Tsar Paul's premonitions of assassination are well-founded.His…
March 1801 CE
His attempts to force the nobility to adopt a code of chivalry has alienated many of his trusted advisors.
The Emperor has also discovered outrageous machinations and corruption in the Russian treasury.
Although he has repealed Catherine's law allowing corporal punishment of the free classes, directing reforms that result in greater rights for the peasantry, and providing for better treatment for serfs on agricultural estates, most of his policies are viewed as a great annoyance to the noble class and induce his enemies to work out a plan of action.
A conspiracy had been organized, some months before it is executed, by Counts Peter Ludwig von der Pahlen, Nikita Petrovich Panin, and the half-Spanish, half-Neapolitan adventurer Admiral Ribas.
The death of Ribas had delayed the execution.
On the night of March 23 [O.S. March 11], 1801, Paul is murdered in his bedroom in the newly built St. Michael's Castle by a band of dismissed officers headed by General Bennigsen, a Hanoverian in the Russian service, and General Yashvil, a Georgian.
They charge nto his bedroom, flushed with drink after dining together, and find Paul hiding behind some drapes in the corner.
The conspirators pull him out, force him to the table, and try to compel him to sign his abdication.
Paul offers some resistance, and Nikolay Zubov striked him with a sword, after which the assassins strangle and trample him to death.
He is succeeded by his son, the twenty-three-year-old Alexander I, who is actually in the palace, and to whom General Nikolay Zubov, one of the assassins, announced his accession, accompanied by the admonition, "Time to grow up! Go and rule!".
The assassins are not punished by Alexander, and the court physician James Wylie declares apoplexy the official cause of death.