Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia

The Russian Empire was multi-ethnic and multi-confessional Empire in which the “titular” ethnic group was in the minority. In 1646, the Russian share accounted for about 90 % of the total population, by 1917 only 43 %. This article examines the sectoral structure of employment of the people of the R...

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Published in:Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History
Main Author: Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Russian
Published: St Petersburg State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2017.113
http://hdl.handle.net/11701/6371
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spelling ftstpetersburgun:oai:dspace.spbu.ru:11701/6371 2023-05-15T18:45:17+02:00 Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich 2017-03 https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2017.113 http://hdl.handle.net/11701/6371 ru rus St Petersburg State University Vestnik of St Petersburg University. History;Volume 62; Issue 1 Russia 1600–1900 ethno-religious politics national historiography foreign historiography the ethnic composition of the population underdeveloped state sectoral structure of employment Article 2017 ftstpetersburgun https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2017.113 2018-10-02T16:36:46Z The Russian Empire was multi-ethnic and multi-confessional Empire in which the “titular” ethnic group was in the minority. In 1646, the Russian share accounted for about 90 % of the total population, by 1917 only 43 %. This article examines the sectoral structure of employment of the people of the Russian Empire according to material from the first all-Russian census of the population in 1897 and on this basis it evaluates the ethnic status of various groups and their role in the economic and social life of the country. All ethnic groups were represented in the government (administration, the courts, police, the social and estate service) and also in the army, including Jews, Yakuts, Romani, Chechens, and Abkhazians, each roughly proportional to its share in the population of the empire (with the exception of Jews in the administration). But in various spheres of economic activity the ethnic groups participated in different ways, depending on their inclination and cultural traditions. Ethnic discrimination was observed almost exclusively in relation to unbaptized Jews. So-called ‘Russification’ contributed to the fact that those representatives of non-Russian ethic groups who received a Russian education had the opportunity to take administrative positions and participate more actively in the management of their region. The government’s flexible ethnoconfessional policy ensured the absence of ethnic discrimination. This policy stipulated the status quo the new area and its population, extensive cooperation with the local elites, religious and ethnic tolerance, creating some advantages in the legal status of non-Russians in comparison with Russian, the right of indigenous peoples of annexed territories to be civilian actors on par with Russians. Such management techniques by a multi-ethnic and multi-confessional population allowed for gradual integration of various ethnic groups into the Empire, inclusion into a unified Imperial economic, legal and social space, alignment of their level of development by creating additional benefits for lagging regions, modernization of traditional society at “the outskirts” with their particular economic, legal and social structures, and to ensure the long preservation of the unity of the Russian Empire. Refs 85. Tables 3. Исследование выполнено за счет гранта Российского научного фонда (проект № 15-18-00119). Article in Journal/Newspaper Yakuts Saint Petersburg State University: Research Repository (DSpace SPbU) Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History 62 1 164 185
institution Open Polar
collection Saint Petersburg State University: Research Repository (DSpace SPbU)
op_collection_id ftstpetersburgun
language Russian
topic Russia 1600–1900
ethno-religious politics
national historiography
foreign historiography
the ethnic composition of the population
underdeveloped state
sectoral structure of employment
spellingShingle Russia 1600–1900
ethno-religious politics
national historiography
foreign historiography
the ethnic composition of the population
underdeveloped state
sectoral structure of employment
Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich
Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
topic_facet Russia 1600–1900
ethno-religious politics
national historiography
foreign historiography
the ethnic composition of the population
underdeveloped state
sectoral structure of employment
description The Russian Empire was multi-ethnic and multi-confessional Empire in which the “titular” ethnic group was in the minority. In 1646, the Russian share accounted for about 90 % of the total population, by 1917 only 43 %. This article examines the sectoral structure of employment of the people of the Russian Empire according to material from the first all-Russian census of the population in 1897 and on this basis it evaluates the ethnic status of various groups and their role in the economic and social life of the country. All ethnic groups were represented in the government (administration, the courts, police, the social and estate service) and also in the army, including Jews, Yakuts, Romani, Chechens, and Abkhazians, each roughly proportional to its share in the population of the empire (with the exception of Jews in the administration). But in various spheres of economic activity the ethnic groups participated in different ways, depending on their inclination and cultural traditions. Ethnic discrimination was observed almost exclusively in relation to unbaptized Jews. So-called ‘Russification’ contributed to the fact that those representatives of non-Russian ethic groups who received a Russian education had the opportunity to take administrative positions and participate more actively in the management of their region. The government’s flexible ethnoconfessional policy ensured the absence of ethnic discrimination. This policy stipulated the status quo the new area and its population, extensive cooperation with the local elites, religious and ethnic tolerance, creating some advantages in the legal status of non-Russians in comparison with Russian, the right of indigenous peoples of annexed territories to be civilian actors on par with Russians. Such management techniques by a multi-ethnic and multi-confessional population allowed for gradual integration of various ethnic groups into the Empire, inclusion into a unified Imperial economic, legal and social space, alignment of their level of development by creating additional benefits for lagging regions, modernization of traditional society at “the outskirts” with their particular economic, legal and social structures, and to ensure the long preservation of the unity of the Russian Empire. Refs 85. Tables 3. Исследование выполнено за счет гранта Российского научного фонда (проект № 15-18-00119).
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich
author_facet Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich
author_sort Mironov, Boris Nikolaevich
title Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
title_short Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
title_full Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
title_fullStr Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
title_full_unstemmed Ethnic discrimination in late imperial Russia
title_sort ethnic discrimination in late imperial russia
publisher St Petersburg State University
publishDate 2017
url https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2017.113
http://hdl.handle.net/11701/6371
genre Yakuts
genre_facet Yakuts
op_relation Vestnik of St Petersburg University. History;Volume 62; Issue 1
op_doi https://doi.org/10.21638/11701/spbu02.2017.113
container_title Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History
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container_start_page 164
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