Imperial Russia
(Redirected from Russian Empire)
Categories: Imperial Russia | History of Russia | Empires
Imperial Russia is the term used to cover the period of history from the expansion of Russia under Peter the Great, through the expansion of the Russian Empire from the Baltic to the Pacific Ocean, to the deposal of Nicholas II of Russia, the last tsar, at the start of the Russian Revolution of 1917.
The Russian state was officially named the Russian Empire (Russian: Росси́йская Импе́рия) from 1721 to 1917.
Capital city of the Russian Empire was Saint-Petersburg (after 1914 re-named Petrograd). At the end of the 19th century the size of the Empire was about 22 400 000 square kilometers (almost 1/6 of the Earth's landmass);its only rival in size was the British Empire. According to the 1897 census its population was about 128 200 000 people, however, majority of them (93.4 million) lived in the European Russia. More than a 100 different ethnic groups lived in the Russian Empire (ethnic Russians were about 45 % of the population). In addition to today's Russia prior to 1917 Russian Empire included territories of Finland (Grand Duchy of Finland), Estonia and Latvia (Baltic provinces), most of Lithuania, Belarus, most of Ukraine, significant part of Poland (Kingdom of Poland), Moldova (Bessarabia), Caucasus, and most of Central Asia (Russian Turkestan).
In 1914 the Russian Empire consisted of 81 provinces (guberniyas) and 20 regions (oblasts). Vassals and protectorates of the Russian Empire included khanates of Bukhara, Khiva and after 1914 Tuva.
Russian Empire was a hereditary monarchy headed by an autocratic Emperor (Tsar) from a Romanov dynasty. Orthodox Christianity was the official faith of the Empire and was controlled by the monarch through the Holy Synod. Subjects of the Russian Empire were segregated into sosloviya, or social estates (classes) such as “dvoryanstvo” (nobility), clergy, merchants, cossacks and peasants. Native people of Siberia and Central Asia were officially registered as a category called “inorodtsy” (non-Russians, literally: "people of alien kin").
In addition to Russia proper, the empire consisted of the constitutional monarchies of the Kingdom of Poland (1815-1831) and the Grand Duchy of Finland (1809-1917)
Coat of Arms of the Russian Empire was a Two-headed eagle, National anthem – God Save the Tsar (“Bozhe, tsarya khrani”), official language - Russian.
After the overthrow of monarchy during the February Revolution of 1917 Russia was declared to be a republic by the Provisional Government.
This period, together with overlaps with the preceding and subsequent periods, is covered in the following articles.
- Russian history, 1682-1796
- Russian history, 1796-1855
- Russian history, 1855-1892
- Russian history, 1892-1920
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Image:Russmap in 1913.png
The Russian Empire in 1913
Rulers
Tsars1</sub> and Tsarinas of the Imperial period of Russia:
- Peter I (the Great), (1682-1725)
- Catherine I, (1725-1727)
- Peter II, (1727-1730)
- Anna, (1730-1740)
- Ivan VI, (1740-1741)
- Elizabeth, (1741-1762)
- Peter III, (1762)
- Catherine II (the Great), (1762-1796)
- Paul I, (1796-1801)
- Alexander I, (1801-1825)
- Nicholas I, (1825-1855)
- Alexander II, (1855-1881)
- Alexander III, (1881-1894)
- Nicholas II, (1894-1917)
1. Technically Peter the Great changed his title from "tsar" to "imperator" (Emperor) in 1721 and his successors kept it, but "tsar" was still in regular popular use up to the fall of the Russian Empire.
References
External Links
- The Empire that was Russia: Color photographs of Tsarist Russia
- Russian Army during the Napoleonic Warsid:Kekaisaran Rusia
eo:Rusia Imperio es:Rusia Imperial fa:روسیه تزاری it:Russia imperiale lt:Rusijos imperija ja:ロシア帝国 pt:Império Russo ro:Imperiul Rus ru:Российская Империя fi:Venäjän keisarikunta