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7 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

The Orthodox Church...

The Tsar was the head of the Church. Accordingly, the Church reinforced his authority. Among the huge peasant population, the Church was very influential. Official Church doctrine stated that the Tsar was appointed by God, and that any challenge to the Tsar - the 'Little Father' - was an insult to God. The Church made sure that peasants kept on hearing this message.

The Civil Service...

The Civil Service was made up of administrators and officials who carried out the instructions of the Tsar and his Ministers. They were appointed and paid by the Tsarist state and were very loyal to it.

The Police...

In Tsarist Russia, the police had a vital role in keeping watch for enemies of the Tsar, and arresting them as required. Particularly important here was the Okhrana, the secret police. Agents of the Okhrana worked undercover, infiltrating organisations and groups which might present a danger to the Tsar.

Censorship...

All books and newspapers in Russia were censored so that people would not be influenced by liberal or socialist ideas. Any material which was thought to be dangerous was banned. Any person trying to circulate banned books or newspapers ran the risk of being detected by the Okhrana.

The Law

The Tsarist legal system was designed to support autocracy and Tsarist authority. A standard punishment for opponents of the Tsar was exile to the remote region of Siberia. Many thousands of people seen to be enemies of the state were sent to Siberia where they were so far away that they had little chance of threatening Tsarist power.

The Army

The Tsar had a huge army, and it was a very effective means of enforcing Tsarist power. At times of civil unrest, because of high food prices, for example, the arrival of Cossack cavalry regiments usually meant that things calmed down fairly quickly.

The size of the Russian empire

The country itself helped maintain Tsarist authority. The bulk of the population were peasant farmers. Most of them were illiterate and this made it difficult to spread liberal or revolutionary ideas using books or pamphlets. These peasants lived largely in remote, widely dispersed villages. This made it difficult for them to unite in a challenge to the Tsar. The sheer size of Russia and the poor state of the roads and railways also meant that it was difficult for ideas to spread.