Theosophical Society,
H
P Blavatsky
Tsar
Nicholas 1
1796
-1855
Reigned
1825 -1855
HPB began her world travels in 1849 which was a particularly
unsettled time in both Russian and European history. Russia was under the
oppressive rule of Tsar Nicholas 1 who feared that the wave of revolutions
which swept through Europe in 1848 would spread to Russia.
Russia in
1848 and 1849
The year 1848 did not bring revolution to Russia which, like Great
Britain, was
not seriously
affected by the disturbances which occurred in almost every other
European country. However, it was a year in which Russia was to
suffer from a
bad harvest, a
major cholera epidemic and an increase in the number of fires in
provincial towns which were caused by the unusually dry weather.
The cumulative effect of these three disasters on Russia's economy
was serious,
since the majority
of the population was engaged in agriculture. As the result,
there was a sharp fall in the export of grain which had begun to
increase after
the repeal of
the Corn Laws in
Nicholas I, who had ascended the Russian throne in the aftermath of
the
unsuccessful Decembrist revolt of 1825, was not surprised by what
happened in
France. He had always believed that the recognition of Louis
Philippe by the
Great Powers as the lawful ruler of France after the fall of
Charles X in 1830
had been a
fundamental error which had inevitably led to the secession of
Belgium from the United Kingdom of the Netherlands and the revolt
in Russian
re-establishment of an
independent
over
begun its long and
slow process of decline.
Nicholas' first concern was with military preparations and despite
the
reservations of some of
his advisers about adding to
he authorized
the calling up of army and navy reserves, as well as an increase
in military expenditure of seven million silver rubles. It was
anticipated that
within three months
Meanwhile he announced that, although he did not intend to
recognize the new
French government, he would not interfere in French affairs, as
long as the
treaties of 1815 were respected.
The tsar had long cherished the idea of building a wall around
Russia, but
realized that this
was a physical impossibility. However, in order to counter
the spread of revolutionary ideas from abroad, he agreed, on the
advice of Count A.F. Orlov, the head of the third
department (political police) and other
advisers, to the establishment of a secret committee which was to
exercise a
stricter control of the existing censorship of the press and all
publications.
The committee, which was set up on March 10 and reconstituted on
April 14 (April 2 o.s.), was to continue its
repressive activities in Russian literature and
journalism for the remainder of Nicholas reign. At the same time a
number of
restrictive measures were introduced in university and secondary
education with
aim of limiting the number of students and ensuring that
instruction in such
potentially dangerous subjects as philosophy was subjected to
suitable
safeguards. In addition, Nicholas abandoned his embryonic plans to
alleviate the
lot of the serfs
and on April 2 addressed the nobility in
urging them to lend
him their full support in return for his promise not to do
anything to undermine their position as serf-owners.
The tsar's fears about the spread of revolution to Russia were
increased as a
result of the
outbreak of disturbances on
especially
Frederick William IV, King in Prussia to grant a constitution and
reorganize the
Grant Duchy of Posen. On March 26
Nicholas issued a manifesto in which he stated unequivocally that Russia would
resist any attempt at aggression by the forces of revolution. The manifesto,
which had been drafted by Nicholas personally, caused alarm throughout
During the next few weeks the tsar took further measures to ensure
that the
disturbances in the Duchy of Posen and any possible outbreak of
trouble in the
Austrian province of Galicia, which had absorbed the independent
Republic of
Cracow after the
suppression of the revolt in 1846, did not spread to Russian
Poland and Russia's Western provinces where emissaries from the
Polish
emigration were active.
By the middle of May Prussia had restored order in
Posen, but by this time it was involved in a war with Denmark about
the future
relationship of the
Duchies of Schleswig and
Confederation. Nicholas was
prepared to honor his treaty obligations by offering
limited naval support to the Danes and their Swedish allies, but
was content to
allow
to the fighting
was brought about by the signature of a seven-month armistice at
Malmö in Sweden on
26 August.
General Louis Cavaignac's successful
defeat of the French workers after several
days of street
fighting in
reconciliation between
re-establishment of
diplomatic relations between the two countries in May 1849.
However, the tsar decided to scrap his plans to stand down part of
the Russian
army during the winter months because of his fears that his
brother-in-law, King
Frederick William IV, would not be able to
re-assert his control in
the beginning of
December his anxieties were allayed when the Prussian
parliament was dissolved and a new constitution was promulgated
which restored the ultimate authority of the king.
During the second half of 1848 Nicholas' attention was also
absorbed by events
in the Habsburg monarchy which appeared to be about to disintegrate
into a
number of independent states, as a result of the concessions made
earlier in the
year to
possessions in
beginning of 1848 had
at first been granted and then refused after the fall of
Prince Clemens Metternich in March. Austria's successful
suppression of an
insurrection in
Windischgraetz's equally
swift crushing of an attempted rising in Prague at the
conclusion of the
Slavonic Congress held there in June, at which
represented officially.
Nor did the tsar give any encouragement to the
separatist aspirations of the Serbs and Croats in the Habsburg
monarchy who were enjoined to remain loyal to the emperor. Nicholas had
declined to give military support to Austria in Italy and was concerned about
the government's ability to deal with the situation in Vienna following the
flight of the Emperor Ferdinand I to Innsbruck on May 17, but Count Joseph Radetzky's decisive victory over the Piedmontese
army at Custozza on July 23, followed by the
re-instatement of Count Josip Jelacic
as Ban of Croatia at the end of August and the invasion of Hungary in
mid-September gave the tsar renewed hope that Austria would succeed in solving
its problems without Russian aid. However, there were still lingering doubts
about the situation in Galicia. The decision of the Austrian government to give
Windischgraetz a free hand in restoring order in
When Windischgraetz began his invasion of
Hungary towards the end of December after the formation of a new government led
by Prince Felix Schwarzenberg, the tsar was confident
that the Hungarians would be defeated as easily as the Piedmontese
had been. Despite the tsar's preoccupation with events in western Europe, he
had not forgotten the likely repercussions of these disturbances on the
Christian provinces of the Ottoman Empire, especially the Danubian
Principalities and Serbia, where Russia enjoyed a special position as a result
of the treaties concluded after its wars with Turkey earlier in the nineteenth
century. In April there were disturbances in Moldavia which were soon
suppressed, but in Wallachia a revolutionary
government forced the hospodar to abdicate and
assumed power on June 26. In early July the tsar reluctantly acquiesced in an
occupation of Moldavia by a small Russian intervention force assembled in Bessarabia which had been initiated by his special envoy,
General A.O. Duhamel. However, it remained the tsar's
aim to persuade the Turks to use their troops to restore order and in a
circular issued on 31 July the Russians assured the great powers that their
occupation would only be temporary.By the end of July
the Turks, who had continued to negotiate with the Wallachian
revolutionaries about the future form of government, decided to send in their
troops, while the Wallachians made every effort to
seek support for their cause from Great Britain and France.
In the face of pressure from the Russians, the Turks occupied
Bucharest on September 25 which the Russians, who had growing increasingly
impatient, also occupied on October 14. Despite his earlier assurance that the
Russian occupation would only be temporary, the tsar had decided to remain in
the Danubian Principalities which could be a useful
base for military operations against Transylvania, if Russia were required to
come to the aid of the Habsburg mona rchy. At the end of December 1848 the Russians therefore
began negotiations with the Turks in order to regularize the new situation in
which they found themselves in the Danubian
Principalities. By the Act of Balta Liman of May 1, 1849 various changes were made to the form
of government in Moldavia and Wallachia and it was
agreed that both Russia and Turkey would maintain an occupation force in the
principalities until order had been restored.
The tsar's belief that Russia might be compelled to intervene in
Transylvania
proved to be
justified. In January 1849 Jozef Bem,
the Polish emigré general
whom Kossuth had
appointed to command the Hungarian forces in
Bem's success in
Transylvania was to be matched by that of General Artur
Görgey in Hungary who succeeded in reversing the
earlier victories gained by
Windischgraetz during the first few weeks of 1849. At the
beginning of the year
the Tsar was again forced to reject a second Austrian appeal for
financial
assistance. Despite another victory by Radetzky
at Novara on March 23 over
Piedmont which had denounced the armistice signed in August 1848,
an unwilling Austrian government had no alternative but to appeal to the tsar
to honor his alliance and assist his ally to bring the war with Hungary to a
successful conclusion. On 19 April the tsar, who was on a visit to Moscow over
Easter, took a decision in principle to respond to the Austrian appeal, which
was formally made by the emperor on May 1, by intervening in Hungary on a
massive scale. He was anxious, like Palmerston, that
the Habsburg monarchy should not disintegrate and should retain its
preponderant position in Germany which he did not wish to see united under the
aegis of the liberally-minded Frederick William IV.
The tsar's reluctant decision to intervene was influenced to a
large extent by the
involvement of the Poles in the Hungarian revolt, a fact which was
exploited to
the full by the Austrians. Ever since the revolutions had begun the
tsar worried
about their repercussions in Russia and on May 5, 1849 the members
of the
Petrashevsky group in
Saint Petersburg (who included the young Dostoevsky) were finally arrested
after a year's investigation of their allegedly subversive
activities. The
prospects of the Hungarian forces and their Polish generals Bem
and Dombinski threatening Russian Poland
and Russia's western provinces from
Galicia and Bukovina had transformed a
threat to the stability of the Habsburg
monarchy into a threat to Russia itself.
Assured of the neutrality of Great Britain and France engaged in
the restoration
of order in the
the Russian intervention in Hungary which began with the occupation
of Cracow
and Galicia in May. At the same time Paskevich
in Warsaw agreed to an urgent
request from the Austrians to send a Russian division under General
F.S.
Panyutin to Moravia
to assist in the defence of Vienna against a possible
Hungarian attack.
On May 21 the tsar and Francis Joseph met in Warsaw to discuss the
details of
the intervention
and the situation in
between Prussia and Denmark over Schleswig-Holstein and in the face
of a warning from the tsar that a Prussian attack on Russian naval units
assisting the Danes in the Baltic would be treated as a casus
belli the Prussian king eventually
acquiesced in the signing of a second armistice on July 10.
On June 17 the huge Russian intervention force of 190 000 men began
its
operation. While the main army under Field-Marshal I. F. Paskevich entered
northern Hungary (Slovakia) through the Dukla
pass in the Carpathians, other
units under General
M.M. Grotenhjelm and General A.N. Lüders
entered northern and southern
Throughout the campaign the Russian army suffered severely from
disease, especially cholera, and out of a total number of 11 871 Russian deaths
only one in twelve was caused by enemy action. After the campaign was over the
tsar attempted, on the basis of existing treaties, to obtain the extradition
from Turkey of the leading Poles who had sought refuge there, while Austria
also attempted to secure the extradition of many of the Hungarians. On this occasion Palmerston, together
with the French government, now headed by Louis Napoleon, decided to support
the Turks in their refusal of the demands of the Austrians and Russians, who
had broken off diplomatic relations, by sending naval vessels to the eastern
As 1849 drew to a close, it seemed to many
contemporary observers that the tsar was the arbiter of the destinies of
History
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