga Yurievskaya Princess Catherine YurievskayaNamesAlexander Nikolayevich RomanovHouseHolstein Gottorp RomanovFatherNicholas I of RussiaMotherCharlotte of PrussiaReligionRussian OrthodoxSignatureAlexander s most significant reform as emperor was the emancipation of Russia s serfs in 1861 for which he is known as Alexander the Liberator Russian Aleksa ndr Osvobodi tel tr Aleksandr Osvobodytel IPA ɐlʲɪˈksandr ɐsvebɐˈdʲitʲɪlʲ The tsar was responsible for other reforms including reorganizing the judicial system setting up elected local judges abolishing corporal punishment 2 promoting local self government through the zemstvo system imposing universal military service ending some privileges of the nobility and promoting university education After an assassination attempt in 1866 Alexander adopted a somewhat more conservative stance until his death 3 Alexander was also notable for his foreign policy which was mainly pacifist supportive of the United States and opposite of Great Britain Alexander backed the Union during the American Civil War and sent warships to New York Harbor and San Francisco Bay ostensibly to deter attacks by the Confederate Navy 4 and sold Alaska to the United States in 1867 fearing the remote colony would fall into British hands if there were another war 5 He sought peace moved away from bellicose France when Napoleon III fell in 1871 and in 1872 joined with Germany and Austria in the League of the Three Emperors that stabilized the European situation Despite his otherwise pacifist foreign policy he fought a brief war with the Ottoman Empire in 1877 78 leading to the independence of the Bulgarian Montenegrin Romanian and Serbian states pursued further expansion into Far East and the Caucasus and conquered Turkestan also approving plans leading to the Circassian genocide 6 Although disappointed by the results of the Congress of Berlin in 1878 Alexander abided by that agreement Among his greatest domestic challenges was an uprising in Poland in 1863 to which he responded by stripping that land of its separate constitution and incorporating it directly into Russia Alexander was proposing additional parliamentary reforms to counter the rise of nascent revolutionary and anarchistic movements when he was assassinated in 1881 7 Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Reforms 2 1 1 Emancipation of the serfs 2 1 2 Additional reforms 2 2 Reaction after 1866 2 3 Suppression of separatist movements 2 4 Encouraging Finnish nationalism 2 5 Foreign affairs 2 5 1 End of Caucasian War 2 5 2 Liberation of Bulgaria 2 6 Assassination attempts 3 Assassination 4 Aftermath 5 Marriages and children 5 1 First marriage 5 2 Second marriage 6 In fiction 7 In nonfiction 8 Ancestors 9 Honours 9 1 Arms 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksEarly life Edit Grand prince Alexander Nikolaevich 1830 Born in Moscow Alexander Nikolayevich was the eldest son of Nicholas I of Russia and Charlotte of Prussia eldest daughter of Frederick William III of Prussia and of Louise of Mecklenburg Strelitz His early life gave little indication of his ultimate potential until the time of his accession in 1855 aged 37 few quantify imagined that posterity would know him for implementing the most challenging reforms undertaken in Russia since the reign of Peter the Great 8 His uncle Emperor Alexander I died childless Grand Duke Konstantin the next younger brother of Alexander I had previously renounced his rights to the throne of Russia Thus Alexander s father who was the third son of Paul I became the new Emperor he took the name Nicholas I At that time Alexander became Tsarevich as his father s heir to the throne In the period of his life as heir apparent 1825 to 1855 the intellectual atmosphere of Saint Petersburg did not favour any kind of change freedom of thought and all forms of private initiative were suppressed vigorously by the order of his father Personal and official censorship was rife criticism of the authorities was regarded as a serious offence 9 The education of the tsarevich as future emperor took place under the supervision of the liberal romantic poet and gifted translator Vasily Zhukovsky 10 grasping a smattering of a great many subjects and becoming familiar with the chief modern European languages 9 Unusually for the time the young Alexander was taken on a six month tour of Russia 1837 visiting 20 provinces in the country 11 He also visited many prominent Western European countries 12 in 1838 and 1839 As Tsesarevich Alexander became the first Romanov heir to visit Siberia 13 1837 While touring Russia he also befriended the then exiled poet Alexander Herzen and pardoned him It was through Herzen s influence that the tsarevich later abolished serfdom in Russia In 1839 when his parents sent him on a tour of Europe he met twenty year old Queen Victoria and both fell in love Simon Sebag Montefiore speculates that a small romance emerged Such a marriage however would not work as Alexander was not a minor prince of Europe and was in line to inherit a throne himself 14 In 1847 Alexander donated money to Ireland during the Great Famine 15 He has been described as looking like a German somewhat of a pacifist a heavy smoker and card player 16 Reign Edit Procession of Alexander II into Dormition Cathedral from the Red Porch during his coronation The coronation of Emperor Alexander II and Empress Maria Alexandrovna on 26 August 7 September 1856 at the Dormition Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin painting by Mihaly Zichy The painting depicts the moment when the Emperor crowned the Empress Reforms Edit Main article Government reforms of Alexander II of Russia Encouraged by public opinion Alexander began a period of radical reforms including an attempt not to depend on landed aristocracy controlling the poor an effort to develop Russia s natural resources and to reform all branches of the administration 9 Boris Chicherin 1828 1904 was a political philosopher who believed that Russia needed a strong authoritative government by Alexander to make the reforms possible He praised Alexander for the range of his fundamental reforms arguing that the tsar was called upon to execute one of the hardest tasks which can confront an autocratic ruler to completely remodel the enormous state which had been entrusted to his care to abolish an age old order founded on slavery to replace it with civic decency and freedom to establish justice in a country which had never known the meaning of legality to redesign the entire administration to introduce freedom of the press in the context of untrammeled authority to call new forces to life at every turn and set them on firm legal foundations to put a repressed and humiliated society on its feet and to give it the chance to flex its muscles 17 Emancipation of the serfs Edit Main articles Emancipation reform of 1861 and Abolition of serfdom in Livonia Alexander II succeeded to the throne upon the death of his father in 1855 As Tsarevich he had been an enthusiastic supporter of his father s reactionary policies That is he always obeyed the autocratic ruler But now he was the autocratic ruler himself and fully intended to rule according to what he thought best He rejected any moves to set up a parliamentary system that would curb his powers He inherited a large mess that had been wrought by his father s fear of progress during his reign Many of the other royal families of Europe had also disliked Nicholas I which extended to distrust of the Romanov dynasty itself Even so there was no one more prepared to bring the country around than Alexander II 18 The first year of his reign was devoted to the prosecution of the Crimean War and after the fall of Sevastopol to negotiations for peace led by his trusted counsellor Prince Alexander Gorchakov The country had been exhausted and humiliated by the war 19 Bribe taking theft and corruption were rampant 20 The Emancipation Reform of 1861 abolished serfdom on private estates throughout the Russian Empire Serfs gained the full rights of free citizens including rights to marry without having to gain consent to own property and to own a business The measure was the first and most important of the liberal reforms made by Alexander II Polish landed proprietors of the Lithuanian provinces presented a petition hoping that their relations with the serfs might be regulated in a way more satisfactory for the proprietors Alexander II authorized the formation of committees for ameliorating the condition of the peasants and laid down the principles on which the amelioration was to be effected 9 Without consulting his ordinary advisers Alexander ordered the Minister of the Interior to send a circular to the provincial governors of European Russia serfdom was rare in other parts containing a copy of the instructions forwarded to the Governor General of Lithuania praising the supposed generous patriotic intentions of the Lithuanian landed proprietors and suggesting that perhaps the landed proprietors of other provinces might express a similar desire The hint was taken in all provinces where serfdom existed emancipation committees were formed 9 Leaving church in Pskov 1864 Emancipation was not a simple goal capable of being achieved instantaneously by imperial decree It contained complicated problems deeply affecting the economic social and political future of the nation Alexander had to choose between the different measures recommended to him and decide if the serfs would become agricultural laborers dependent economically and administratively on the landlords or if the serfs would be transformed into a class of independent communal proprietors 9 The emperor gave his support to the latter project and the Russian peasantry became one of the last groups of peasants in Europe to shake off serfdom The architects of the emancipation manifesto were Alexander s brother Konstantin Yakov Rostovtsev and Nikolay Milyutin On 3 March 1861 six years after his accession the emancipation law was signed and published Additional reforms Edit Main article Government reforms of Alexander II of Russia The US 7 2 million check used to pay for Russian Alaska in 1867 A host of new reforms followed in diverse areas 21 22 The tsar appointed Dmitry Milyutin to carry out significant reforms in the Russian armed forces Further important changes were made concerning industry and commerce and the new freedom thus afforded produced a large number of limited liability companies 23 Plans were formed for building a great network of railways partly to develop the natural resources of the country and partly to increase its power for defense and attack 9 Military reforms included universal conscription introduced for all social classes on 1 January 1874 24 Prior to the new regulation as of 1861 conscription was compulsorily enforced only for the peasantry Conscription had been 25 years for serfs who were drafted by their landowners which was widely considered to be a life sentence 25 Other military reforms included extending the reserve forces and the military district system which split the Russian states into 15 military districts a system still in use over a hundred years later The building of strategic railways and an emphasis on the military education of the officer corps comprised further reforms Corporal punishment in the military and branding of soldiers as punishment were banned 26 The bulk of important military reforms were enacted as a result of the poor showing in the Crimean War A new judicial administration 1864 based on the French model introduced security of tenure 27 A new penal code and a greatly simplified system of civil and criminal procedure also came into operation 28 Reorganisation of the judiciary occurred to include trial in open court with judges appointed for life a jury system and the creation of justices of the peace to deal with minor offences at local level Legal historian Sir Henry Maine credited Alexander II with the first great attempt since the time of Grotius to codify and humanise the usages of war 29 Alexander II with his uncle German Emperor William I on a hunting trip together 1872 Alexander s bureaucracy instituted an elaborate scheme of local self government zemstvo for the rural districts 1864 and the large towns 1870 with elective assemblies possessing a restricted right of taxation and a new rural and municipal police under the direction of the Minister of the Interior 1 Under Alexander s rules Jews could not own land and were restricted in travel However special taxes on Jews were eliminated and those who graduated from secondary school were permitted to live outside the Pale of Settlement and became eligible for state employment Large numbers of educated Jews moved as soon as possible to Moscow Saint Petersburg and other major cities 30 31 The Alaska colony was losing money and would be impossible to defend in wartime against Britain so in 1867 Russia sold Alaska to the United States for 7 2 million equivalent to 140 million in 2021 dollars The Russian administrators soldiers settlers and some of the priests returned home Others stayed to minister to their native parishioners who remain members of the Russian Orthodox Church into the 21st century 32 Reaction after 1866 Edit Alexander maintained a generally liberal course 33 Radicals complained he did not go far enough and he became a target for numerous assassination plots He survived attempts that took place in 1866 1879 and 1880 Finally 13 March O S 1 March 1881 assassins organized by the Narodnaya Volya People s Will party killed him with a bomb The Emperor had earlier in the day signed the Loris Melikov constitution which would have created two legislative commissions made up of indirectly elected representatives had it not been repealed by his reactionary successor Alexander III 34 An attempted assassination in 1866 started a more conservative period that lasted until his death 3 The Tsar made a series of new appointments replacing liberal ministers with conservatives 35 Under Minister of Education Dmitry Tolstoy liberal university courses and subjects that encouraged critical thinking were replaced by a more traditional curriculum and from 1871 onwards only students from gimnaziya schools could progress to university 36 35 In 1879 governor generals were established with powers to prosecute in military courts and exile political offenders The government also held show trials with the intention of deterring others from revolutionary activity but after cases such as the Trial of the 193 where sympathetic juries acquitted many of the defendants 37 this was abandoned 35 Suppression of separatist movements Edit Battle of Mrzyglod during the January Uprising in 1863 After Alexander II became Emperor of Russia and King of Poland in 1855 he substantially relaxed the strict and repressive regime that had been imposed on Congress Poland after the November Uprising of 1830 1831 38 39 However in 1856 at the beginning of his reign Alexander made a memorable speech to the deputies of the Polish nobility who inhabited Congress Poland Western Ukraine Lithuania Livonia and Belarus in which he warned against further concessions with the words Gentlemen let us have no dreams 40 This served as a warning to the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth The territories of the former Poland Lithuania were excluded from liberal policies introduced by Alexander The result was the January Uprising of 1863 1864 that was suppressed after eighteen months of fighting Hundreds of Poles were executed and thousands were deported to Siberia The price of suppression was Russian support for the unification of Germany citation needed The martial law in Lithuania introduced in 1863 lasted for the next 40 years Native languages Ukrainian and Belarusian were completely banned from printed texts the Ems Ukase being an example The Authorities banned to use Latin script for writing Lithuanian The Polish language was banned in both oral and written form from all provinces except Congress Poland where it was allowed in private conversations only Nikolay Milyutin was installed as governor and he decided that the best response to the January Uprising was to make reforms regarding the peasants He devised a program which involved the emancipation of the peasantry at the expense of the nationalist szlachta landowners and the expulsion of Roman Catholic priests from schools 41 Emancipation of the Polish peasantry from their serf like status took place in 1864 on more generous terms than the emancipation of Russian peasants in 1861 42 Encouraging Finnish nationalism Edit Monument to Alexander II The Liberator at the Senate Square in Helsinki by sculptor Walter Runeberg Erected in 1894 when Finland was still a Russian grand duchy In 1863 Alexander II re convened the Diet of Finland and initiated several reforms increasing Finland s autonomy within the Russian Empire including establishment of its own currency the Finnish markka 43 Liberation of business led to increased foreign investment and industrial development Finland also got its first railways separately established under Finnish administration 44 Finally the elevation of Finnish from a language of the common people to a national language equal to Swedish opened opportunities for a larger proportion of Finnish society Alexander II is still regarded as The Good Tsar in Finland 44 These reforms could be seen as results of a genuine belief that reforms were easier to test in an underpopulated homogeneous country than in the whole of Russia They may also be seen as a reward for the loyalty of its relatively western oriented population during the Crimean War and during the Polish uprising Encouraging Finnish nationalism and language can also be seen as an attempt to dilute ties with Sweden Foreign affairs Edit During the Crimean War Austria maintained a policy of hostile neutrality towards Russia and while not going to war was supportive of the Anglo French coalition Having abandoned its alliance with Russia Austria was diplomatically isolated following the war which contributed to Russia s non intervention in the 1859 Franco Austrian War which meant the end of Austrian influence in Italy and in the 1866 Austro Prussian War with the loss of its influence in most German speaking lands 45 During the American Civil War 1861 1865 Russia supported the Union largely due to the view that the U S served as a counterbalance to their geopolitical rival the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland In 1863 the Russian Navy s Baltic and Pacific fleets wintered in the American ports of New York and San Francisco respectively 46 The Monument to the Tsar Liberator in the centre of Sofia the capital of Bulgaria The Treaty of Paris of 1856 stood until 1871 when Prussia defeated France in the Franco Prussian War During his reign Napoleon III eager for the support of the United Kingdom had opposed Russia over the Eastern Question France abandoned its opposition to Russia after the establishment of the Third French Republic Encouraged by the new attitude of French diplomacy and supported by the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck Russia renounced the Black Sea clauses of the Paris treaty agreed to in 1856 As the United Kingdom with Austria 47 could not enforce the clauses Russia once again established a fleet in the Black Sea France after the Franco Prussian War and the loss of Alsace Lorraine was fervently hostile to Germany and maintained friendly relations with Russia In the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 the states of Romania Serbia and Montenegro gained international recognition of their independence and Bulgaria achieved its autonomy from direct Ottoman rule Russia took over Southern Bessarabia 48 lost in 1856 End of Caucasian War Edit Main article Caucasian War Imam Shamil surrendered to Count Baryatinsky on 25 August 1859 The Russo Circassian War concluded as a Russian victory during Alexander II s rule Just before the conclusion of the war the Russian Army under the emperor s order sought to eliminate the Circassian mountaineers in the Circassian genocide which would be often referred to as cleansing and genocide in several historic dialogues 49 50 In 1857 Dmitry Milyutin first published the idea of mass expulsions of Circassian natives 51 Milyutin argued that the goal was not to simply move them so that their land could be settled by productive farmers but rather that eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself to cleanse the land of hostile elements 51 52 Tsar Alexander II endorsed the plans 51 A large portion of indigenous peoples of the region were ethnically cleansed 53 from their homeland at the end of the Russo Circassian War by Russia A large deportation was launched against the remaining population before the end of the war in 1864 and it was mostly completed by 1867 54 Only a small percentage accepted to surrender and resettle within the Russian Empire The remaining Circassian populations who refused to surrender were thus variously dispersed resettled tortured and most of the time killed en masse 55 Liberation of Bulgaria Edit Main article Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 In April 1876 the Bulgarian population in the Balkans rebelled against Ottoman rule in Bulgaria The Ottoman authorities suppressed the April Uprising causing a general outcry throughout Europe Some of the most prominent intellectuals and politicians on the Continent most notably Victor Hugo and William Gladstone sought to raise awareness about the atrocities that the Turks imposed on the Bulgarian population To solve this new crisis in the Eastern question a Constantinople Conference was convened by the Great Powers in Constantinople at the end of the year The participants in the Conference failed to reach a final agreement After the failure of the Constantinople Conference at the beginning of 1877 Emperor Alexander II started diplomatic preparations with the other Great Powers to secure their neutrality in case of a war between Russia and the Ottomans Alexander II considered such agreements paramount in avoiding the possibility of causing his country a disaster similar to the Crimean War 43 In 1877 Russian general Iosif Gurko liberated Veliko Tarnovo ending the 480 year rule of the Ottoman Empire The Russian Emperor succeeded in his diplomatic endeavors Having secured agreement as to non involvement by the other Great Powers on 17 April 1877 Russia declared war upon the Ottoman Empire The Russians helped by the Romanian Army under its supreme commander King Carol I then Prince of Romania who sought to obtain Romanian independence from the Ottomans as well were successful against the Turks and the Russo Turkish War of 1877 1878 ended with the signing of the preliminary peace Treaty of San Stefano on 19 February 3 March N S 1878 The treaty and the subsequent Congress of Berlin June July 1878 secured the emergence of an independent Bulgarian state for the first time since 1396 and Bulgarian parliamentarians elected the tsar s nephew Prince Alexander of Battenberg as the Bulgarians first ruler For his social reforms in Russia and his role in the liberation of Bulgaria Alexander II became known in Bulgaria as the Tsar Liberator of Russians and Bulgarians A monument to Alexander II was erected in 1907 in Sofia in the National Assembly square opposite to the Parliament building 43 The monument underwent a complete reconstruction in 2012 funded by the Sofia Municipality and some Russian foundations The inscription on the monument reads in Old Bulgarian style To the Tsar Liberator from grateful Bulgaria There is a museum dedicated to Alexander in the Bulgarian city of Pleven Assassination attempts Edit In April 1866 there was an attempt on the emperor s life in St Petersburg by Dmitry Karakozov 56 To commemorate his narrow escape from death which he himself referred to only as the event of 4 April 1866 a number of churches and chapels were built in many Russian cities Viktor Hartmann a Russian architect even sketched a design of a monumental gate which was never built to commemorate the event Modest Mussorgsky later wrote his Pictures at an Exhibition the last movement of which The Great Gate of Kiev is based on Hartmann s sketches citation needed During the 1867 World Fair Polish immigrant Antoni Berezowski attacked the carriage containing Alexander his two sons and Napoleon III 57 His self modified double barreled pistol misfired and struck a horse of an escorting cavalryman citation needed On the morning of 20 April 1879 Alexander was briskly walking towards the Square of the Guards Staff and faced Alexander Soloviev a 33 year old former student Having seen a menacing revolver in his hands the Emperor fled in a zigzag pattern Soloviev fired five times but missed he was sentenced to death and hanged on 28 May citation needed The student acted on his own but other revolutionaries were keen to murder Alexander 58 In December 1879 the Narodnaya Volya People s Will a radical revolutionary group which hoped to ignite a social revolution organised an explosion on the railway from Livadia citation needed to Moscow but they missed the emperor s train citation needed On the evening of 5 February 1880 Stephan Khalturin also from Narodnaya Volya set off a timed charge under the dining room of the Winter Palace right in the resting room of the guards a story below killing 11 people and wounding 30 others 58 The New York Times 4 March 1880 reported the dynamite used was enclosed in an iron box and exploded by a system of clockwork used by the man Thomas in Bremen some years ago 59 However dinner had been delayed by the late arrival of the tsar s nephew the Prince of Bulgaria so the tsar and his family were not in the dining room at the time of the explosion and were unharmed 58 Assassination EditMain article Assassination of Alexander II of Russia The explosion killed one of the Cossacks and wounded the driver The assassination of Alexander II drawing by G Broling 1881 After the last assassination attempt in February 1880 Count Loris Melikov was appointed the head of the Supreme Executive Commission and given extraordinary powers to fight the revolutionaries Loris Melikov s proposals called for some form of parliamentary body and the Emperor seemed to agree these plans were never realized citation needed On 13 March O S 1 March 1881 Alexander was assassinated in Saint Petersburg 60 As he was known to do every Sunday for many years the emperor went to the Mikhailovsky Manege for the military roll call He travelled both to and from the Manege in a closed carriage accompanied by five Cossacks and Frank Franciszek Joseph Jackowski a Polish noble with a sixth Cossack 61 sitting on the coachman s left The emperor s carriage was followed by two sleighs carrying among others the chief of police and the chief of the emperor s guards The route as always was via the Catherine Canal and over the Pevchesky Bridge citation needed The street was flanked by narrow pavements for the public A young member of the Narodnaya Volya People s Will movement Nikolai Rysakov 58 was carrying a small white package wrapped in a handkerchief He later said of his attempt to kill the Tsar After a moment s hesitation I threw the bomb I sent it under the horses hooves in the supposition that it would blow up under the carriage The explosion knocked me into the fence 62 The explosion while killing one of the Cossacks and seriously wounding the driver and people on the sidewalk 58 had only damaged the bulletproof carriage a gift from Napoleon III of France The emperor emerged shaken but unhurt 58 Rysakov was captured almost immediately Police Chief Dvorzhitzky heard Rysakov shout out to someone else in the gathering crowd Dvorzhitzky offered to drive the Tsar back to the Palace in his sleigh The Tsar agreed but he decided to first see the culprit and to survey the damage He expressed solicitude for the victims To the anxious inquires of his entourage Alexander replied Thank God I m untouched Nevertheless a second young member of the Narodnaya Volya Ignacy Hryniewiecki 58 standing by the canal fence raised both arms and threw something at the emperor s feet He was alleged to have shouted It is too early to thank God 63 Dvorzhitzky was later to write I was deafened by the new explosion burned wounded and thrown to the ground Suddenly amid the smoke and snowy fog I heard His Majesty s weak voice cry Help Gathering what strength I had I jumped up and rushed to the emperor His Majesty was half lying half sitting leaning on his right arm Thinking he was merely wounded heavily I tried to lift him but the czar s legs were shattered and the blood poured out of them Twenty people with wounds of varying degree lay on the sidewalk and on the street Some managed to stand others to crawl still others tried to get out from beneath bodies that had fallen on them Through the snow debris and blood you could see fragments of clothing epaulets sabres and bloody chunks of human flesh 64 Later it was learned there was a third bomber in the crowd Ivan Emelyanov stood ready clutching a briefcase containing a bomb that was to be used if the other two bombers failed 65 Alexander was carried by sleigh to the Winter Palace 58 to his study where almost the same day twenty years earlier he had signed the Emancipation Edict freeing the serfs Alexander was bleeding to death with his legs torn away his stomach ripped open and his face mutilated 66 Members of the Romanov family came rushing to the scene citation needed The dying emperor was given Communion and Last Rites When the attending physician Sergey Botkin was asked how long it would be he replied Up to fifteen minutes 67 At 3 30 that day the standard of Alexander II his personal flag was lowered for the last time citation needed Aftermath Edit The Church of the Savior on Blood was built on the site of Alexander II s assassination Alexander II also known as the Grand Duke of Finland was well regarded among the majority of Finns 68 Statue of Alexander II at the Senate Square in Helsinki Finland flowered on 13 March 1899 the day of the commemoration of the emperor s death Alexander II s death caused a great setback for the reform movement One of his last acts was the approval of Mikhail Loris Melikov s constitutional reforms 69 Though the reforms were conservative in practice their significance lay in the value Alexander II attributed to them I have given my approval but I do not hide from myself the fact that it is the first step towards a constitution 70 In a matter of 48 hours Alexander II planned to release these plans to the Russian people Instead following his succession Alexander III under the advice of Konstantin Pobedonostsev chose to abandon these reforms and went on to pursue a policy of greater autocratic power 71 The assassination triggered major suppression of civil liberties in Russia and police brutality burst back in full force after experiencing some restraint under the reign of Alexander II whose death was witnessed first hand by his son Alexander III and his grandson Nicholas II both future emperors who vowed not to have the same fate befall them Both of them used the Okhrana to arrest protestors and uproot suspected rebel groups creating further suppression of personal freedom for the Russian people A series of anti Jewish pogroms and antisemitic legislation the May Laws were yet another result 43 Finally the tsar s assassination also inspired anarchists to advocate propaganda by deed the use of a spectacular act of violence to incite revolution 72 In 1881 the Alexander Church designed by Theodor Decker and named after Alexander II was completed in Tampere 73 74 Also with construction starting in 1883 the Church of the Savior on Blood was built on the site of Alexander s assassination and dedicated in his memory Marriages and children EditFirst marriage Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article An intimate glimpse into the family life of Alexander II 1871 Emperor Alexander II and his wife Empress Maria with their son the future Alexander III by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky 1870 In 1838 39 the young bachelor Alexander made the Grand Tour of Europe which was standard for young men of his class at that time One of the purposes of the tour was to select a suitable bride for himself His father Nicholas I of Russia suggested Princess Alexandrine of Baden as a suitable choice but he was prepared to allow Alexander to choose his own bride as long as she was not Roman Catholic or a commoner 75 Alexander stayed for three days with the maiden Queen Victoria The two got along well but there was no question of marriage between two major monarchs In Germany Alexander made an unplanned stop in Darmstadt He was reluctant to spend a possibly dull evening with their host Louis II Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine but he agreed to do so because Vasily Zhukovsky insisted that his entourage was exhausted and needed a rest 75 During dinner he met and was charmed by Princess Marie the 14 year old daughter of Louis II Grand Duke of Hesse He was so smitten that he declared that he would rather abandon the succession than not marry her 76 He wrote to his father I liked her terribly at first sight If you permit it dear father I will come back to Darmstadt after England 77 When he left Darmstadt she gave him a locket that contained a piece of her hair 76 Alexander s parents initially did not support his decision to marry Princess Marie of Hesse There were troubling rumors about her paternity Although she was the legal daughter of Ludwig II Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine there were rumors that Marie was the biological daughter of her mother s lover Baron August von Senarclens de Grancy 76 Alexander s parents worried that Marie could have inherited her mother s consumption Alexander s mother considered the Hesse family grossly inferior to the Hohenzollerns and Romanovs 76 In April 1840 Alexander s engagement to Princess Marie was officially announced 78 In August the 16 year old Marie left Darmstadt for Russia 78 In December she was received into the Orthodox Church and received the names Maria Alexandrovna 79 On 16 April 1841 aged 23 Tsarevitch Alexander married Marie in St Petersburg The marriage produced six sons and two daughters Grand Duchess Alexandra Alexandrovna of Russia 30 August 1842 10 July 1849 nicknamed Lina died of infant meningitis in St Petersburg at the age of six Nicholas Alexandrovich Tsesarevich of Russia 20 September 1843 24 April 1865 engaged to Princess Dagmar of Denmark Emperor Alexander III 10 March 1845 1 November 1894 he married Princess Dagmar of Denmark on 9 November 1866 They had six children Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich of Russia 22 April 1847 17 February 1909 he married Duchess Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin on 28 August 1874 They had five children Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich 14 January 1850 14 November 1908 he married Alexandra Zhukovskaya in 1870 They had one son Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia 17 October 1853 24 October 1920 she married Alfred Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha on 23 January 1874 They had six children Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich of Russia 11 May 1857 17 February 1905 he married Princess Elisabeth of Hesse and by Rhine on 15 June 1884 They had no children Grand Duke Paul Alexandrovich of Russia 3 October 1860 24 January 1919 he married Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark on 17 June 1889 They had two children He remarried Olga Karnovich on 10 October 1902 They had three children Alexander particularly placed hope in his eldest son Tsarevich Nicholas In 1864 Alexander II found Nicholas a bride Princess Dagmar of Denmark second daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and younger sister to Alexandra Princess of Wales and King George I of Greece In 1865 Nicholas died of cerebrospinal meningitis Alexander was devastated by Nicholas death and his nephew Grand Duke Alexander Mikhailovich of Russia reflected that his shoulders were bent and he walked so slowly that we all felt as though his loss had robbed him of all his strength 80 Alexander s second son Grand Duke Alexander became tsarevich and married the late Tsarevich Nicholas s fiancee The couple married in November 1866 with Dagmar converting to Orthodoxy and taking the name Maria Feodorovna citation needed Alexander grew estranged from his second son Grand Duke Alexander 81 Alexander s favorite child was his daughter Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna He reflected that his daughter had never caused us anything but joy We lost our eldest girl and we had so ardently wished for another her birth was a joy and a delight not to be described and her whole life has been a continuation 82 In 1873 a quarrel broke out between the courts of Queen Victoria and Alexander II when Victoria s second son Prince Alfred made it known that he wished to marry the Grand Duchess The tsar objected to the queen s request to have his daughter come to England in order to meet her 83 and after the January 1874 wedding in St Petersburg the tsar insisted that his daughter be granted precedence over the Princess of Wales which the queen rebuffed 84 Later that year after attending the engagement ceremonies of his second surviving son Vladimir to Marie of Mecklenburg Schwerin in Berlin Alexander II with his third son Alexei accompanying him made a visit to England 85 While not a state visit but simply a trip to see his daughter he nevertheless partook in receptions at Buckingham Palace and Marlborough House inspected the artillery at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich reviewed troops at Aldershot and met both Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and the leader of the opposition William Gladstone 86 Disraeli observed of the tsar that his mien and manners are gracious and graceful but the expression of his countenance which I could now very closely examine is sad Whether it is satiety or the loneliness of despotism or fear of a violent death I know not but it was a visage of I should think habitual mournfulness 86 In 1866 Alexander II took a mistress Catherine Dolgorukova with whom he would father three surviving children In 1880 he moved his mistress and their children into the Winter Palace Alexander s affair alienated all his children except Alexei and Marie Alexandrovna 87 Courtiers spread stories that the dying Empress Marie was forced to hear the noise of Catherine s children moving about overhead but their respective rooms were actually far 88 In May 1880 Grand Duchess Marie Alexandrovna visited Russia to see her dying mother She was horrified to learn that Catherine lived in the Palace and she confronted him 89 Shocked by the loss of support from his daughter he quietly retreated to Gatchina Palace for military reviews 89 The quarrel however evidently jolted his conscience enough to lead him to return to St Petersburg each morning to ask after his wife s health 89 Empress Marie Alexandrovna suffered from tuberculosis She succumbed to it on 3 June 1880 Second marriage Edit Tsar Alexander II photo by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky 1881 The Di Rocco Wieler Private Collection Toronto Canada On 18 July O S 6 July 1880 Alexander II married his mistress Catherine Dolgorukova morganatically in a secret ceremony at Tsarskoe Selo 90 The action scandalized both his family and the court It violated Orthodox custom which required a minimum period of 40 days mourning between the death of a spouse and the remarriage of a surviving spouse eliciting criticism in foreign courts 91 Alexander bestowed on Catherine the title of Princess Yurievskaya and legitimized their children 91 Before their marriage Alexander and Catherine had four children Prince George Alexandrovich Yuryevsky 12 May 1872 13 September 1913 he married Countess Alexandra von Zarnekau on 11 February 1900 and they were divorced in 1908 They had one son Princess Olga Alexandrovna Yurievskaya 7 November 1873 10 August 1925 she married Count Georg of Merenberg on 12 May 1895 They had three children Prince Boris Alexandrovich Yurievsky 23 February 11 April 1876 Princess Catherine Alexandrovna Yurievskaya 9 September 1878 22 December 1959 she married Prince Alexander Vladimirovich Baryatinsky 1870 1910 on 18 October 1901 They had two sons She remarried Prince Sergei Platonovich Obolensky on 6 October 1916 and they were divorced in 1924 In fiction EditAlexander II appears prominently in the opening two chapters of Jules Verne s Michael Strogoff published in 1876 during Alexander s own lifetime The Emperor sets the book s plot in motion and sends its eponymous protagonist on the dangerous and vital mission which would occupy the rest of the book Verne presents Alexander II in a highly positive light as an enlightened yet firm monarch dealing confidently and decisively with a rebellion Alexander s liberalism shows in a dialogue with the chief of police who says There was a time sire when NONE returned from Siberia to be immediately rebuked by the Emperor who answers Well whilst I live Siberia is and shall be a country whence men CAN return 92 The films Katia 1938 and Magnificent Sinner 1959 depict a highly fictionalized account of the Tsar s romance with the woman who became his second wife In The Tiger in the Well Philip Pullman refers to the assassination though he never names Alexander and to the pogroms that followed The anti Jewish attacks play an important role in the novel s plot Andrew Williams s historical thriller To Kill A Tsar tells the story of The People s Will revolutionaries and the assassination through the eyes of an Anglo Russian doctor living in St Petersburg Oscar Wilde s first play Vera or The Nihilists written in 1880 Alexander II s last year features Russian revolutionaries who seek to assassinate a reform minded Emperor and who in the play ultimately fail in their plot Though Wilde s fictional Emperor differs from the actual Alexander contemporary events which in Russia as published in the British press of the time clearly original research influenced Wilde Alexander II s reasons to sell Alaska to the United States in 1867 are fictionized in the epilogue of the novel Forty Ninth 93 by Boris Pronsky and Craig Britton in a form of a letter to Catherine Dolgorukova Prior to that the book explores the events immediately after the first assassination attempt on the Tsar in 1866 as well as the relationship with his brother Grand Duke Konstantin Nikolayevich In nonfiction EditMark Twain describes a short visit with Alexander II in Chapter 37 of The Innocents Abroad describing him as very tall and spare and a determined looking man though a very pleasant looking one nevertheless It is easy to see that he is kind and affectionate There is something very noble in his expression when his cap is off 94 Ancestors EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Alexander II of Russia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ancestors of Alexander II of Russia8 Peter III of Russia4 Paul I of Russia9 Catherine II of Russia2 Nicholas I of Russia10 Frederick II Eugene Duke of Wurttemberg5 Duchess Sophie Dorothea of Wurttemburg11 Princess Friederike of Brandenburg Schwedt1 Alexander II of Russia12 Frederick William II of Prussia6 Frederick William III of Prussia13 Princess Frederica Louisa of Hesse Darmstadt3 Princess Charlotte of Prussia14 Charles II Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Strelitz7 Duchess Louise of Mecklenburg Strelitz15 Princess Friederike of Hesse DarmstadtHonours EditDomestic orders and decorations 95 self published source Knight of St Andrew 29 April 1818 Knight of St Alexander Nevsky 29 April 1818 Knight of St Anna 1st Class 29 April 1818 Knight of St Vladimir 1st Class 1 January 1846 Knight of St George 4th Class 10 November 1850 1st Class 26 November 1869 Knight of St Stanislaus 1st Class 11 June 1865 Golden Sword For Bravery 28 November 1877 Poland Knight of the White Eagle 12 July 1829 96 Foreign orders and decorations 95 Austrian Empire 97 Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 1839 Knight of the Military Order of Maria Theresa 1875 Baden 98 Knight of the House Order of Fidelity 1839 Grand Cross of the Zahringer Lion 1839 Kingdom of Bavaria Knight of St Hubert 1829 99 Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 25 April 1856 100 Empire of Brazil Grand Cross of the Southern Cross 15 May 1845 Grand Cross of the Order of Pedro I 14 February 1856 Emirate of Bukhara Order of Noble Bukhara 1881 Denmark Knight of the Elephant 23 April 1834 101 with Golden Collar 1838 Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order June 1847 102 France Kingdom of France Knight of the Holy Spirit 5 February 1824 103 French Empire Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour 30 July 1856 104 Kingdom of Greece Grand Cross of the Redeemer 8 November 1835 Kingdom of Hanover 105 Grand Cross of the Royal Guelphic Order 1838 Knight of St George 1840 Electorate of Hesse Grand Cross of the Golden Lion 18 August 1847 106 Grand Duchy of Hesse 107 Grand Cross of the Ludwig Order 25 March 1839 Grand Cross of the Merit Order of Philip the Magnanimous 25 December 1843 Military Merit Cross 16 May 1878 Empire of Japan Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 27 April 1877 108 Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore and Golden Collar 21 June 1864 Mexican Empire Grand Cross of the Mexican Eagle with Collar 1865 109 Monaco Grand Cross of St Charles 22 July 1873 110 Principality of Montenegro Knight of St Peter of Cetinje Nassau Knight of the Gold Lion of Nassau May 1858 111 Netherlands Grand Cross of the Netherlands Lion 2 December 1834 Grand Cross of the Military William Order 13 September 1855 112 Oldenburg Grand Cross of the Order of Duke Peter Friedrich Ludwig with Golden Crown 27 September 1847 113 Ottoman Empire Order of the Medjidie 1st Class 1 February 1860 Order of Osmanieh 1st Class 25 May 1871 Duchy of Parma Senator Grand Cross of the Constantinian Order of St George with Collar 1851 114 Persian Empire Order of the Lion and the Sun 1st Class 10 July 1850 Kingdom of Portugal Grand Cross of the Sash of the Three Orders 27 November 1855 115 Kingdom of Prussia Knight of the Black Eagle 10 June 1826 with Collar 1856 116 Grand Commander s Cross of the Royal House Order of Hohenzollern 30 May 1856 116 Pour le Merite military 8 December 1869 with Oak Leaves 8 December 1871 Grand Cross 24 April 1878 117 Kingdom of Sardinia Knight of the Annunciation 20 October 1845 118 Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the White Falcon 12 September 1838 119 Kingdom of Saxony Knight of the Rue Crown 1840 120 Spain Knight of the Golden Fleece 14 May 1826 121 Sweden Norway Knight of the Seraphim 6 March 1826 122 Two Sicilies Grand Cross of St Ferdinand and Merit 20 January 1839 United Kingdom Stranger Knight of the Garter 14 August 1867 123 Wurttemberg 124 Grand Cross of the Wurttemberg Crown 1829 Knight of the Military Merit Order 25 December 1850 Arms Edit Lesser Coat of Arms of the Russian EmpireGallery Edit Portrait of Alexander II 1856 Portrait of Emperor Alexander II wearing the greatcoat and cap of the Imperial Horse Guards Regiment c 1865 Alexander II by Sergei Lvovich Levitsky 1860 The Di Rocco Wieler Private Collection Toronto Canada Alexander II portrait by Konstantin Makovsky 1881 The Monument to the Tsar Liberator in Sofia commemorates Alexander II s decisive role in the Liberation of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule during the Russo Turkish War of 1877 78 A monument to Alexander II in Czestochowa removed after liberation of Poland A monument to Alexander II in Plovdiv Bulgaria See also EditThird Section of His Imperial Majesty s Own Chancellery Tsars of Russia family treeNotes Edit Old style 17 April 1818 1 March 1881References Edit a b Wallace 1911 p 561 Reformation by the Tsar Liberator InfoRefuge InfoRefuge 16 October 2007 Retrieved 18 April 2016 a b Alexander II emperor of Russia Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 14 May 2018 Yegorov Oleg 16 August 2017 What role did Russia play in the U S Civil War Russia Beyond Claus M Naske 1987 Alaska a history of the 49th state Slotnick Herman E 2nd ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press p 61 ISBN 978 0806125732 OCLC 44965514 King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Page 94 In a policy memorandum in of 1857 Dmitri Milyutin chief of staff to Bariatinskii summarized the new thinking on dealing with the northwestern highlanders The idea Milyutin argued was not to clear the highlands and coastal areas of Circassians so that these regions could be settled by productive farmers but Rather eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself to cleanse the land of hostile elements Tsar Alexander II formally approved the resettlement plan Milyutin who would eventually become minister of war was to see his plans realized in the early 1860s Kontrreformy 1889 1892 gg Soderzhanie kontrreform Nikolaj Troickij scepsis net Wallace 1911 pp 559 60 a b c d e f g Wallace 1911 p 560 The McGraw Hill encyclopedia of world biography an international reference work McGraw Hill 1973 p 113 ISBN 9780070796331 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II the Last Great Tsar p 63 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar pp 65 69 190 91 amp 199 200 Radzinsky Edvard 2005 How to Bring Up a Caesar Alexander II The Last Great Tsar Translated by Bouis Antonina reprint ed New York Simon and Schuster p 62 ISBN 978 0743281973 The tsarevich was the first Romanov heir to visit Siberia where convicts and exiles were sent Sebag Montefiore p 512 Irish Famine sparked international fundraising IrishCentral 10 May 2010 The Advocate or Irish Industrial Journal 7 March 1855 page 3 column 2 Quoted in David Saunders Russia in the Age of Reaction and Reform 1801 1881 London Longman 1992 p 213 ISBN 9780582489783 Sebag Montefiore pp 541 42 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar p 107 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar p 107 W Bruce Lincoln The great reforms Autocracy bureaucracy and the politics of change in imperial Russia Northern Illinois UP 1990 Ben Eklof John Bushnell and Larisa Georgievna Zakharova eds Russia s great reforms 1855 1881 Indiana UP 1994 The new volumes of the Encyclopaedia Britannica constituting in combination with the existing volumes of the ninth edition the tenth edition of that work and also supplying a new distinctive and independent library of reference dealing with recent events and developments A amp C Black 29 December 2017 via Google Books Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar p 150 Jonathon Bromley Russia 1848 1917 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar pp 150 51 An Introduction to Russian History 1976 edited by Robert Auty and Dimitri Obolensky chapter by John Keep p 238 Wallace 1911 pp 560 561 Maine Henry 1888 International Law A Series of Lectures Delivered Before the University of Cambridge 1887 1 ed London John Murray p 128 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Sara E Karesh and Mitchell M Hurvitz 2005 Encyclopedia of Judaism Infobase pp 10 11 ISBN 9780816069828 James P Duffy Vincent L Ricci Czars Russia s Rulers for Over One Thousand Years p 324 James R Gibson Why the Russians Sold Alaska Wilson Quarterly 3 3 1979 179 188 Online Simon Sebag Montefiore The Romanovs 1613 1918 2016 pp 392ff This Day in History 13 March 1881 archived from the original on 10 February 2010 retrieved 11 November 2009 a b c Waller Sally 2015 Tsarist and Communist Russia 1855 1964 Oxford Oxford University Press p 23 ISBN 978 0 19 835467 3 Dmitry Andreyevich Count Tolstoy Russian statesman Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 14 May 2018 Hingley Ronald Nihilists Russian Radicals and Revolutionaries in the Reign of Alexander II 1855 81 Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1967 p 79 Alexander II Encyclopaedia Britannica January Insurrection Encyclopaedia Britannica Morfill William 1902 A history of Russia from the birth of Peter the Great to Nicholas II James Pott p 429 Lincoln W Bruce 1977 Nikolai Miliutin an enlightened Russian Bureaucrat p 90 102 New York Oriental Research Partners ISBN 0 89250 133 2 Zyzniewski Stanley J The Russo Polish Crucible of the 1860s A Review of Some Recent Literature The Polish Review 1966 23 46 Online a b c d krotov info www krotov info Archived from the original on 16 May 2012 Retrieved 9 February 2018 a b Haarmann Harald 4 October 2016 Modern Finland Portrait of a Flourishing Society McFarland p 211 ISBN 978 1476625652 Figes Orlando 2010 Crimea The Last Crusade London Allen Lane p 433 ISBN 978 0 7139 9704 0 Norman E Saul Richard D McKinzie Russian American Dialogue on Cultural Relations 1776 1914 p 95 ISBN 0 8262 1097 X 9780826210975 Hugh Ragsdale Imperial Russian Foreign Policy Cambridge University Press 1993 p 227 Frederick Kellogg Purdue University Press 1995 The Road to Romanian Independence p 191 Y Abramov Caucasian Mountaineers Materials For the History of Circassian People Archived 21 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine 1990 Justin McCarthy Death and Exile the Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims 1821 1922 Princeton NJ 1995 a b c King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus Page 94 In a policy memorandum in of 1857 Dmitri Milyutin chief of staff to Bariatinskii summarized the new thinking on dealing with the northwestern highlanders The idea Milyutin argued was not to clear the highlands and coastal areas of Circassians so that these regions could be settled by productive farmers but Rather eliminating the Circassians was to be an end in itself to cleanse the land of hostile elements Tsar Alexander II formally approved the resettlement plan Milyutin who would eventually become minister of war was to see his plans realized in the early 1860s Richmond 2008 p 79 In his memoirs Milutin who proposed deporting Circassians from the mountains as early as 1857 recalls the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population Memoirs of Dmitry Milyutin the plan of action decided upon for 1860 was to cleanse ochistit the mountain zone of its indigenous population as quoted in W Richmond The Northwest Caucasus Past Present and Future Routledge 2008 page needed Kazemzadeh 1974 King Charles The Ghost of Freedom A History of the Caucasus p 95 One after another entire Circassian tribal groups were dispersed resettled or killed en masse Verhoeven Claudia 2009 The odd man Karakozov Imperial Russia modernity and the birth of terrorism Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4652 8 Tarsaidze Alexandre 1970 Katia Wife before God New York Macmillan a b c d e f g h Rowley Alison Summer 2017 Dark Tourism and the Death of Russian Emperor Alexander II 1881 1891 Historian 79 2 229 55 doi 10 1111 hisn 12503 ISSN 0018 2370 S2CID 148924679 Quoted in Larabee Ann 2005 The Dynamite Fiend The Chilling Tale of a Confederate Spy Con Artist and Mass Murderer Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1403967947 p 194 On the place of the emperor Alexander II assassination in St Petersburg the Church of the Savior on Spilled Blood was founded Presidential Library Retrieved 23 November 2022 Harris Richard Mother s recounting of her father s experience Radzinsky Edvard Alexander II The Last Great Czar Freepress 2005 p 413 Robert K Massie Nicholas and Alexandra Dell Publishing Company New York p 16 Radzinsky 2005 p 415 Manaev Georgy 13 March 2021 5 times terrorists FAILED to kill the Russian Emperor Russia Beyond Retrieved 4 April 2022 Massie p 16 Radzinsky 2005 p 419 YLE The statue of the Russian emperor arouses wonder among tourists Why is it still in the middle of Helsinki Venajan keisarin patsas herattaa turisteissa ihmetysta Miksi se on yha keskella Helsinkia in Finnish Heilbronner Hans Alexander III and the Reform Plan of Loris Melikov The Journal of Modern History 33 4 1961 384 97 386 Venturi Franco Roots of Revolution A History of the Populist and Socialist Movements in Nineteenth Century Russia trans by Francis Haskell New York Alfred A Knopf 1960 Heilbronner pp 390 96 Palmer Brian 29 December 2010 What do anarchists want from us Slate com Alexander Church Alexander Church Tampere Tampere a b John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 11 a b c d John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 12 Edvard Radzinsky Alexander II The Last Great Tsar p 67 a b John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 13 Alexander II of Russia Spirit of the Times A Chronicle of the Turf Agriculture Field Sports Literature and the Stage 1835 1861 25 304 11 August 1855 via ProQuest John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 30 Van Der Kiste p 94 John Van der Kiste The Romanovs 1818 1959 p 62 Van Der Kiste John The Romanovs 1818 1959 Sutton Publishing 2004 p 71 Van Der Kiste p 74 Der Kiste p 74 a b Van Der Kiste p 75 Van Der Kiste p 67 Radzinsky Edvard 2005 Alexander II The Last Great Tsar Free Press a division of Simon and Schuster Inc p 300 ISBN 978 0 7432 7332 9 a b c Van Der Kiste p 97 Van Der Kiste pp 97 amp 98 a b Van Der Kiste p 98 Jules Verne Michael Strogoff Ch 2 Pronsky Boris Britton Craig Forty Ninth pp 114 117 130 136 180 182 ISBN 9798201386238 Twain Mark 1869 The Innocents Abroad or the New Pilgrim s Progress ch 37 retrieved 28 April 2011 a b Russian Imperial Army Emperor Alexander II of Russia Archived 18 December 2018 at the Wayback Machine In Russian Kawalerowie i statuty Orderu Orla Bialego 1705 2008 2008 p 289 Ritter Orden Hof und Staatshandbuch der Osterreichisch Ungarischen Monarchie 1878 pp 61 64 retrieved 2 November 2019 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Grossherzogtum Baden 1850 Grossherzogliche Orden p 32 48 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Konigreichs Bayern 1870 Landesamt 1870 p 8 Ferdinand Veldekens 1858 Le livre d or de l ordre de Leopold et de la croix de fer lelong p 212 Jorgen Pedersen 2009 Riddere af Elefantordenen 1559 2009 in Danish Syddansk Universitetsforlag p 468 ISBN 978 87 7674 434 2 Staatshandbucher fur das Herzogtums Sachsen Altenburg 1869 Herzogliche Sachsen Ernestinischer Hausorden p 20 Teulet Alexandre 1863 Liste chronologique des chevaliers de l ordre du Saint Esprit depuis son origine jusqu a son extinction 1578 1830 Chronological List of Knights of the Order of the Holy Spirit from its origin to its extinction 1578 1830 Annuaire bulletin de la Societe de l Histoire de France in French 2 117 Retrieved 24 March 2020 M Wattel B Wattel 2009 Les Grand Croix de la Legion d honneur de 1805 a nos jours Titulaires francais et etrangers Paris Archives amp Culture p 514 ISBN 978 2 35077 135 9 Hof und Staats Handbuch fur das Konigreich Hannover Berenberg 1854 pp 32 61 Kurfurstlich Hessisches Hof und Staatshandbuch 1856 Waisenhaus 1856 p 11 Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Hessen und bei Rhein 1879 Grossherzogliche Orden und Ehrenzeichen pp 10 47 130 刑部芳則 2017 明治時代の勲章外交儀礼 PDF in Japanese 明治聖徳記念学会紀要 p 143 Seccion IV Ordenes del Imperio Almanaque imperial para el ano 1866 in Spanish 1866 p 242 retrieved 29 April 2020 Sovereign Ordonnance of 22 July 1873 Staats und Adress Handbuch des Herzogthums Nassau 1866 Herzogliche Orden p 7 Militaire Willems Orde Romanov Aleksandr II Nikolajevitsj Military William Order Romanov Alexander II Nikolaevich Ministerie van Defensie in Dutch 13 September 1855 Retrieved 12 March 2016 Staat Oldenburg 1873 Hof und Staatshandbuch des Grossherzogtums Oldenburg fur 1872 73 Schulze p 28 Almanacco di corte in Italian 1858 Retrieved 24 April 2019 Braganca Jose Vicente de Estrela Paulo Jorge 2017 Troca de Decoracoes entre os Reis de Portugal e os Imperadores da Russia Exchange of Decorations between the Kings of Portugal and the Emperors of Russia Pro Phalaris in Portuguese 16 10 Retrieved 19 March 2020 a b Koniglich Preussische Ordensliste Preussische Ordens Liste in German Berlin 1 8 923 1877 via hathitrust org Lehmann Gustaf 1913 Die Ritter des Ordens pour le merite 1812 1913 The Knights of the Order of the Pour le Merite in German Vol 2 Berlin Ernst Siegfried Mittler amp Sohn p 499 Cibrario Luigi 1869 Notizia storica del nobilissimo ordine supremo della santissima Annunziata Sunto degli statuti catalogo dei cavalieri in Italian Eredi Botta p 110 Retrieved 4 March 2019 Staatshandbuch fur das Grossherzogtum Sachsen Sachsen Weimar Eisenach 1840 Grossherzogliche Hausorden p 7 Staatshandbuch fur den Freistaat Sachsen 1865 66 Heinrich 1866 p 3 Caballeros existentes en la insignie Orden del Toison de Oro Guia de forasteros en Madrid para el ano de 1835 in Spanish En la Imprenta Nacional 1835 p 73 Sveriges statskalender in Swedish 1877 p 368 Retrieved 6 January 2018 via runeberg org Shaw Wm A 1906 The Knights of England I London p 64 Wurttemberg 1869 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreichs Wurttemberg 1869 pp 30 55 Sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Wallace Donald Mackenzie 1911 Alexander II In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 559 561 Richmond Walter 2008 The Northwest Caucasus past present future London Routledge ISBN 9780415693219 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of Russian history 1613 1917 Crankshaw Edward 2000 The Shadow of the Winter Palace The Drift to Revolution 1825 1917 Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0 306 80940 8 Eklof Ben John Bushnell L Larisa Georgievna Zakharova 1994 Russia s Great Reforms 1855 1881 ISBN 978 0 253 20861 3 Lincoln W Bruce The Romanovs Autocrats of All the Russias 1983 excerpt and text search Lincoln W Bruce The Great Reforms Autocracy Bureaucracy and the Politics of Change in Imperial Russia 1990 Moss Walter G Alexander II and His Times A Narrative History of Russia in the Age of Alexander II Tolstoy and Dostoevsky London Anthem Press 2002 online Archived 12 January 2006 at archive today Mosse W E Alexander II and the Modernization of Russia 1958 online Pereira N G O Tsar Emancipator Alexander II of Russia 1818 1881 Newtonville Mass Oriental Research Partners 1983 Polunow Alexander 2005 Russia in the Nineteenth Century Autocracy Reform And Social Change 1814 1914 M E Sharpe Incorporated ISBN 978 0 7656 0672 3 Radzinsky Edvard Alexander II The Last Great Tsar New York The Free Press 2005 Zakharova Larissa 1910 Alexander II Portrait of an Autocrat and His Times ISBN 978 0 8133 1491 4 Watts Carl Peter Alexander II s Reforms Causes and Consequences History Review 1998 6 15 OnlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander II of Russia Wikiquote has quotations related to Alexander II of Russia Wikisource has original works by or about Alexander II of Russia Alexander II Obituary Notice Monday March 14 1881 Eminent Persons Biographies reprinted from the Times Vol II 1876 1881 London Macmillan and Co 1893 pp 268 291 hdl 2027 osu 32435022453492 The Emperor Alexander II Photos with dates The Assassination of Tsar Alexander II from In Our Time BBC Radio 4 Alexander II the Liberator Russian speaking forum Romanovs Romanovs The seventh film Nicholas I Alexander II on YouTubeAlexander II of RussiaHouse of Holstein Gottorp RomanovCadet branch of the House of OldenburgBorn 29 April 1818 Died 13 March 1881Regnal titlesPreceded byNicholas I Emperor of RussiaGrand Duke of Finland1855 1881 Succeeded byAlexander IIIKing of Poland1855 1864 VacantAnnexation by Russia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander II of Russia amp oldid 1146921073, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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