A revolutionary movement in Russia is born…
1816 CE to 1827 CE
Secret societies that will eventually become the Decembrist Movement had formed around 1815 in Russian Masonic lodges.
Young officers who had pursued Napoleon into Western Europe have come back to Russia with revolutionary ideas, including human rights, representative government, and mass democracy.
The intellectual Westernization that had been fostered in the eighteenth century by a paternalistic, autocratic Russian state now includes opposition to autocracy, demands for representative government, calls for the abolition of serfdom, and, in some instances, advocacy of a revolutionary overthrow of the government.
Officers are particularly incensed that Alexander had granted Poland a constitution while Russia remains without one.
Several clandestine organizations are preparing for an uprising when Alexander dies unexpectedly in 1825.
Following his death, there as confusion about who will succeed him because the next in line, his brother Constantine, had relinquished his right to the throne.
A group of officers commanding about three thousand men refuses to swear allegiance to the new tsar, Alexander's brother Nicholas, proclaiming instead their loyalty to the idea of a Russian constitution.
Because these events occur in December 1825, the rebels are called Decembrists.
Nicholas easily overcomes the revolt, and the Decembrists who remain alive are arrested.
Many are exiled to Siberia.
Nicholas turns away from liberal reforms and champions the reactionary doctrine "Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality".
Groups
Finns
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Poles (West Slavs)
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Christians, Roman Catholic
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Christians, Eastern Orthodox
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Christians, Eastern Catholic (Uniate)
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Belarusians (East Slavs)
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Russians (East Slavs)
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Tatars
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Cossacks
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Freemasons
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Ukrainians (East Slavs)
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Finland, (Swedish) Grand Duchy of
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Russian Empire
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Russian America
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Finland, Grand Duchy of
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Holy Alliance
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Poland, Congress Kingdom of
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