Russian Empire (1721–1917)

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Russian Empire
Россійская Имперія
1721–1917
Flag of Russian Empire
Flag
Location of Russian Empire
Capital
and largest city
Saint Petersburg
Official languagesRussian
Dominant mode of productionFeudalism
GovernmentMonarchy
• First emperor
Peter I
• Last emperor
Nicholas II
History
• Established
1721
• Dissolution
1917
Area
• Total
22,800,000 km²
Population
• 1897 census
125,640,021

The Russian Empire was a semi-feudal monarchy that was founded by Peter I in 1721 and overthrown in the February Revolution of 1917. Throughout its entire existence, it was ruled by the Romanov dynasty. The Russian Empire included the area of modern-day Russia, the other Soviet republics, Finland, Alaska, and Poland. Most of the empire's territory later became part of the USSR, but Finland and Poland became independent after the revolution and Alaska was sold to the United States in 1867.

History

Expansion

In 1721, Sweden ceded Estonia and northern Latvia to Russia after being defeated in the Great Northern War. Catherine the Great annexed southern Latvia and Lithuania in the 1790s after defeating Poland. Russia defeated the Swedish again in 1809 and took Finland from Swedish control.[1]

The Russian Empire killed over a million civilians in the Caucasus during the Circassian genocide.[2]

Education

The male literacy rate was 1–12% for rural areas and 20–25% for urban areas.[3] The literacy rate for women was even lower and girls could not go to school.[4]

Health

The first hospitals in Russia were established by Peter I in Moscow in 1706 and in Saint Petersburg in 1715 and were staffed by foreign doctors. Russia began training its own doctors in 1724 at the Academy of Science. Healthcare was not initially available to serfs and industrial workers.

In 1884, with the introduction of the zemstvo system, health care became available in rural areas, but much of the population still received no medical care. In some areas, there was only one doctor per 40,000 people.[5]

Housing

In Saint Petersburg in 1908, 60% of textile workers did not have their own rooms and slept in crowded barracks. The average proletarian family had only three square meters of floor space. In 1913, 58% of workers lived in company-owned accommodations with bunk beds.

In 1912, there were 24,500 small apartments in Moscow that housed a total of 325,000 people, or more than 13 people per apartment. The nobility and bourgeoisie lived in large mansions and villas, often with hundreds of square meters of space per resident.

Only 3% of houses were connected to sewage systems and only 5% of urban homes had electricity.[6]

References

  1. W. P., Zelda K. Coates (1940). Russia, Finland and the Baltic: 'Russia, Finland and the Baltic States' (pp. 14–16). [PDF] London, England: Lawrence & Wishart Ltd..
  2. “Czarist Russia slaughtered over a million people in a purge of Circassians from its Caucasus provinces.”

    Austin Murphy (2000). The Triumph of Evil: 'Introduction' (p. 51). [PDF] Fucecchio, Italy: European Academic Publishing Press. ISBN 8883980026
  3. Boris N. Mironov (1991). The Development of Literacy in Russia and the USSR from the Tenth to the Twentieth Centuries (p. 234). History of Education Quarterly. doi: 10.2307/368437 [HUB]
  4. Nicholas V. Riasanovsky (2005). Russian Identities: A Historical Survey (pp. 112–18).
  5. Carlos Rule (2017-01-18). "Health in the USSR" Stalin Society. Archived from the original on 2022-02-16. Retrieved 2022-06-27.
  6. "Housing in the USSR" (2017-01-13). Stalin Society. Archived from the original on 2022-03-30. Retrieved 2022-05-20.