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Peter Romanov Westernizes Russia
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Peter the Great
Peter the Great
•Born June 9, 1672
•1682 - 1694 Peter “rules” with half brother Ivan underRegency of half-sister Sophia
•1694 Peter takes sole control (Ivan dies 1696)
•Reign = 43 years (1682-1725)
Peter the Great
Introduced new (Western) technologies to Russia
Successful in battle against the Turks
Successful in the Great Northern War vs. Sweden
Implemented several internal reforms
Modified government policies & strictly enforced them
Increase Russia’s territory (particularly access to Baltic)
Built St. Petersburg
Peter the Great
Peter the Great, like Louis XIV, learned at an early age to be on guard against the Russian nobles and the army. While a youth, he had to fight off the power of his half-sister Sophia, while sharing power with his half-brother Ivan.
Peter the Great
Peter was enchanted with western culture and ushered Russia into the modern age. His efforts to modernize Russia met with stiff opposition from the church and the boyars, and his own son thought of him as the anti-christ. It has been said that Peter dragged Russia "kicking and screaming into the modern era."
WesternizationPeter wanted to equip Russia with modern technology, institutions, and ideas. He required Western-style education for all male nobles, introduced so-called cipher schools to teach the alphabet and basic arithmetic, established a printing house, and funded the Academy of Sciences which was established just before his death in 1725 and became one of Russia's most important cultural institutions.
Westernization
He demanded that aristocrats acquire the dress, tastes, and social customs of the West. The result was a deepening of the cultural rift between the nobility and the mass of Russian people.
St PetersburgThe best illustration of Peter's drive for Westernization, his break with traditions, and his coercive methods was his construction in 1703 of a new, architecturally Western capital, St. Petersburg, situated on land newly conquered from Sweden on the Gulf of Finland. Although St. Petersburg faced westward, its Westernization was by coercion, and it could not arouse the individualistic spirit that was an important element in the Western ways Peter so admired.
St Petersburg
Peter and Paul Fortress
A 20th century statue of Peterinside the fortress
Notice the exaggerated features
Winter Palace
Summer/Winter
Peterhof
(summer palace)
Peterhof
View to the Gulf of Finland
Samson rending open the jaws of the Lion
Peterhof
Reforms - Military
Established navy
Reorganized army
Drafted for lifetime
Officers from nobility
Nobility either military or civil servants
Reforms - Govt
In 1722 Peter introduced the Table of Ranks, which determined a person's position and status according to service to the tsar rather than to birth or seniority. Even commoners who achieved a certain level on the table were ennobled automatically.
Reforms - Govt
Peter tripled the revenues of the state treasury through a variety of taxes. He levied a capitation, or poll tax, on all males except clergy and nobles and imposed a myriad of indirect taxes on alcohol, salt, and even beards. To provide uniforms and weapons for the military, Peter developed metallurgical and textile industries using serf labor.
Reforms - Church
The Orthodox Church was partially incorporated into the country's administrative structure. Peter abolished the patriarchate and replaced it with a collective body, the Holy Synod, led by a lay government official.
LegacyPeter's reign raised questions about Russia's backwardness, its relationship to the West, the appropriateness of reform from above, and other fundamental problems that have confronted many of Russia's subsequent rulers. In the nineteenth century, Russians debated whether Peter was correct in pointing Russia toward the West or whether his reforms had been a violation of Russia's natural traditions.
Sources• www.english.upenn.edu/~jlynch/FrankenDemo/Gifs/pgreat.html • www.pbs.org/weta/faceofrussia • http://fp.uni.edu/bruess/ • http://www.galen-frysinger.org/russia.htm• http://www.biketracks.net/russia.htm• http://www.cohums.ohiostate.edu/english/People/odlin.1/courses/571/peteng.ht
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• www.csli.stanford.edu/~jbernd/russia/peteri.html • http://www.umass.edu/tei/ogia/gallery/russia2/index.html• http://www.dartmouth.edu/~russ15/russia_PI/peter_great_pt1.html• http://www.peterhof.org/ind.html• http://www.1upinfo.com/country-guide-study/russia/russia20.html• http://www.russia.net/history/sp.html