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Tsar Alexander II Emancipation Edict Revision Notes $8.25   Add to cart

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Tsar Alexander II Emancipation Edict Revision Notes

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Detailed revision notes which set out clearly the causes, results and consequences of Tsar Alexander II's Emancipation Edict.

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  • June 30, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Emancipation of the Serfs 1861
Russia in 1855

Strengths of 1855 Russia Weaknesses of 1855 Russia
 World largest army of approx. 1.5  AUTOCRACY
million  Edicts from the Tsar = law
 Russian empire = ethnically and  Tsar appointed his own advisers
religiously diverse  Secret police
 Tsar-Peasant link  Inequal society: lack of a middle
class, only top and bottom classes
 Russia = backwards compared to
rest of Europe
 Serfdom obstructed economic &
industrial progress
 Surfs lacked freedom of movement
and were tied to their land
 No internal market demands
 Calls for democratic reform initially
ignored by Tsar  Decembrist
Uprising 1825


Who were the Serf’s?
No basic human, political or civil rights
Organised into communities  Mir: allocated land to the Serfs, could physically punish
them & prevented them from moving away
Not technically slaves  not owned by their landlord but required to…
Give up freedom of movement = a system of slavery as Serfs couldn’t leave the land unless
permitted by landlord  tied to the land
2 main categories of Serfs:
1.Worked the land & gave produce to their landlords
2.Worked in the homes of landlords
Landlords…
 acted as recruiting officers: Serfs required to perform military service of 25 years
 sold their Serfs often breaking up families in the process (technically not allowed to
but did anyway)
 could arrange marriages between Serfs and looked to breed strong healthy Serfs to
improve their stocks
 acted as their Serfs Judge and Jury & could administer punishments to a Serf, send
them into the army or exile them to Siberia

, Terms of the Emancipation Edict:
1. All privately owned Serfs = freed
2. State owned Serfs = receive freedom in 1866
3. Freed Serfs could  own property, own business, sue in courts, vote in local
elections, marry who they want
4. Freed-Serfs received an allotment of land taken from their former landowner’s
estate  this land was decided by the landowners and allocated by official surveyors
5. Landowners compensated for lost Land by the state, land valued generously
6. Freed-Serfs paid for allotments through Redemption Payments
o Redemption payments: loan payments to the government paid for 49 years
with a 6% annual interest, Serfs only received full rights once this had been
fully paid off
7. Freed-Serfs given option of continuing work on former landowner’s land for so many
days a year to help pay back redemption payments
8. The Mirs were given responsibility for collecting redemption payments, the sale of
land and what was farmed
o Mirs: peasant villages/ communes
9. Landowners kept control of meadows, woodland, and pasture
10. There was a 2-year period of ‘temporary obligation’ before freedom was granted
where the allocation of land was sorted out

Benefited Serfs Benefited Landlords
 Freedom  Landowners chose the land to give
 Own property, business etc… to ex-serfs  save best for
 Right to vote in local elections themselves
 Worse off  Landowners = access to forests etc…
 access to wood, animals to hunt
which ex-serfs don’t have
 Received compensation from ex-
serfs through redemption payments
 If couldn’t pay redemption
payments serfs = not fully free and
still had to work on land to
compensate
 Better off than Serfs/ ex-Serfs




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