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Serfdom in Russia

The term serf, in the sense of an unfree peasant of tsarist Russia, is the usual English-language translation of krepostnoy krest'yanin (крепостной крестьянин) which meant an unfree person who, unlike a slave, historically could be sold only together with the land to which they were "attached". However, this stopped being a requirement by the 19th century, and serfs were practically indistinguishable from slaves. Contemporary legal documents, such as Russkaya Pravda (12th century onwards), distinguished several degrees of feudal dependency of peasants. While another form of slavery in Russia, kholopstvo, was ended by Peter I in 1723,[1] the serfdom (krepostnoe pravo) was abolished only by Alexander II's emancipation reform of 1861.

A Peasant Leaving His Landlord on Yuriev Day, painting by Sergei V. Ivanov

Serfdom became the dominant form of relation between Russian peasants and nobility in the 17th century. Serfdom most commonly existed in the central and southern areas of the Tsardom of Russia and, from 1721, of the subsequent Russian Empire. Serfdom in Little Russia (parts of today's central Ukraine), and other Cossack lands, in the Urals and in Siberia generally occurred rarely until, during the reign of Catherine the Great (r. 1762–1796), it spread to Ukraine[citation needed]; noblemen began to send their serfs into Cossack lands in an attempt to harvest their extensive untapped natural resources.

Only the Russian state and Russian noblemen had the legal right to own serfs, but in practice commercial firms sold Russian serfs as slaves – not only within Russia but even abroad (especially into Persia and the Ottoman Empire) as "students or servants".[citation needed] Those "students and servants" were in fact owned by rich people, sometimes even by rich serfs, who were not noblemen. Emperor Nicholas I banned the trade of African slaves in 1842, though there were almost no Russians who participated in it, but Russian serfs were still sold and bought.[2][3]

Emperor Alexander I (r. 1801–1825) wanted to reform the system but moved cautiously, liberating serfs in Estonia (1816), Livonia (1816), and Courland (1817) only. New laws allowed all classes (except the serfs) to own land, a privilege previously confined to the nobility.[4] Emperor Alexander II abolished serfdom in the emancipation reform of 1861, a few years later than Austria and other German states. Scholars have proposed multiple overlapping reasons to account for the abolition, including fear of a large-scale revolt by the serfs, the government's financial needs, changing cultural sensibilities, and the military's need for soldiers.[5]

Terminology Edit

The term muzhik, or moujik (Russian: мужи́к, IPA: [mʊˈʐɨk]) means "Russian peasant" when it is used in English.[6][clarification needed] This word was borrowed from Russian into Western languages through translations of 19th-century Russian literature, describing Russian rural life of those times, and where the word muzhik was used to mean the most common rural dweller – a peasant – but this was only a narrow contextual meaning.[7]

History Edit

Origins Edit

The origins of serfdom in Russia (крепостничество, krepostnichestvo) may be traced to the 12th century, when the exploitation of the so-called zakups on arable lands (ролейные (пашенные) закупы, roleyniye (pashenniye) zakupy) and corvée smerds (Russian term for corvée is барщина, barschina) was the closest to what is now known as serfdom. According to the Russkaya Pravda, a princely smerd had limited property and personal rights and his escheat was given to the prince.

From the 13th century to the 15th century Edit

From the 13th century to the 15th century, feudal dependency applied to a significant number of peasants, but serfdom as we know it was still not a widespread phenomenon. In the mid-15th century the right of certain categories of peasants in some votchinas to leave their master was limited to a period of one week before and after Yuri's Day (November 26). The Sudebnik of 1497 officially confirmed this time limit as universal for everybody and also established the amount of the "break-away" fee called pozhiloye (пожилое). The legal code of Ivan III of Russia, Sudebnik (1497), strengthened the dependency of peasants, statewide, and restricted their mobility. The Russians persistently battled against the successor states of the Golden Horde, chiefly the Khanate of Crimea. Annually the Russian population of the borderland suffered from Tatar invasions and slave raids and tens of thousands of noblemen protected the southern borderland (a heavy burden for the state), which slowed its social and economic development and expanded the taxation of peasantry.

Transition to full serfdom Edit

The Sudebnik of 1550 increased the amount of pozhiloye and introduced an additional tax called za povoz (за повоз, or transportation fee), in case a peasant refused to bring the harvest from the fields to his master. A temporary (Заповедные лета, or forbidden years) and later an open-ended prohibition for peasants to leave their masters was introduced by the ukase of 1597 under the reign of Boris Godunov, which took away the peasants' right to free movement around Yuri's Day, binding the vast majority of the Russian peasantry in full serfdom. These also defined the so-called fixed years (Урочные лета, urochniye leta), or the 5-year time frame for search of the runaway peasants. In 1607, a new ukase defined sanctions for hiding and keeping the runaways: the fine had to be paid to the state and pozhiloye – to the previous owner of the peasant.

The Sobornoye Ulozhenie (Соборное уложение, "Code of Law") of 1649 gave serfs to estates, and in 1658, flight was made a criminal offense. Russian landowners eventually gained almost unlimited ownership over Russian serfs.[8] The landowner could transfer the serf without land to another landowner while keeping the serf's personal property and family; however, the landowner had no right to kill the serf.[9] About four-fifths of Russian peasants were serfs according to the censuses of 1678 and 1719; free peasants remained only in the north and north-east of the country.[10]

Most of the dvoryane (nobles) were content with the long time frame for search of the runaway peasants. The major landowners of the country, however, together with the dvoryane of the south, were interested in a short-term persecution due to the fact that many runaways would usually flee to the southern parts of Russia. During the first half of the 17th century the dvoryane sent their collective petitions (челобитные, chelobitniye) to the authorities, asking for the extension of the "fixed years". In 1642, the Russian government established a 10-year limit for search of the runaways and 15-year limit for search for peasants taken away by their new owners.

The Sobornoye Ulozhenie introduced an open-ended search for those on the run, meaning that all of the peasants who had fled from their masters after the census of 1626 or 1646–1647 had to be returned. The government would still introduce new time frames and grounds for search of the runaways after 1649, which applied to the peasants who had fled to the outlying districts of the country, such as regions along the border abatises called zasechniye linii (засечные линии) (ukases of 1653 and 1656), Siberia (ukases of 1671, 1683 and 1700), Don (1698) etc. The dvoryane constantly demanded that the search for the runaways be sponsored by the government. The legislation of the second half of the 17th century paid much attention to the means of punishment of the runaways.

Serfdom was hardly efficient; serfs and nobles had little incentive to improve the land. However, it was politically effective. Nobles rarely challenged the tsar for fear of provoking a peasant uprising. Serfs were often given lifelong tenancy on their plots, so they tended to be conservative as well. The serfs took little part in uprisings against the empire as a whole; it was the Cossacks and nomads who rebelled initially and recruited serfs into rebel armies. But many landowners died during serf uprisings against them. The revolutions of 1905 and 1917 happened after serfdom's abolition.

Rebellions Edit

 
Vengeance of Serfs. Engraving by Charles Michel Geoffroy, 1845

There were numerous rebellions against this bondage, most often in conjunction with Cossack uprisings, such as the uprisings of Ivan Bolotnikov (1606–1607), Stenka Razin (1667–1671), Kondraty Bulavin (1707–1709) and Yemelyan Pugachev (1773–1775). While the Cossack uprisings benefited from disturbances among the peasants, and they in turn received an impetus from Cossack rebellion, none of the Cossack movements were directed against the institution of serfdom itself. Instead, peasants in Cossack-dominated areas became Cossacks during uprisings, thus escaping from the peasantry rather than directly organizing peasants against the institution. Rich Cossacks owned serfs themselves. Between the end of Pugachev's Rebellion and the beginning of the 19th century, there were hundreds of outbreaks across Russia, and there was never a time when the peasantry was completely quiescent.

Slaves and serfs Edit

 
Punishment with a knout

As a whole, serfdom both came and remained in Russia much later than in other European countries. Slavery remained a legally recognized institution in Russia until 1723, when Peter the Great abolished slavery and converted the slaves into serfs. This was relevant more to household slaves because Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier in 1679.[11][12]

Formal conversion to serf status and the later ban on the sale of serfs without land did not stop the trade in household slaves; this trade merely changed its name. The private owners of the serfs regarded the law as a mere formality. Instead of "sale of a peasant" the papers would advertise "servant for hire" or similar.

By the eighteenth century, the practice of selling serfs without land had become commonplace. Owners had absolute control over their serfs' lives, and could buy, sell and trade them at will, giving them as much power over serfs as Americans had over chattel slaves, though owners did not always choose to exercise their powers over serfs to the fullest extent.[13]

The official estimate is that 23 million Russians were privately owned, 18.3 million were in state ownership and another 900,000 serfs were under the Tsar's patronage (udelnye krestiane) before the Great Emancipation of 1861.[14]

One particular source of indignation in Europe was Kolokol published in London, England (1857–65) and Geneva (1865–67). It collected many cases of horrendous physical, emotional and sexual abuse of the serfs by the landowners.

Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Edit

Peter III created two measures in 1762 that influenced the abolition of serfdom. He ended mandatory military service for nobles with the abolition of compulsory noble state service. This provided a rationale to end serfdom. Second, was the secularization of the church estates, which transferred its peasants and land to state jurisdiction.[15][16] In 1775 measures were taken by Catherine II to prosecute estate owners for the cruel treatment of serfs. These measures were strengthened in 1817 and the late 1820s.[17] There were even laws that required estate owners to help serfs in time of famine, which included grain to be kept in reserve. These policies failed to aid famines in the early nineteenth century due to estate owner negligence.[18]

 
The Bargain by Nikolai Nevrev (Sale of a serf girl)

Tsar Alexander I and his advisors quietly discussed the options at length. Obstacles included the failure of abolition in Austria and the political reaction against the French Revolution. Cautiously, he freed peasants from Estonia and Latvia and extended the right to own land to most classes of subjects, including state-owned peasants, in 1801 and created a new social category of "free agriculturalist", for peasants voluntarily emancipated by their masters, in 1803. The great majority of serfs were not affected.[4]

The Russian state also continued to support serfdom due to military conscription. The conscripted serfs dramatically increased the size of the Russian military during the war with Napoleon.[19] With a larger military Russia achieved victory in the Napoleonic Wars and Russo-Persian Wars; this did not change the disparity between Russia and Western Europe, who were experiencing agricultural and industrial revolutions. Compared to Western Europe it was clear that Russia was at an economic disadvantage. European philosophers during the Age of Enlightenment criticized serfdom and compared it to medieval labor practices which were almost non-existent in the rest of the continent. Most Russian nobles were not interested in change toward western labor practices that Catherine the Great proposed. Instead they preferred to mortgage serfs for profit. Napoleon did not touch serfdom in Russia. In 1820, 20% of all serfs were mortgaged to state credit institutions by their owners. This was increased to 66% in 1859.[20]

Bourgeois were allowed to own serfs 1721–62 and 1798–1816; this was to encourage industrialisation. In 1804, 48% of Russian factory workers were serfs, 52% in 1825.[21] Landless serfs rose from 4.14% in 1835 to 6.79% in 1858. They received no land in the emancipation. Landlords deliberately increased the number of domestic serfs when they anticipated serfdom's demise. In 1798, Ukrainian landlords were banned from selling serfs apart from land. In 1841, landless nobles were banned also.[22]

Increasingly in the 18th century Russian peasants were escaping from Russia to the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (where once harsh serfdom conditions were improving) in significant enough numbers to become a major concern for the Russian Government and sufficient to play a role in its decision to partition the Commonwealth (one of the reasons Catherine II gave for the partition of Poland was the fact that thousands of peasants escaped from Russia to Poland to seek a better fate".) Until the partitions solved this problem, Russian armies raided territories of the Commonwealth, officially to recover the escapees, but in fact kidnapping many locals.[23][24][25]

Abolition Edit

 
A 1907 painting by Boris Kustodiev depicting Russian serfs listening to the proclamation of the Emancipation Manifesto in 1861

In 1816, 1817, and 1819, serfdom was abolished in Estland, Courland, and Livonia respectively.[26] However all the land stayed in noble hands and labor rent lasted till 1868. It was replaced with landless laborers and sharecropping (halbkörner). Landless workers had to ask permission to leave an estate.

The nobility was too weak to oppose the emancipation of the serfs. In 1820, a fifth of the serfs were mortgaged, half by 1842.[27] By 1859, a third of noble's estates and two thirds of their serfs were mortgaged to noble banks or the state.[28] The nobility was also weakened by the scattering of their estates, lack of primogeniture, and the high turnover and mobility from estate to estate.

The Tsar's aunt Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna played a powerful role backstage in the years 1855 to 1861. Using her close relationship with her nephew Alexander II, she supported and guided his desire for emancipation, and helped mobilize the support of key advisors.[29]

In 1861, Alexander II freed all serfs[clarification needed] in a major agrarian reform, stimulated in part by his view that "it is better to liberate the peasants from above" than to wait until they won their freedom by risings "from below".

Serfdom was abolished in 1861, but its abolition was achieved on terms not always favorable to the peasants and served to increase revolutionary pressures. Between 1864 and 1871 serfdom was abolished in Georgia. In Kalmykia serfdom was abolished only in 1892.[30]

The serfs had to work for the landlord as usual for two years. The nobles kept nearly all the meadows and forests, had their debts paid by the state while the ex serfs paid 34% over the market price for the shrunken plots they kept. This figure was 90% in the northern regions, 20% in the black earth region but zero in the Polish provinces. In 1857, 6.79% of serfs were domestic, landless servants who stayed landless after 1861.[citation needed] Only Polish and Romanian domestic serfs got land. 90% of the serfs who got larger plots were in Congress Poland where the Tsar wanted to weaken the szlachta. The rest were in the barren north and in Astrakhan. In the whole Empire, peasant land declined 4.1%, 13.3% outside the ex Polish zone and 23.3% in the 16 black earth provinces.[citation needed] These redemption payments were not abolished till January 1, 1907.

Impact Edit

A 2018 study in the American Economic Review found "substantial increases in agricultural productivity, industrial output, and peasants' nutrition in Imperial Russia as a result of the abolition of serfdom in 1861".[31]

Serf society Edit

Labour and obligations Edit

In Russia, the terms barshchina (барщина) or boyarshchina (боярщина), refer to the obligatory work that the serfs performed for the landowner on his portion of the land (the other part of the land, usually of a poorer quality, the peasants could use for themselves). Sometimes the terms are loosely translated by the term corvée. While no official government regulation to the extent of barshchina existed, a 1797 ukase by Paul I of Russia described a barshchina of three days a week as normal and sufficient for the landowner's needs.

In the black earth region, 70% to 77% of the serfs performed barshchina; the rest paid levies (obrok).[32]

Marriage and family life Edit

 
Group of Russian peasant women

The Russian Orthodox Church had many rules regarding marriage that were strictly observed by the population. For example, marriage was not allowed to take place during times of fasting, the eve or day of a holiday, during the entire week of Easter, or for two weeks after Christmas. Before the abolition of serfdom in 1861, marriage was strictly prohibited on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays. Because of these firm rules most marriages occurred in the months of January, February, October, and November. After the emancipation the most popular marrying months were July, October, and November.[33]

Imperial laws were very particular with the age in which serfs could marry. The minimum age to marry was 13 years old for women, and 15 for men. After 1830 the female and male ages were raised to 16 and 18 respectively. To marry over the age of 60, the serf had to receive permission, but marriage over the age of 80 was forbidden. The Church also did not approve marriages with large age differences.[34]

Landowners were interested in keeping all of their serfs and not losing workers to marriages on other estates. Prior to 1812 serfs were not allowed to marry serfs from other estates. After 1812 the rules relaxed slightly, but in order for a family to give their daughter to a husband in another estate they had to apply and present information to their landowner ahead of time. If a serf wanted to marry a widow, then emancipation and death certificates were to be handed over and investigated for authenticity by their owner before a marriage could take place.[35]

Before and after the abolition of serfdom, Russian peasant families were patriarchal. Marriage was important for families economically and socially. Parents were in charge of finding suitable spouses for their children in order to help the family. The bride's parents were concerned with the social and material benefits they would gain in the alliance between the two families. Some also took into consideration their daughter's future quality of life and how much work would be required of her. The groom's parents would be concerned about economical factors such as the size of the dowry as well as the bride's decency, modesty, obedience, ability to do work, and family background. Upon marriage, the bride came to live with her new husband and his family, so she needed to be ready to assimilate and work hard.[36]

Serfs looked highly upon early marriage because of increased parental control. At a younger age there is less chance of the individual falling in love with someone other than whom his or her parents chose. There is also increased assurance of chastity, which was more important for women than men. The average age of marriage for women was around 19 years old.[37][38]

During serfdom, when the head of the house was being disobeyed by their children they could have the master or landowner step in. After the emancipation of serfs in 1861, the household patriarch lost some of his power, and could no longer receive the landowner's help. The younger generations now had the freedom to work off their estates; some even went to work in factories. These younger peasants had access to newspapers and books, which introduced them to more radical ways of thinking. The ability to work outside of the household gave the younger peasants independence as well as a wage to do with what they wanted. Agricultural and domestic jobs were a group effort, so the wage went to the family. The children who worked industrial jobs gave their earnings to their family as well, but some used it as a way to gain a say in their own marriages. In this case some families allowed their sons to marry whom they chose as long as the family was in similar economic standing as their own. No matter what, parental approval was required in order to make a marriage legal.[39]

Distribution of property and duties between the spouses Edit

According to a study completed in the late 1890s by the ethnographer Olga Petrovna Semyonova-Tian-Shanskaia, husband and wife had different duties in the household. In regards to ownership, the husband assumed the property plus any funds required to make additions to the property. Additions included fence, barns, and wagons. While primary purchasing power belonged to the husband, the wife was expected to buy certain items. She was also expected to buy household items such as bowls, plates, pots, barrels and various utensils. Wives were also required to purchase cloth and make clothes for the family by spinning and using a dontse. Footwear was the husband's responsibility - he made bast shoes and felt boots for the family. As for crops, it was expected for men to sow and women to harvest. A common crop harvested by serfs in the Black Earth Region was flax. Husbands owned most of the livestock, such as pigs and horses. Cows were the property of the husband, but were usually in the wife's possession. Chickens were considered to be the wife's property, while sheep was common property for the family. The exception was when the wife owned sheep through a dowry (sobinki).[40]

Material culture Edit

Typical Russian serf clothing included the zipun [ru] (Russian: зипун, a collarless kaftan) and the smock.[41]

A 19th-century report noted: "Every Russian peasant, male and female, wears cotton clothes. The men wear printed shirts and trousers, and the women are dressed from head to foot in printed cotton also."[42]

The extent of serfdom in Russia Edit

 
Kateryna, painting of a Ukrainian serf girl by Taras Shevchenko, who was himself born a serf

By the mid-19th century, peasants composed a majority of the population, and according to the census of 1857, the number of private serfs was 23.1 million out of 62.5 million citizens of the Russian empire, 37.7% of the population.

The exact numbers, according to official data, were: entire population 60909309; peasantry of all classes 49486665; state peasants 23138191; peasants on the lands of proprietors 23022390; peasants of the appanages and other departments 3326084.[43] State peasants were considered personally free, but their freedom of movement was restricted.[44]

% serfs on estates[45]
Estate of 1700 1861
>500 serfs 26 42
100–500 33 38
1–100 41 20
% serf owners with <100 serfs[46]
1777 1834 1858
83 84 78

Russian serfdom depended entirely on the traditional and extensive technology of the peasantry. Yields remained low and stationary throughout most of the 19th century. Any increase in income drawn from agriculture was largely through increasing land area and extensive grain raising by means of exploitation of the peasant labor, that is, by burdening the peasant household still further.

Serfs owned by European Russian landlords[47]
No. of serfs in 1777 (%) in 1859 (%)
>1000 1.1
501–1000 2
101–500 16 (>100) 18
21–100 25 35.1
0–20 59 43.8

% peasants enserfed in each province, 1860

>55%: Kaluga Kyiv Kostroma Kutais Minsk Mogilev Nizhny Novgorod Podolia Ryazan Smolensk Tula Vitebsk Vladimir Volhynia Yaroslavl

36–55%: Chernigov Grodno Kovno Kursk Moscow Novgorod Oryol Penza Poltava Pskov Saratov Simbirsk Tambov Tver Vilna

16–35%: Don Ekaterinoslav Kharkov Kherson Kuban Perm Tiflis Vologda Voronezh

In the Central Black Earth Region 70–77% of the serfs performed labour services (barshchina), the rest paid rent (obrok). Owing to the high fertility, 70% of Russian cereal production in the 1850s was here.[32] In the seven central provinces, 1860, 67.7% of the serfs were on obrok.

In literature, Russian serfdom provided both a backdrop and a source of dramatic tension for the works of prominent authors like Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky. Characters drawn from the serf population were portrayed with profound emotional depth, their stories shedding light on the harsh realities of serfdom. These narratives served to amplify calls for social reform and underscored the deep inequalities of the Russian societal structure.

The influence of serfdom was also notable in Russian music and art. Folk songs and dances, often performed by serfs, contributed significantly to Russia's unique cultural tradition. At the same time, works of art often depicted serfs and their lives, either romanticizing their existence or highlighting the cruelty of the serfdom system.



See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Hellie, Richard (1982). Slavery in Russia, 1450-1725. University Of Chicago Press. p. 85. ISBN 9780226326474.
  2. ^ "Serfdom".
  3. ^ «Наиболее сильный запрос был на красивых девушек» Как в России торговали соотечественниками (The greatest demand was for pretty girls: How they traded compatriots in Russia).//Commersant 2017] - "20 мая 1842 года в России был опубликован указ «О предании суду и наказании Российских подданных, которые будут изобличены в каком-либо участии в торге неграми»."
  4. ^ a b Susan P. McCaffray, "Confronting Serfdom in the Age of Revolution: Projects for Serf Reform in the Time of Alexander I", Russian Review (2005) 64#1 pp 1-21 in JSTOR
  5. ^ Evsey D. Domar and Mark J. Machina, "On the Profitability of Russian Serfdom", (1984) p 919.
  6. ^ The World Book Dictionary. World Book .com. 1 January 2003. ISBN 9780716602996. Retrieved 18 December 2016 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ The Durham University journal – Volumes 45–46 – Page 237
    • Snippet: "Thus a Russian–English dictionary will give the Russian word muzhik as 'peasant'. Yet the English word 'peasant' brings to mind a being far different from the Russian muzhik who, unlike his Western counterpart, is presented to us in literature ..."
  8. ^ "Rural Population Classes". Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  9. ^ "Language Centre – Language Centre – Home". Retrieved 18 December 2016.
  10. ^ Водарский, Ярослав Евгеньевич (1973). Население России за 400 лет (XVI-начало XX вв). Moscow: Просвещение. p. 32.
  11. ^ Historical survey > Ways of ending slavery
  12. ^ Miller, David B. (1 January 1984). "Review of Slavery in Russia, 1450-1725". Speculum. 59 (3): 653–655. doi:10.2307/2846321. JSTOR 2846321.
  13. ^ Kolchin, Peter (1987). Unfree Labor: American Slavery and Russian Serfdom. Harvard University Press. pp. 41–42. ISBN 0674920988.
  14. ^ Marie, Jean-Jacques (1997). "Le règne réformateur d'Alexandre II". Cairn. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
  15. ^ David Moon. "The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia". Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Page 37
  16. ^ Gregory Freeze. "Russia: A History". New York: Oxford University Press, 2002
  17. ^ David Moon. "The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia". Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Page 39
  18. ^ David Moon. "The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia". Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Page 40
  19. ^ David Moon. "The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia". Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Page 33
  20. ^ David Moon. "The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia". Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Pages 22-23
  21. ^ Geroid Robinson, Rural Russia under the old regime, page 59
  22. ^ Geroid Tanquary Robinson, Rural Russia under the old régime: a history of the landlord-peasant world, page 37
  23. ^ Czajewski, Jerzy (October 2004). [Russian population exodus into the Rzeczpospolita]. Promemoria (6/15). ISSN 1509-9091. Archived from the original on 3 January 2005.
  24. ^ Kimla, Piotr (2011). "Przywary niewolników pańszczyźnianych w XVIII-wiecznej Rzeczypospolitej w relacji Huberta Vautrina". Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie-Skłodowska. Sectio G. Ius (in Polish). 58 (1): 87–97. ISSN 0458-4317.
  25. ^ Wagner, W.J. (1992). "May 3, 1791, and the Polish constitutional tradition". The Polish Review. 36 (4): 383–395. JSTOR 25778591.
  26. ^ David Moon. The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia. Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2001. Page xiv
  27. ^ Geoffrey Hosking, Russia: People and Empire, page 164
  28. ^ Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy, p. 48
  29. ^ Shane O'Rourke, "The Mother Benefactress and the Sacred Battalion: Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna, the Editing Commission, and the Emancipation of the Serfs", Russian Review (2011) 70#4 pp. 584–607, online
  30. ^ NUPI – Centre for Russian Studies 2006-02-16 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ Markevich, Andrei; Zhuravskaya, Ekaterina (2018). "The Economic Effects of the Abolition of Serfdom: Evidence from the Russian Empire". American Economic Review. 108 (4–5): 1074–1117. doi:10.1257/aer.20160144. ISSN 0002-8282.
  32. ^ a b Richard Pipes, Russia under the old regime, pages 147–8
  33. ^ Alexandre Avdeev, Alain Blum [fr], Irina Troitskaia, Heather Juby, "Peasant Marriage in Nineteenth-Century Russia", Population (English Edition, 2002–), Vol. 59, No. 6 (Nov.–Dec., 2004), (Institut National d'Études Démographiques), 742–43.
  34. ^ Avdeev, Blum, Troitskaia, Juby, "Peasant Marriage", 731–33.
  35. ^ Avdeev, Blum, Troitskaia, Juby, "Peasant Marriage", 726.
  36. ^ Barbara Alpern Engel, "Peasant Morality and Pre-Marital Relations in Late 19th Century Russia", Journal of Social History, Vol. 23, No. 4 (Summer, 1990), (Oxford University Press), 695–98.
  37. ^ Avdeev, Blum, Troitskaia, Juby, "Peasant Marriage", 733.
  38. ^ Engel, "Peasant Pre-Marital Relations", 698–99.
  39. ^ Engel, "Peasant Pre-Marital Relations", 701–05, 708.
  40. ^ Olga Semyonova-Tian-Shanskaia, Edited by: David L. Ransel. Village Life in Late Tsarist Russia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993. Pages 124-127.
  41. ^ Vionnet, Louis Joseph (19 January 2013) [1899]. North, Jonathan (ed.). With Napoleon's Guard in Russia: The Memoirs of Major Vionnet, 1812. Translated by North, Jonathan. Casemate Publishers (published 2013). ISBN 9781783408986. Retrieved 14 August 2022. The peasants, or, more precisely, the serfs, wear a costume which very much resembles that worn by the Poles or, perhaps more accurately, that worn by Asians. It consists of a long and rather shapeless smock.
  42. ^ Morley, Henry (1866). Sketches of Russian Life Before and During the Emancipation of the Serfs. London: Chapman and Hall. p. 218. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
  43. ^ Donald Mackenzie Wallace (1905). . Russia. Archived from the original on 2009-07-05.
  44. ^ Assigned, Church and Crown Peasants
  45. ^ David Moon, The Russian Peasant 1600–1930, pages 204–205.
  46. ^ Theda Skocpol, States and Social Revolutions, page 87.
  47. ^ Richard Pipes, Russia under the old regime, page 178.

Further reading Edit

  • Blum, Jerome. Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century (1961)
  • Blum, Jerome. The End of the Old Order in Rural Europe (1978) influential comparative history
  • Crisp, Olga. "The state peasants under Nicholas I." Slavonic and East European Review 37.89 (1959): 387-412 online.
  • Dennison, Tracy. The institutional framework of Russian serfdom (Cambridge University Press, 2011) excerpt
  • Domar, Evsey, and Mark Machina. "On the Profitability of Russian Serfdom". Journal of Economic History (1984) 44#4 pp. 919–955. JSTOR 2122113.
  • Emmons, Terence. The Russian Landed Gentry and the Peasant Emancipation of 1861 (Cambridge University Press, 1968)
  • Gorshkov, Boris B. "Serfs on the Move: Peasant Seasonal Migration in Pre-Reform Russia, 1800–61". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History (Fall 2000) 627–56
  • Gorshkov, Boris B. "Serfs, Emancipation of" in Encyclopedia of Europe, 1789–1914. John Merriman and Jay Winter, eds. in chief. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2006
  • Hellie, Richard, Slavery in Russia, 1450–1725 (1984)
  • Hoch, Steven. "Did Russia's Emancipated Serfs Really Pay Too Much for Too Little Land? Statistical Anomalies and Long-Tailed Distributions". Slavic Review (2004) 63#2 pp. 247–274.
  • Hoch, Steven. Serfdom and Social Control in Russia: Petrovskoe, a Village in Tambov (University of Chicago Press, 1986)
  • Hoch, Steven and Wilson R. Augustine. "The Tax Censuses and the Decline of the Serf Population in Imperial Russia, 1833–1858". Slavic Review (1979) 38#3 pp: 403-425.
  • Kolchin, Peter. Unfree Labor: American Slavery and Russian Serfdom (1987).
  • Lust, Kersti. "Kiselev's Reforms of State Peasants: The Baltic Perspective", Journal of Baltic Studies (2008) 39#1 pp 57–71.
  • Lust, Kersti. "The Impact of the Baltic Emancipation Reforms on Peasant-Landlord Relations: A Historiographical Survey", Journal of Baltic Studies (2013) 44#1 pp. 1–18.
  • McCaffray, Susan P. "Confronting Serfdom in the Age of Revolution: Projects for Serf Reform in the Time of Alexander I", Russian Review (2005) 64#1 pp 1–21 JSTOR 3664324.
  • Mironov, Boris. “When and Why was the Russian Peasantry Emancipated?” in Serfdom and Slavery: Studies in Legal Bondage Ed. M.L. Bush. (London: Longman, 1996) pp. 323–347.
  • Moon, David. Abolition of Serfdom in Russia: 1762–1907 (2002)
  • Moon, David. The Russian Peasantry 1600–1930: The World the Peasants Made (London: Longman, 1999)
  • Nafziger, Steven. 'Serfdom, emancipation, and economic development in Tsarist Russia" (Working paper, Williams College, MA, 2012). online
  • Rudolph, Richard L. "Agricultural structure and proto-industrialization in Russia: economic development with unfree labor". Journal of economic history (1985) 45#1 pp: 47–69. JSTOR 2122007.
  • Stanziani, Alessandro. "Revisiting Russian Serfdom: Bonded Peasants and Market Dynamics, 1600s–1800s". International Labor and Working-Class History (2010) 78#1 pp: 12-27.
  • Viaene, Vincent, Wayne Thorpe, and H. G. Koenigsberger. "Reassessing Russian Serfdom". European History Quarterly (1996) 26 pp. 483–526.
  • Wallace, Donald Mackenzie. Russia (1878) Chapter XXVIII The Serfs;
  • Wirtschafter, Elise Kimerling. Russia's Age of Serfdom 1649–1861 (2008).

Primary sources Edit

  • Gorshkov, Boris B., ed. A Life Under Russian Serfdom: Memoirs of Savva Dmitrievich Purlevskii, 1800–68. Budapest & New York, 2005
  • Nikitenko, Aleksandr. Up from Serfdom: My Childhood and Youth in Russia, 1804–1824 (2001)

External links Edit

  • Saltychikha (1730–1801): Russian serf-owner
  • The Causes of Slavery or Serfdom: A Hypothesis
  • Russian serfdom, The Argus, Friday 30 July 1858, p. 7

serfdom, russia, term, serf, sense, unfree, peasant, tsarist, russia, usual, english, language, translation, krepostnoy, krest, yanin, крепостной, крестьянин, which, meant, unfree, person, unlike, slave, historically, could, sold, only, together, with, land, w. The term serf in the sense of an unfree peasant of tsarist Russia is the usual English language translation of krepostnoy krest yanin krepostnoj krestyanin which meant an unfree person who unlike a slave historically could be sold only together with the land to which they were attached However this stopped being a requirement by the 19th century and serfs were practically indistinguishable from slaves Contemporary legal documents such as Russkaya Pravda 12th century onwards distinguished several degrees of feudal dependency of peasants While another form of slavery in Russia kholopstvo was ended by Peter I in 1723 1 the serfdom krepostnoe pravo was abolished only by Alexander II s emancipation reform of 1861 A Peasant Leaving His Landlord on Yuriev Day painting by Sergei V IvanovSerfdom became the dominant form of relation between Russian peasants and nobility in the 17th century Serfdom most commonly existed in the central and southern areas of the Tsardom of Russia and from 1721 of the subsequent Russian Empire Serfdom in Little Russia parts of today s central Ukraine and other Cossack lands in the Urals and in Siberia generally occurred rarely until during the reign of Catherine the Great r 1762 1796 it spread to Ukraine citation needed noblemen began to send their serfs into Cossack lands in an attempt to harvest their extensive untapped natural resources Only the Russian state and Russian noblemen had the legal right to own serfs but in practice commercial firms sold Russian serfs as slaves not only within Russia but even abroad especially into Persia and the Ottoman Empire as students or servants citation needed Those students and servants were in fact owned by rich people sometimes even by rich serfs who were not noblemen Emperor Nicholas I banned the trade of African slaves in 1842 though there were almost no Russians who participated in it but Russian serfs were still sold and bought 2 3 Emperor Alexander I r 1801 1825 wanted to reform the system but moved cautiously liberating serfs in Estonia 1816 Livonia 1816 and Courland 1817 only New laws allowed all classes except the serfs to own land a privilege previously confined to the nobility 4 Emperor Alexander II abolished serfdom in the emancipation reform of 1861 a few years later than Austria and other German states Scholars have proposed multiple overlapping reasons to account for the abolition including fear of a large scale revolt by the serfs the government s financial needs changing cultural sensibilities and the military s need for soldiers 5 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 From the 13th century to the 15th century 2 3 Transition to full serfdom 2 3 1 Rebellions 2 3 2 Slaves and serfs 2 4 Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries 2 4 1 Abolition 2 5 Impact 3 Serf society 3 1 Labour and obligations 3 2 Marriage and family life 3 3 Distribution of property and duties between the spouses 3 4 Material culture 4 The extent of serfdom in Russia 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Primary sources 8 External linksTerminology EditThe term muzhik or moujik Russian muzhi k IPA mʊˈʐɨk means Russian peasant when it is used in English 6 clarification needed This word was borrowed from Russian into Western languages through translations of 19th century Russian literature describing Russian rural life of those times and where the word muzhik was used to mean the most common rural dweller a peasant but this was only a narrow contextual meaning 7 History EditOrigins Edit The origins of serfdom in Russia krepostnichestvo krepostnichestvo may be traced to the 12th century when the exploitation of the so called zakups on arable lands rolejnye pashennye zakupy roleyniye pashenniye zakupy and corvee smerds Russian term for corvee is barshina barschina was the closest to what is now known as serfdom According to the Russkaya Pravda a princely smerd had limited property and personal rights and his escheat was given to the prince From the 13th century to the 15th century Edit From the 13th century to the 15th century feudal dependency applied to a significant number of peasants but serfdom as we know it was still not a widespread phenomenon In the mid 15th century the right of certain categories of peasants in some votchinas to leave their master was limited to a period of one week before and after Yuri s Day November 26 The Sudebnik of 1497 officially confirmed this time limit as universal for everybody and also established the amount of the break away fee called pozhiloye pozhiloe The legal code of Ivan III of Russia Sudebnik 1497 strengthened the dependency of peasants statewide and restricted their mobility The Russians persistently battled against the successor states of the Golden Horde chiefly the Khanate of Crimea Annually the Russian population of the borderland suffered from Tatar invasions and slave raids and tens of thousands of noblemen protected the southern borderland a heavy burden for the state which slowed its social and economic development and expanded the taxation of peasantry Transition to full serfdom Edit The Sudebnik of 1550 increased the amount of pozhiloye and introduced an additional tax called za povoz za povoz or transportation fee in case a peasant refused to bring the harvest from the fields to his master A temporary Zapovednye leta or forbidden years and later an open ended prohibition for peasants to leave their masters was introduced by the ukase of 1597 under the reign of Boris Godunov which took away the peasants right to free movement around Yuri s Day binding the vast majority of the Russian peasantry in full serfdom These also defined the so called fixed years Urochnye leta urochniye leta or the 5 year time frame for search of the runaway peasants In 1607 a new ukase defined sanctions for hiding and keeping the runaways the fine had to be paid to the state and pozhiloye to the previous owner of the peasant The Sobornoye Ulozhenie Sobornoe ulozhenie Code of Law of 1649 gave serfs to estates and in 1658 flight was made a criminal offense Russian landowners eventually gained almost unlimited ownership over Russian serfs 8 The landowner could transfer the serf without land to another landowner while keeping the serf s personal property and family however the landowner had no right to kill the serf 9 About four fifths of Russian peasants were serfs according to the censuses of 1678 and 1719 free peasants remained only in the north and north east of the country 10 Most of the dvoryane nobles were content with the long time frame for search of the runaway peasants The major landowners of the country however together with the dvoryane of the south were interested in a short term persecution due to the fact that many runaways would usually flee to the southern parts of Russia During the first half of the 17th century the dvoryane sent their collective petitions chelobitnye chelobitniye to the authorities asking for the extension of the fixed years In 1642 the Russian government established a 10 year limit for search of the runaways and 15 year limit for search for peasants taken away by their new owners The Sobornoye Ulozhenie introduced an open ended search for those on the run meaning that all of the peasants who had fled from their masters after the census of 1626 or 1646 1647 had to be returned The government would still introduce new time frames and grounds for search of the runaways after 1649 which applied to the peasants who had fled to the outlying districts of the country such as regions along the border abatises called zasechniye linii zasechnye linii ukases of 1653 and 1656 Siberia ukases of 1671 1683 and 1700 Don 1698 etc The dvoryane constantly demanded that the search for the runaways be sponsored by the government The legislation of the second half of the 17th century paid much attention to the means of punishment of the runaways Serfdom was hardly efficient serfs and nobles had little incentive to improve the land However it was politically effective Nobles rarely challenged the tsar for fear of provoking a peasant uprising Serfs were often given lifelong tenancy on their plots so they tended to be conservative as well The serfs took little part in uprisings against the empire as a whole it was the Cossacks and nomads who rebelled initially and recruited serfs into rebel armies But many landowners died during serf uprisings against them The revolutions of 1905 and 1917 happened after serfdom s abolition Rebellions Edit nbsp Vengeance of Serfs Engraving by Charles Michel Geoffroy 1845There were numerous rebellions against this bondage most often in conjunction with Cossack uprisings such as the uprisings of Ivan Bolotnikov 1606 1607 Stenka Razin 1667 1671 Kondraty Bulavin 1707 1709 and Yemelyan Pugachev 1773 1775 While the Cossack uprisings benefited from disturbances among the peasants and they in turn received an impetus from Cossack rebellion none of the Cossack movements were directed against the institution of serfdom itself Instead peasants in Cossack dominated areas became Cossacks during uprisings thus escaping from the peasantry rather than directly organizing peasants against the institution Rich Cossacks owned serfs themselves Between the end of Pugachev s Rebellion and the beginning of the 19th century there were hundreds of outbreaks across Russia and there was never a time when the peasantry was completely quiescent Slaves and serfs Edit See also Slavery in Russia nbsp Punishment with a knoutAs a whole serfdom both came and remained in Russia much later than in other European countries Slavery remained a legally recognized institution in Russia until 1723 when Peter the Great abolished slavery and converted the slaves into serfs This was relevant more to household slaves because Russian agricultural slaves were formally converted into serfs earlier in 1679 11 12 Formal conversion to serf status and the later ban on the sale of serfs without land did not stop the trade in household slaves this trade merely changed its name The private owners of the serfs regarded the law as a mere formality Instead of sale of a peasant the papers would advertise servant for hire or similar By the eighteenth century the practice of selling serfs without land had become commonplace Owners had absolute control over their serfs lives and could buy sell and trade them at will giving them as much power over serfs as Americans had over chattel slaves though owners did not always choose to exercise their powers over serfs to the fullest extent 13 The official estimate is that 23 million Russians were privately owned 18 3 million were in state ownership and another 900 000 serfs were under the Tsar s patronage udelnye krestiane before the Great Emancipation of 1861 14 One particular source of indignation in Europe was Kolokol published in London England 1857 65 and Geneva 1865 67 It collected many cases of horrendous physical emotional and sexual abuse of the serfs by the landowners Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries Edit Peter III created two measures in 1762 that influenced the abolition of serfdom He ended mandatory military service for nobles with the abolition of compulsory noble state service This provided a rationale to end serfdom Second was the secularization of the church estates which transferred its peasants and land to state jurisdiction 15 16 In 1775 measures were taken by Catherine II to prosecute estate owners for the cruel treatment of serfs These measures were strengthened in 1817 and the late 1820s 17 There were even laws that required estate owners to help serfs in time of famine which included grain to be kept in reserve These policies failed to aid famines in the early nineteenth century due to estate owner negligence 18 nbsp The Bargain by Nikolai Nevrev Sale of a serf girl Tsar Alexander I and his advisors quietly discussed the options at length Obstacles included the failure of abolition in Austria and the political reaction against the French Revolution Cautiously he freed peasants from Estonia and Latvia and extended the right to own land to most classes of subjects including state owned peasants in 1801 and created a new social category of free agriculturalist for peasants voluntarily emancipated by their masters in 1803 The great majority of serfs were not affected 4 The Russian state also continued to support serfdom due to military conscription The conscripted serfs dramatically increased the size of the Russian military during the war with Napoleon 19 With a larger military Russia achieved victory in the Napoleonic Wars and Russo Persian Wars this did not change the disparity between Russia and Western Europe who were experiencing agricultural and industrial revolutions Compared to Western Europe it was clear that Russia was at an economic disadvantage European philosophers during the Age of Enlightenment criticized serfdom and compared it to medieval labor practices which were almost non existent in the rest of the continent Most Russian nobles were not interested in change toward western labor practices that Catherine the Great proposed Instead they preferred to mortgage serfs for profit Napoleon did not touch serfdom in Russia In 1820 20 of all serfs were mortgaged to state credit institutions by their owners This was increased to 66 in 1859 20 Bourgeois were allowed to own serfs 1721 62 and 1798 1816 this was to encourage industrialisation In 1804 48 of Russian factory workers were serfs 52 in 1825 21 Landless serfs rose from 4 14 in 1835 to 6 79 in 1858 They received no land in the emancipation Landlords deliberately increased the number of domestic serfs when they anticipated serfdom s demise In 1798 Ukrainian landlords were banned from selling serfs apart from land In 1841 landless nobles were banned also 22 Increasingly in the 18th century Russian peasants were escaping from Russia to the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth where once harsh serfdom conditions were improving in significant enough numbers to become a major concern for the Russian Government and sufficient to play a role in its decision to partition the Commonwealth one of the reasons Catherine II gave for the partition of Poland was the fact that thousands of peasants escaped from Russia to Poland to seek a better fate Until the partitions solved this problem Russian armies raided territories of the Commonwealth officially to recover the escapees but in fact kidnapping many locals 23 24 25 Abolition Edit Main articles Emancipation reform of 1861 and Abolition of serfdom in Livonia nbsp A 1907 painting by Boris Kustodiev depicting Russian serfs listening to the proclamation of the Emancipation Manifesto in 1861In 1816 1817 and 1819 serfdom was abolished in Estland Courland and Livonia respectively 26 However all the land stayed in noble hands and labor rent lasted till 1868 It was replaced with landless laborers and sharecropping halbkorner Landless workers had to ask permission to leave an estate The nobility was too weak to oppose the emancipation of the serfs In 1820 a fifth of the serfs were mortgaged half by 1842 27 By 1859 a third of noble s estates and two thirds of their serfs were mortgaged to noble banks or the state 28 The nobility was also weakened by the scattering of their estates lack of primogeniture and the high turnover and mobility from estate to estate The Tsar s aunt Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna played a powerful role backstage in the years 1855 to 1861 Using her close relationship with her nephew Alexander II she supported and guided his desire for emancipation and helped mobilize the support of key advisors 29 In 1861 Alexander II freed all serfs clarification needed in a major agrarian reform stimulated in part by his view that it is better to liberate the peasants from above than to wait until they won their freedom by risings from below Serfdom was abolished in 1861 but its abolition was achieved on terms not always favorable to the peasants and served to increase revolutionary pressures Between 1864 and 1871 serfdom was abolished in Georgia In Kalmykia serfdom was abolished only in 1892 30 The serfs had to work for the landlord as usual for two years The nobles kept nearly all the meadows and forests had their debts paid by the state while the ex serfs paid 34 over the market price for the shrunken plots they kept This figure was 90 in the northern regions 20 in the black earth region but zero in the Polish provinces In 1857 6 79 of serfs were domestic landless servants who stayed landless after 1861 citation needed Only Polish and Romanian domestic serfs got land 90 of the serfs who got larger plots were in Congress Poland where the Tsar wanted to weaken the szlachta The rest were in the barren north and in Astrakhan In the whole Empire peasant land declined 4 1 13 3 outside the ex Polish zone and 23 3 in the 16 black earth provinces citation needed These redemption payments were not abolished till January 1 1907 Impact Edit A 2018 study in the American Economic Review found substantial increases in agricultural productivity industrial output and peasants nutrition in Imperial Russia as a result of the abolition of serfdom in 1861 31 Serf society EditLabour and obligations Edit In Russia the terms barshchina barshina or boyarshchina boyarshina refer to the obligatory work that the serfs performed for the landowner on his portion of the land the other part of the land usually of a poorer quality the peasants could use for themselves Sometimes the terms are loosely translated by the term corvee While no official government regulation to the extent of barshchina existed a 1797 ukase by Paul I of Russia described a barshchina of three days a week as normal and sufficient for the landowner s needs In the black earth region 70 to 77 of the serfs performed barshchina the rest paid levies obrok 32 Marriage and family life Edit nbsp Group of Russian peasant womenThe Russian Orthodox Church had many rules regarding marriage that were strictly observed by the population For example marriage was not allowed to take place during times of fasting the eve or day of a holiday during the entire week of Easter or for two weeks after Christmas Before the abolition of serfdom in 1861 marriage was strictly prohibited on Tuesdays Thursdays and Saturdays Because of these firm rules most marriages occurred in the months of January February October and November After the emancipation the most popular marrying months were July October and November 33 Imperial laws were very particular with the age in which serfs could marry The minimum age to marry was 13 years old for women and 15 for men After 1830 the female and male ages were raised to 16 and 18 respectively To marry over the age of 60 the serf had to receive permission but marriage over the age of 80 was forbidden The Church also did not approve marriages with large age differences 34 Landowners were interested in keeping all of their serfs and not losing workers to marriages on other estates Prior to 1812 serfs were not allowed to marry serfs from other estates After 1812 the rules relaxed slightly but in order for a family to give their daughter to a husband in another estate they had to apply and present information to their landowner ahead of time If a serf wanted to marry a widow then emancipation and death certificates were to be handed over and investigated for authenticity by their owner before a marriage could take place 35 Before and after the abolition of serfdom Russian peasant families were patriarchal Marriage was important for families economically and socially Parents were in charge of finding suitable spouses for their children in order to help the family The bride s parents were concerned with the social and material benefits they would gain in the alliance between the two families Some also took into consideration their daughter s future quality of life and how much work would be required of her The groom s parents would be concerned about economical factors such as the size of the dowry as well as the bride s decency modesty obedience ability to do work and family background Upon marriage the bride came to live with her new husband and his family so she needed to be ready to assimilate and work hard 36 Serfs looked highly upon early marriage because of increased parental control At a younger age there is less chance of the individual falling in love with someone other than whom his or her parents chose There is also increased assurance of chastity which was more important for women than men The average age of marriage for women was around 19 years old 37 38 During serfdom when the head of the house was being disobeyed by their children they could have the master or landowner step in After the emancipation of serfs in 1861 the household patriarch lost some of his power and could no longer receive the landowner s help The younger generations now had the freedom to work off their estates some even went to work in factories These younger peasants had access to newspapers and books which introduced them to more radical ways of thinking The ability to work outside of the household gave the younger peasants independence as well as a wage to do with what they wanted Agricultural and domestic jobs were a group effort so the wage went to the family The children who worked industrial jobs gave their earnings to their family as well but some used it as a way to gain a say in their own marriages In this case some families allowed their sons to marry whom they chose as long as the family was in similar economic standing as their own No matter what parental approval was required in order to make a marriage legal 39 Distribution of property and duties between the spouses Edit According to a study completed in the late 1890s by the ethnographer Olga Petrovna Semyonova Tian Shanskaia husband and wife had different duties in the household In regards to ownership the husband assumed the property plus any funds required to make additions to the property Additions included fence barns and wagons While primary purchasing power belonged to the husband the wife was expected to buy certain items She was also expected to buy household items such as bowls plates pots barrels and various utensils Wives were also required to purchase cloth and make clothes for the family by spinning and using a dontse Footwear was the husband s responsibility he made bast shoes and felt boots for the family As for crops it was expected for men to sow and women to harvest A common crop harvested by serfs in the Black Earth Region was flax Husbands owned most of the livestock such as pigs and horses Cows were the property of the husband but were usually in the wife s possession Chickens were considered to be the wife s property while sheep was common property for the family The exception was when the wife owned sheep through a dowry sobinki 40 Material culture Edit Typical Russian serf clothing included the zipun ru Russian zipun a collarless kaftan and the smock 41 A 19th century report noted Every Russian peasant male and female wears cotton clothes The men wear printed shirts and trousers and the women are dressed from head to foot in printed cotton also 42 The extent of serfdom in Russia Edit nbsp Kateryna painting of a Ukrainian serf girl by Taras Shevchenko who was himself born a serfBy the mid 19th century peasants composed a majority of the population and according to the census of 1857 the number of private serfs was 23 1 million out of 62 5 million citizens of the Russian empire 37 7 of the population The exact numbers according to official data were entire population 60909 309 peasantry of all classes 49486 665 state peasants 23138 191 peasants on the lands of proprietors 23022 390 peasants of the appanages and other departments 3326 084 43 State peasants were considered personally free but their freedom of movement was restricted 44 serfs on estates 45 Estate of 1700 1861 gt 500 serfs 26 42100 500 33 381 100 41 20 serf owners with lt 100 serfs 46 1777 1834 185883 84 78Russian serfdom depended entirely on the traditional and extensive technology of the peasantry Yields remained low and stationary throughout most of the 19th century Any increase in income drawn from agriculture was largely through increasing land area and extensive grain raising by means of exploitation of the peasant labor that is by burdening the peasant household still further Serfs owned by European Russian landlords 47 No of serfs in 1777 in 1859 gt 1000 1 1501 1000 2101 500 16 gt 100 1821 100 25 35 10 20 59 43 8 peasants enserfed in each province 1860 gt 55 Kaluga Kyiv Kostroma Kutais Minsk Mogilev Nizhny Novgorod Podolia Ryazan Smolensk Tula Vitebsk Vladimir Volhynia Yaroslavl36 55 Chernigov Grodno Kovno Kursk Moscow Novgorod Oryol Penza Poltava Pskov Saratov Simbirsk Tambov Tver Vilna16 35 Don Ekaterinoslav Kharkov Kherson Kuban Perm Tiflis Vologda VoronezhIn the Central Black Earth Region 70 77 of the serfs performed labour services barshchina the rest paid rent obrok Owing to the high fertility 70 of Russian cereal production in the 1850s was here 32 In the seven central provinces 1860 67 7 of the serfs were on obrok In literature Russian serfdom provided both a backdrop and a source of dramatic tension for the works of prominent authors like Leo Tolstoy and Fyodor Dostoevsky Characters drawn from the serf population were portrayed with profound emotional depth their stories shedding light on the harsh realities of serfdom These narratives served to amplify calls for social reform and underscored the deep inequalities of the Russian societal structure The influence of serfdom was also notable in Russian music and art Folk songs and dances often performed by serfs contributed significantly to Russia s unique cultural tradition At the same time works of art often depicted serfs and their lives either romanticizing their existence or highlighting the cruelty of the serfdom system See also EditSlavery in Russia Anna Orlova Tshesmenskaja Darya Nikolayevna Saltykova Dead Souls a novel which focuses on late serfdom Fugitive peasants Government reforms of Alexander II of Russia History of serfdom Kholop Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century Manifesto of three day corvee 1797 Obshchina SmerdReferences Edit Hellie Richard 1982 Slavery in Russia 1450 1725 University Of Chicago Press p 85 ISBN 9780226326474 Serfdom Naibolee silnyj zapros byl na krasivyh devushek Kak v Rossii torgovali sootechestvennikami The greatest demand was for pretty girls How they traded compatriots in Russia Commersant 2017 20 maya 1842 goda v Rossii byl opublikovan ukaz O predanii sudu i nakazanii Rossijskih poddannyh kotorye budut izoblicheny v kakom libo uchastii v torge negrami a b Susan P McCaffray Confronting Serfdom in the Age of Revolution Projects for Serf Reform in the Time of Alexander I Russian Review 2005 64 1 pp 1 21 in JSTOR Evsey D Domar and Mark J Machina On the Profitability of Russian Serfdom 1984 p 919 The World Book Dictionary World Book com 1 January 2003 ISBN 9780716602996 Retrieved 18 December 2016 via Google Books The Durham University journal Volumes 45 46 Page 237 Snippet Thus a Russian English dictionary will give the Russian word muzhik as peasant Yet the English word peasant brings to mind a being far different from the Russian muzhik who unlike his Western counterpart is presented to us in literature Rural Population Classes Retrieved 18 December 2016 Language Centre Language Centre Home Retrieved 18 December 2016 Vodarskij Yaroslav Evgenevich 1973 Naselenie Rossii za 400 let XVI nachalo XX vv Moscow Prosveshenie p 32 Historical survey gt Ways of ending slavery Miller David B 1 January 1984 Review of Slavery in Russia 1450 1725 Speculum 59 3 653 655 doi 10 2307 2846321 JSTOR 2846321 Kolchin Peter 1987 Unfree Labor American Slavery and Russian Serfdom Harvard University Press pp 41 42 ISBN 0674920988 Marie Jean Jacques 1997 Le regne reformateur d Alexandre II Cairn Retrieved May 1 2022 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Page 37 Gregory Freeze Russia A History New York Oxford University Press 2002 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Page 39 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Page 40 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Page 33 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Pages 22 23 Geroid Robinson Rural Russia under the old regime page 59 Geroid Tanquary Robinson Rural Russia under the old regime a history of the landlord peasant world page 37 Czajewski Jerzy October 2004 Zbiegostwo ludnosci Rosji w granice Rzeczypospolitej Russian population exodus into the Rzeczpospolita Promemoria 6 15 ISSN 1509 9091 Archived from the original on 3 January 2005 Kimla Piotr 2011 Przywary niewolnikow panszczyznianych w XVIII wiecznej Rzeczypospolitej w relacji Huberta Vautrina Annales Universitatis Mariae Curie Sklodowska Sectio G Ius in Polish 58 1 87 97 ISSN 0458 4317 Wagner W J 1992 May 3 1791 and the Polish constitutional tradition The Polish Review 36 4 383 395 JSTOR 25778591 David Moon The Abolition of Serfdom in Russia Harlow Pearson Education Limited 2001 Page xiv Geoffrey Hosking Russia People and Empire page 164 Orlando Figes A People s Tragedy p 48 Shane O Rourke The Mother Benefactress and the Sacred Battalion Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna the Editing Commission and the Emancipation of the Serfs Russian Review 2011 70 4 pp 584 607 online NUPI Centre for Russian Studies Archived 2006 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Markevich Andrei Zhuravskaya Ekaterina 2018 The Economic Effects of the Abolition of Serfdom Evidence from the Russian Empire American Economic Review 108 4 5 1074 1117 doi 10 1257 aer 20160144 ISSN 0002 8282 a b Richard Pipes Russia under the old regime pages 147 8 Alexandre Avdeev Alain Blum fr Irina Troitskaia Heather Juby Peasant Marriage in Nineteenth Century Russia Population English Edition 2002 Vol 59 No 6 Nov Dec 2004 Institut National d Etudes Demographiques 742 43 Avdeev Blum Troitskaia Juby Peasant Marriage 731 33 Avdeev Blum Troitskaia Juby Peasant Marriage 726 Barbara Alpern Engel Peasant Morality and Pre Marital Relations in Late 19th Century Russia Journal of Social History Vol 23 No 4 Summer 1990 Oxford University Press 695 98 Avdeev Blum Troitskaia Juby Peasant Marriage 733 Engel Peasant Pre Marital Relations 698 99 Engel Peasant Pre Marital Relations 701 05 708 Olga Semyonova Tian Shanskaia Edited by David L Ransel Village Life in Late Tsarist Russia Bloomington Indiana University Press 1993 Pages 124 127 Vionnet Louis Joseph 19 January 2013 1899 North Jonathan ed With Napoleon s Guard in Russia The Memoirs of Major Vionnet 1812 Translated by North Jonathan Casemate Publishers published 2013 ISBN 9781783408986 Retrieved 14 August 2022 The peasants or more precisely the serfs wear a costume which very much resembles that worn by the Poles or perhaps more accurately that worn by Asians It consists of a long and rather shapeless smock Morley Henry 1866 Sketches of Russian Life Before and During the Emancipation of the Serfs London Chapman and Hall p 218 Retrieved 14 August 2022 Donald Mackenzie Wallace 1905 CHAPTER XXVIII THE SERFS Russia Archived from the original on 2009 07 05 Assigned Church and Crown Peasants David Moon The Russian Peasant 1600 1930 pages 204 205 Theda Skocpol States and Social Revolutions page 87 Richard Pipes Russia under the old regime page 178 Further reading EditBlum Jerome Lord and Peasant in Russia from the Ninth to the Nineteenth Century 1961 Blum Jerome The End of the Old Order in Rural Europe 1978 influential comparative history Crisp Olga The state peasants under Nicholas I Slavonic and East European Review 37 89 1959 387 412 online Dennison Tracy The institutional framework of Russian serfdom Cambridge University Press 2011 excerpt Domar Evsey and Mark Machina On the Profitability of Russian Serfdom Journal of Economic History 1984 44 4 pp 919 955 JSTOR 2122113 Emmons Terence The Russian Landed Gentry and the Peasant Emancipation of 1861 Cambridge University Press 1968 Gorshkov Boris B Serfs on the Move Peasant Seasonal Migration in Pre Reform Russia 1800 61 Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History Fall 2000 627 56 Gorshkov Boris B Serfs Emancipation of in Encyclopedia of Europe 1789 1914 John Merriman and Jay Winter eds in chief New York Charles Scribner s Sons 2006 Hellie Richard Slavery in Russia 1450 1725 1984 Hoch Steven Did Russia s Emancipated Serfs Really Pay Too Much for Too Little Land Statistical Anomalies and Long Tailed Distributions Slavic Review 2004 63 2 pp 247 274 Hoch Steven Serfdom and Social Control in Russia Petrovskoe a Village in Tambov University of Chicago Press 1986 Hoch Steven and Wilson R Augustine The Tax Censuses and the Decline of the Serf Population in Imperial Russia 1833 1858 Slavic Review 1979 38 3 pp 403 425 Kolchin Peter Unfree Labor American Slavery and Russian Serfdom 1987 Lust Kersti Kiselev s Reforms of State Peasants The Baltic Perspective Journal of Baltic Studies 2008 39 1 pp 57 71 Lust Kersti The Impact of the Baltic Emancipation Reforms on Peasant Landlord Relations A Historiographical Survey Journal of Baltic Studies 2013 44 1 pp 1 18 McCaffray Susan P Confronting Serfdom in the Age of Revolution Projects for Serf Reform in the Time of Alexander I Russian Review 2005 64 1 pp 1 21 JSTOR 3664324 Mironov Boris When and Why was the Russian Peasantry Emancipated in Serfdom and Slavery Studies in Legal Bondage Ed M L Bush London Longman 1996 pp 323 347 Moon David Abolition of Serfdom in Russia 1762 1907 2002 Moon David The Russian Peasantry 1600 1930 The World the Peasants Made London Longman 1999 Nafziger Steven Serfdom emancipation and economic development in Tsarist Russia Working paper Williams College MA 2012 online Rudolph Richard L Agricultural structure and proto industrialization in Russia economic development with unfree labor Journal of economic history 1985 45 1 pp 47 69 JSTOR 2122007 Stanziani Alessandro Revisiting Russian Serfdom Bonded Peasants and Market Dynamics 1600s 1800s International Labor and Working Class History 2010 78 1 pp 12 27 Viaene Vincent Wayne Thorpe and H G Koenigsberger Reassessing Russian Serfdom European History Quarterly 1996 26 pp 483 526 Wallace Donald Mackenzie Russia 1878 Chapter XXVIII The Serfs online Wirtschafter Elise Kimerling Russia s Age of Serfdom 1649 1861 2008 Primary sources Edit Gorshkov Boris B ed A Life Under Russian Serfdom Memoirs of Savva Dmitrievich Purlevskii 1800 68 Budapest amp New York 2005 Nikitenko Aleksandr Up from Serfdom My Childhood and Youth in Russia 1804 1824 2001 External links EditSerfdom The Life of East Europe s Masses Saltychikha 1730 1801 Russian serf owner The Causes of Slavery or Serfdom A Hypothesis Russian serfdom The Argus Friday 30 July 1858 p 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serfdom in Russia amp oldid 1176300850, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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