Years of life of Empress Catherine 2. Who ruled in Russia after Catherine II

(1729-1796) Russian empress from 1762 to 1796

Her real name was Sophia Frederika Augusta of Anhalt-Zerbst. In 1743, she came to Russia from Stettin to become the wife of the nephew of Empress Anna Ioannovna Peter of Holstein-Gottorp - the future Tsar Peter III. On August 21, 1745, their marriage took place, and she became Grand Duchess Catherine.

Until the end of her reign, the Empress never managed to combine two incompatible desires: to become famous throughout the world for her liberal views and reforms and not to allow any freedoms in Russia. These contradictions of hers were especially evident in her relations with educated people. She instructed Ekaterina Dashkova, one of the most educated women of that time, to develop a project for the creation of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and supported secular education. At the same time, it was during her reign that already strict censorship was established.

The Empress was afraid of the slightest manifestation of free-thinking and severely punished A.N. Radishchev for his criticism of the existing order, set out in the book “Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow”, at the same time punishing N.I. Novikov, who dared to publish this book.

At the end of her reign, Catherine II ordered the dissolution of all Masonic lodges. N.I. Novikov was arrested and imprisoned in the Shlisselburg fortress, Prince Trubetskoy was exiled.

Nevertheless, Catherine II was an extraordinary and bright personality, a brilliant publicist and writer. She wrote a lot on a variety of topics, leaving behind personal “Notes” and numerous letters. Her correspondence with Diderot and Voltaire is especially interesting. True, she wrote mainly in French, since Russian remained for her the language of everyday communication.

At birth, the girl was given the name Sophia Frederica Augusta. Her father, Christian August, was the prince of the small German principality of Anhalt-Zerbst, but gained fame for his achievements in the military field. The mother of the future Catherine, Princess Johanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp, cared little about raising her daughter. Therefore, the girl was raised by a governess.

Catherine was educated by tutors, and among them, a chaplain who gave the girl religious lessons. However, the girl had her own point of view on many questions. She also mastered three languages: German, French and Russian.

Entry into the Russian royal family

In 1744, the girl travels with her mother to Russia. The German princess becomes engaged to Grand Duke Peter and converts to Orthodoxy, receiving the name Catherine at baptism.

On August 21, 1745, Catherine marries the heir to the throne of Russia, becoming the crown princess. However, family life turned out to be far from happy.

After many childless years, Catherine II finally produced an heir. Her son Pavel was born on September 20, 1754. And then heated debate flared up about who really was the boy’s father. Be that as it may, Catherine hardly saw her first-born: soon after birth, Empress Elizabeth took the child to be raised.

Seizing the throne

On December 25, 1761, after the death of Empress Elizabeth, Peter III ascended the throne, and Catherine became the emperor's wife. However, it has little to do with government affairs. Peter and his wife were openly cruel. Soon, due to the stubborn support he provided to Prussia, Peter became alien to many courtiers, secular and military officials. The founder of what today we call progressive internal state reforms, Peter also quarreled with the Orthodox Church, taking away church lands. And now, just six months later, Peter was overthrown from the throne as a result of a conspiracy that Catherine entered into with her lover, Russian lieutenant Grigory Orlov, and a number of other persons, with the aim of seizing power. She successfully manages to force her husband to abdicate the throne and take control of the empire into her own hands. A few days after his abdication, in one of his estates, in Ropsha, Peter was strangled. What role Catherine played in the murder of her husband is unclear to this day.

Fearing that she herself will be overthrown by opposing forces, Catherine tries with all her might to win the favor of the troops and the church. She recalls the troops sent by Peter to the war against Denmark and in every possible way encourages and rewards those who come over to her side. She even compares herself to her revered Peter the Great, declaring that she is following in his footsteps.

Governing body

Despite the fact that Catherine is a supporter of absolutism, she still makes a number of attempts to carry out social and political reforms. She issues a document, “The Mandate,” in which she proposes to abolish the death penalty and torture, and also proclaims the equality of all people. However, the Senate responds with a decisive refusal to any attempts to change the feudal system.

After completing work on the “Instruction,” in 1767, Catherine convened representatives of various social and economic strata of the population to form the Statutory Commission. The commission did not produce a legislative body, but its convening went down in history as the first time when representatives of the Russian people from all over the empire had the opportunity to express their ideas about the needs and problems of the country.

Later, in 1785, Catherine issues the Charter of the Nobility, in which she radically changes policy and challenges the power of the upper classes, under which most of the masses are under the yoke of serfdom.

Catherine, a religious skeptic by nature, seeks to subjugate the Orthodox Church to her power. At the beginning of her reign, she returned lands and property to the church, but soon changed her views. The Empress declares the church part of the state, and therefore all her possessions, including more than a million serfs, become the property of the empire and are subject to taxes.

Foreign policy

During her reign, Catherine expanded the borders of the Russian Empire. She makes significant acquisitions in Poland, having previously placed her former lover, the Polish prince Stanislav Poniatowski, on the throne of the kingdom. According to the agreement of 1772, Catherine gives part of the lands of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to Prussia and Austria, while the eastern part of the kingdom, where many Russian Orthodox Christians live, goes to the Russian Empire.

But such actions are extremely disapproving of Turkey. In 1774, Catherine made peace with the Ottoman Empire, according to which the Russian state received new lands and access to the Black Sea. One of the heroes of the Russian-Turkish war was Grigory Potemkin, a reliable adviser and lover of Catherine.

Potemkin, a loyal supporter of the empress's policies, himself proved himself to be an outstanding statesman. It was he who, in 1783, convinced Catherine to annex Crimea to the empire, thereby strengthening her position on the Black Sea.

Love for education and art

At the time of Catherine’s accession to the throne, Russia was a backward and provincial state for Europe. The Empress is doing her best to change this opinion, expanding opportunities for new ideas in education and the arts. In St. Petersburg, she founded a boarding school for girls of noble birth, and later free schools were opened in all cities of Russia.

Ekaterina patronizes many cultural projects. She is gaining fame as a zealous art collector, and most of her collection is exhibited at her residence in St. Petersburg, in the Hermitage.

Catherine, a passionate lover of literature, is especially favorable towards the philosophers and writers of the Enlightenment. Endowed with literary talent, the empress describes her own life in a collection of memoirs.

Personal life

The love life of Catherine II became the subject of much gossip and false facts. Myths about her insatiability have been debunked, but this royal lady actually had many love affairs during her life. She could not remarry, since marriage could undermine her position, and therefore she had to wear a mask of chastity in society. But, away from prying eyes, Catherine showed remarkable interest in men.

End of reign

By 1796, Catherine had already enjoyed absolute power in the empire for several decades. And in the last years of her reign, she showed the same liveliness of mind and strength of spirit. But in mid-November 1796, she was found unconscious on the bathroom floor. At that time, everyone came to the conclusion that she had suffered a stroke. 4.3 points. Total ratings received: 55.

Doctor of Historical Sciences M.RAKHMATULLIN.

Over the long decades of the Soviet era, the history of the reign of Catherine II was presented with obvious bias, and the image of the empress herself was deliberately distorted. From the pages of a few publications appears a cunning and vain German princess, who insidiously seized the Russian throne and was most concerned with satisfying her sensual desires. Such judgments are based either on an openly politicized motive, or on the purely emotional memories of her contemporaries, or, finally, on the tendentious intent of her enemies (especially among her foreign opponents), who tried to discredit the empress’s tough and consistent defense of Russia’s national interests. But Voltaire, in one of his letters to Catherine II, called her the “Northern Semiramis”, likening her to the heroine of Greek mythology, whose name is associated with the creation of one of the seven wonders of the world - the Hanging Gardens. Thus, the great philosopher expressed his admiration for the empress’s efforts to transform Russia and her wise rule. This essay attempts to impartially talk about the affairs and personality of Catherine II. “I accomplished my task quite well.”

Crowned Catherine II in all the splendor of her coronation attire. The coronation, according to tradition, took place in Moscow on September 22, 1762.

Empress Elizaveta Petrovna, who reigned from 1741 to 1761. Portrait of the mid-18th century.

Peter I married his eldest daughter, Tsarevna Anna Petrovna, to the Duke of Holstein, Karl-Friedrich. Their son became the heir to the Russian throne, Peter Fedorovich.

Catherine II's mother Johanna Elisabeth of Anhalt-Zerbst, who tried to intrigue secretly from Russia in favor of the Prussian king.

Prussian King Frederick II, whom the young Russian heir tried to imitate in everything.

Science and life // Illustrations

Grand Duchess Ekaterina Alekseevna and Grand Duke Peter Fedorovich. Their marriage turned out to be extremely unsuccessful.

Count Grigory Orlov is one of the active organizers and executors of the palace coup that elevated Catherine to the throne.

The most ardent participation in the coup of June 1762 was taken by the very young princess Ekaterina Romanovna Dashkova.

Family portrait of the royal couple, taken shortly after Peter III ascended the throne. Next to his parents is the young heir Pavel in oriental costume.

Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, in which dignitaries and nobles took the oath to Empress Catherine II.

The future Russian Empress Catherine II Alekseevna, nee Sophia Frederica Augusta, Princess of Anhaltzerbst, was born on April 21 (May 2), 1729 in the then provincial Stettin (Prussia). Her father, the unremarkable Prince Christian August, made a good career through devoted service to the Prussian king: regiment commander, commandant of Stettin, governor. In 1727 (he was then 42 years old) he married the 16-year-old Holstein-Gottorp princess Johanna Elisabeth.

The somewhat eccentric princess, who had an insatiable passion for entertainment and short trips with her numerous and, unlike her, rich relatives, did not put family concerns in first place. Among her five children, her first-born daughter Fikhen (that’s what everyone in the family called Sofia Frederica) was not her favorite - they were expecting a son. “My birth was not particularly joyfully welcomed,” Catherine would later write in her Notes. The power-hungry and strict parent, out of a desire to “knock out her pride,” often rewarded her daughter with slaps in the face for innocent childish pranks and unchildish stubbornness of character. Little Fikhen found solace in her good-natured father. Constantly busy in the service and practically not interfering in the upbringing of his children, he nevertheless became for them an example of conscientious service in the public sphere. “I have never met a more honest person, both in terms of principles and in relation to actions,” Catherine will say about her father at a time when she had already gotten to know people well.

The lack of financial resources did not allow parents to hire expensive, experienced teachers and governesses. And here fate smiled generously on Sofia Frederica. After changing several careless governesses, the French emigrant Elisabeth Cardel (nicknamed Babet) became her kind mentor. As Catherine II later wrote about her, she “knew almost everything without learning anything; she knew all the comedies and tragedies like the back of her hand and was very funny.” The pupil’s heartfelt review paints Babet as “a model of virtue and prudence - she had a naturally exalted soul, a developed mind, an excellent heart; she was patient, meek, cheerful, fair, constant.”

Perhaps the main merit of the clever Kardel, who had an exceptionally balanced character, can be called the fact that she inspired the stubborn and secretive at first (the fruits of her previous upbringing) Fikchen to read, in which the capricious and wayward princess found true pleasure. A natural consequence of this hobby was the precocious girl’s soon-to-be interest in serious works of philosophical content. It is no coincidence that already in 1744, one of the enlightened friends of the family, the Swedish Count Güllenborg, jokingly, but not without reason, called Fickhen a “fifteen-year-old philosopher.” It is curious that Catherine II herself admitted that her acquisition of “intelligence and virtues” was greatly facilitated by the conviction instilled by her mother, “as if I were completely ugly,” which kept the princess from empty social entertainments. Meanwhile, one of her contemporaries recalls: “She was perfectly built, from infancy she was distinguished by a noble bearing and was taller than her years. Her facial expression was not beautiful, but very pleasant, and her open gaze and amiable smile made her whole figure very attractive.”

However, the future fate of Sophia (like many later German princesses) was determined not by her personal merits, but by the dynastic situation in Russia. The childless Empress Elizaveta Petrovna immediately after her accession began to look for an heir worthy of the Russian throne. The choice fell on the only direct successor of the family of Peter the Great, his grandson - Karl Peter Ulrich. The son of Peter I's eldest daughter Anna and Duke of Holstein-Gottorp Karl Friedrich was left an orphan at the age of 11. The prince was educated by pedantic German teachers, led by the pathologically cruel marshal Count Otto von Brümmer. The ducal son, frail from birth, was sometimes kept from hand to mouth, and for any offense he was forced to stand on his knees for hours on the peas, often and painfully whipped. “I order you to be whipped so much,” Brummer began to shout, “that the dogs will lick your blood.” The boy found an outlet in his passion for music, becoming addicted to the pitiful-sounding violin. His other passion was playing with tin soldiers.

The humiliation to which he was subjected day after day produced results: the prince, as contemporaries note, became “hot-tempered, false, loved to brag, and learned to lie.” He grew up to be a cowardly, secretive, capricious beyond measure and a man who thought a lot about himself. Here is a laconic portrait of Peter Ulrich, drawn by our brilliant historian V.O. Klyuchevsky: “His way of thinking and actions gave the impression of something surprisingly half-thought out and unfinished. He looked at serious things with a child’s gaze, and treated children’s undertakings with the seriousness of a mature husband. He looked like a child who imagined himself to be an adult; in fact, he was an adult who remained forever a child."

Such a “worthy” heir to the Russian throne was hastily delivered to St. Petersburg in January 1742 (so that he would not be intercepted by the Swedes, whose king he could also become by his pedigree). In November of the same year, the prince was converted to Orthodoxy against his will and named Peter Fedorovich. But in his soul he always remained a devout German Lutheran, who showed no desire to master the language of his new homeland to any degree. In addition, the heir was not lucky with his studies and upbringing in St. Petersburg. His main mentor, academician Yakov Shtelin, completely lacked any pedagogical talents, and he, seeing the student’s amazing inability and indifference, preferred to please the constant whims of the undergrowth rather than teach him properly the mind.

Meanwhile, 14-year-old Pyotr Fedorovich has already found a bride. What was decisive when the Russian court chose Princess Sofia? The Saxon resident Pezold wrote about this: although she is “from a noble, but such a small family,” she will be an obedient wife without any pretensions to participation in big politics. Elizaveta Petrovna’s elegiac memories of her failed marriage with her mother Sophia’s elder brother, Karl August (shortly before the wedding, he died of smallpox), and the portraits of the pretty princess delivered to the empress, whom everyone “liked at first sight” also played a role in this. "(as Catherine II would write in her Notes without false modesty).

At the end of 1743, Princess Sophia was invited (with Russian money) to St. Petersburg, where she arrived, accompanied by her mother, in February of the following year. From there they headed to Moscow, where the royal court was located at that time, and on the eve of Peter Fedorovich’s birthday (February 9), a very pretty and dressed-up (with the same money) bride appeared before the Empress and the Grand Duke. J. Shtelin writes about Elizaveta Petrovna’s sincere delight at the sight of Sofia. And the mature beauty, stature and greatness of the Russian queen made an indelible impression on the young provincial princess. It was as if the betrothed also liked each other. In any case, the mother of the future bride wrote to her husband that “the Grand Duke loves her.” Fikhen herself assessed everything more soberly: “To tell the truth, I liked the Russian crown more than him (the groom. - M.R.) person".

Indeed, the idyll, if it arose at the beginning, did not last long. Further communication between the Grand Duke and the princess showed a complete dissimilarity in both characters and interests, and in appearance they were strikingly different from each other: the lanky, narrow-shouldered and frail groom was even more inferior compared to the unusually attractive bride. When the Grand Duke suffered from smallpox, his face was so disfigured by fresh scars that Sophia, seeing the heir, could not restrain herself and was frankly horrified. However, the main thing was something else: the stunning infantilism of Pyotr Fedorovich was opposed by the active, purposeful, ambitious nature of Princess Sofia Frederica, who knew her worth, named in Russia in honor of the mother of Empress Elizabeth Ekaterina (Alekseevna). This happened with her adoption of Orthodoxy on June 28, 1744. The Empress gave the convert noble gifts - a diamond cufflink and a necklace worth 150 thousand rubles. The next day, the official betrothal took place, bringing Catherine the titles of Grand Duchess and Imperial Highness.

Assessing later the situation that arose in the spring of 1744, when Empress Elizabeth, having learned about the frivolous attempts of Sophia’s mother, prone to intrigue, Princess Johanna Elizabeth, to act (secretly from the Russian court) in the interests of the Prussian king Frederick II, almost sent her and her daughter back , “to his home” (which the groom, as the bride sensitively perceived, would probably have rejoiced), Catherine expressed her feelings like this: “He was almost indifferent to me, but the Russian crown was not indifferent to me.”

On August 21, 1745, ten days of wedding ceremonies began. Magnificent balls, masquerades, fireworks, a sea of ​​wine and mountains of treats for the common people on Admiralty Square in St. Petersburg exceeded all expectations. However, the newlyweds' family life began with disappointments. As Catherine herself writes, her husband, who had a hearty dinner that evening, “lay down next to me, dozed off and slept safely until the morning.” And so it went on from night to night, from month to month, from year to year. Pyotr Fedorovich, as before the wedding, selflessly played with dolls, trained (or rather, tortured) a pack of his dogs, organized daily shows for an amusing company of court gentlemen of the same age, and at night he enthusiastically taught his wife “gun execution,” bringing her to complete exhaustion. It was then that he first discovered an excessive addiction to wine and tobacco.

It is not surprising that Catherine began to experience physical disgust for her nominal husband, finding solace in reading a wide variety of serious books and horse riding (she used to spend up to 13 hours a day on horseback). As she recalled, the famous “Annals” of Tacitus had a strong influence on the formation of her personality, and the newest work of the French educator Charles Louis Montesquieu “On the Spirit of Laws” became a reference book for her. She was absorbed in studying the works of French encyclopedists and already at that time she was intellectually superior to everyone around her.

Meanwhile, the aging Empress Elizaveta Petrovna was waiting for an heir and blamed Catherine for the fact that he did not appear. In the end, the empress, at the prompting of her confidants, arranged a medical examination of the couple, the results of which we learn from the reports of foreign diplomats: “The Grand Duke was unable to have children due to an obstacle that is eliminated among eastern peoples by circumcision, but which he considered incurable.” The news of this plunged Elizaveta Petrovna into shock. “Struck by this news, like a thunderclap,” writes one of the eyewitnesses, “Elizabeth seemed speechless, could not utter a word for a long time, and finally began to sob.”

However, tears did not prevent the empress from agreeing to an immediate operation, and in case of failure, she ordered to find a suitable “gentleman” to play the role of the father of the unborn child. He became “handsome Serge,” 26-year-old chamberlain Sergei Vasilyevich Saltykov. After two miscarriages (in 1752 and 1753), on September 20, 1754, Catherine gave birth to the heir to the throne, named Pavel Petrovich. True, evil tongues at court almost said out loud that the child should be called Sergeevich. Pyotr Fedorovich, who had by that time successfully recovered from his illness, also doubted his paternity: “God knows where my wife gets her pregnancy from, I don’t really know if this is my child and should I take it personally?”

Time, meanwhile, showed the groundlessness of suspicions. Pavel inherited not only the specific features of Pyotr Fedorovich's appearance, but, more importantly, the features of his character - including mental instability, irritability, a tendency to unpredictable actions and an irrepressible love for the meaningless drill of soldiers.

Immediately after birth, the heir was separated from his mother and placed under the care of nannies, and Sergei Saltykov was sent from Catherine, who was in love with him, to Sweden on an invented diplomatic mission. As for the grand ducal couple, Elizaveta Petrovna, having received the long-awaited heir, lost her former interest in her. With her nephew, because of his unbearable pranks * and stupid antics, she could not stay “even a quarter of an hour without feeling disgust, anger or grief.” For example, he drilled holes in the wall of the room where the aunt-empress received her favorite Alexei Razumovsky, and not only observed what was happening there himself, but also invited “friends” from his entourage to look through the peephole. One can imagine the power of Elizaveta Petrovna’s anger when she learned about the prank. From now on, the Empress Aunt often calls him in her hearts a fool, a freak, or even a “damned nephew.” In such a situation, Ekaterina Alekseevna, who secured an heir to the throne, could calmly reflect on her future fate.

On August 30, 1756, the twenty-year-old Grand Duchess informed the English ambassador to Russia, Sir Charles Herbert Williams, with whom she was in secret correspondence, that she had decided to “perish or reign.” The life goals of young Catherine in Russia are simple: to please the Grand Duke, to please the Empress, to please the people. Recalling this time, she wrote: “Truly, I did not neglect anything in order to achieve this: obsequiousness, humility, respect, the desire to please, the desire to do the right thing, sincere affection - everything on my part was constantly used from 1744 to 1761 I confess that when I lost hope of success in the first point, I redoubled my efforts to complete the last two; it seemed to me that more than once I succeeded in the second, but the third was a success for me in its entirety, without any limitation by any time, and, therefore, I think I have performed my task quite well."

The methods by which Catherine acquired the “power of attorney of the Russians” did not contain anything original and, in their simplicity, corresponded perfectly to the mental attitude and level of enlightenment of the St. Petersburg high society. Let's listen to her herself: “They attribute this to deep intelligence and a long study of my situation. Not at all! I owe this to Russian old women<...>And in ceremonial meetings, and at simple gatherings and parties, I approached old women, sat down next to them, asked about their health, advised what remedies they should use in case of illness, patiently listened to their endless stories about their young years, about current boredom, about frivolity of young people; I myself asked their advice in various matters and then sincerely thanked them. I knew the names of their moseks, lapdogs, parrots, fools; knew when which of these ladies had a birthday. On this day, my valet came to her, congratulated her on my behalf and brought her flowers and fruits from the Oranienbaum greenhouses. Less than two years had passed before the warmest praise for my mind and heart was heard from all sides and spread throughout Russia. In the simplest and most innocent way, I gained great fame for myself, and when the conversation came up about taking the Russian throne, a significant majority found myself on my side.”

On December 25, 1761, after a long illness, Empress Elizabeth Petrovna passed away. Senator Trubetskoy, who announced this long-awaited news, immediately proclaimed the accession to the throne of Emperor Peter III. As the wonderful historian S. M. Solovyov writes, “the answer was sobs and groans throughout the entire palace<...>The majority greeted the new reign gloomily: they knew the character of the new sovereign and did not expect anything good from him." Catherine, even if she had the intention, as she herself recalls, "save the state from that destruction, the danger of which was forced to foresee all the moral and physical qualities of this sovereign." , then, being at that time in the fifth month of pregnancy, she could practically not actively intervene in the course of events.

Perhaps this was for the best for her - during the six months of his reign, Peter III managed to turn the capital’s society and the nobility as a whole against himself to such an extent that he practically opened the way to power for his wife. Moreover, the attitude towards him was not changed either by the abolition of the hated Secret Chancellery, which led to general rejoicing, with its dungeons filled with prisoners with only one notorious cry: “The sovereign’s word and deed!” compulsory public service and giving them freedom to choose their place of residence, occupation and the right to travel abroad. The last act caused such a fit of enthusiasm among the nobility that the Senate even intended to erect a monument made of pure gold to the Tsar-Benefactor. However, the euphoria did not last long - everything was outweighed by the extremely unpopular actions of the emperor in society, which greatly affected the national dignity of the Russian people.

Peter III's deliberately advertised adoration of the Prussian king Frederick II was subjected to angry condemnation. He loudly proclaimed himself his vassal, for which he received the popular nickname “Friedrich’s monkey.” The degree of public discontent jumped especially sharply when Peter III made peace with Prussia and returned to it the lands conquered with the blood of Russian soldiers without any compensation. This step practically nullified all the successes of the Seven Years' War for Russia.

Peter III managed to turn the clergy against himself, since, by his decree of March 21, 1762, they began to hastily implement the decision taken under Elizabeth Petrovna on the secularization of church lands: the treasury, devastated by many years of war, required replenishment. Moreover, the new tsar threatened to deprive the clergy of their usual magnificent vestments, replacing them with black pastoral robes, and to shave off the priests’ beards.

The addiction to wine did not add to the glory of the new emperor. It did not go unnoticed how extremely cynically he behaved in the days of mournful farewell to the late empress, allowing obscene antics, jokes, loud laughter at her coffin... According to contemporaries, Peter III did not have “a more cruel enemy” in these days than himself, because he does not neglect anything that could harm him." This is confirmed by Catherine: her husband “in the whole empire had no more fierce enemy than himself.” As we see, Peter III thoroughly prepared the ground for the coup.

It is difficult to say exactly when the specific outlines of the conspiracy appeared. With a high degree of probability, its occurrence can be attributed to April 1762, when Catherine, after giving birth, received the physical opportunity for real action. The final decision on the conspiracy, apparently, was confirmed after the family scandal that happened in early June. At one of the gala dinners, Peter III, in the presence of foreign ambassadors and about 500 guests, publicly called his wife a fool several times in a row. Then came the order to the adjutant to arrest his wife. And only the persistent persuasion of Prince George Ludwig of Holstein (he was the uncle of the imperial couple) extinguished the conflict. But they did not change the intention of Peter III by any means to free himself from his wife and fulfill his long-standing desire - to marry his favorite, Elizaveta Romanovna Vorontsova. According to reviews from people close to Peter, she “sweared like a soldier, squinted, smelled bad and spat when talking.” Pockmarked, fat, with an exorbitant bust, she was exactly the type of woman that Pyotr Fedorovich liked, who loudly called his girlfriend “Romanova” during drinking sessions. Catherine was threatened with imminent tonsure as a nun.

There was no time left to organize a classic conspiracy with lengthy preparation and thinking through all the details. Everything was decided according to the situation, almost at the level of improvisation, although compensated by the decisive actions of Ekaterina Alekseevna’s supporters. Among them was her secret admirer, Ukrainian Hetman K. G. Razumovsky, at the same time the commander of the Izmailovsky regiment, a favorite of the guards. Those close to Peter III, Chief Prosecutor A. I. Glebov, Field Chief General A. N. Vilboa, Police Director Baron N. A. Korf, as well as Chief General M. N. also showed obvious sympathy for her. The 18-year-old, unusually energetic and girlishly faithful friendship with Catherine, Princess E.R. Dashkova (Peter III’s favorite was her sister), who had extensive connections in the world thanks to her closeness to N.I. Panin and the fact that Chancellor M.I. Vorontsov was her uncle.

It was through the favorite's sister, who did not arouse any suspicion, that officers of the Preobrazhensky Regiment - P. B. Passek, S. A. Bredikhin, brothers Alexander and Nikolai Roslavlev - were recruited to participate in the coup. Through other reliable channels, connections were established with other energetic young guards officers. All of them paved Catherine a relatively easy path to the throne. Among them, the most active and active - “who stood out from the crowd of comrades for his beauty, strength, dash, and sociability” - 27-year-old Grigory Grigorievich Orlov (who had long been in a love affair with Catherine - the boy born to her in April 1762 was their son Alexei). Catherine's favorite was supported in everything by his two equally dashing guards brothers - Alexey and Fedor. It was the three Orlov brothers who were actually the mainspring of the conspiracy.

In the Horse Guards, “everything was directed prudently, boldly and actively” by the future favorite of Catherine II, 22-year-old non-commissioned officer G. A. Potemkin and his same age as F. A. Khitrovo. By the end of June, according to Catherine, her “accomplices” in the guard included up to 40 officers and about 10 thousand privates. One of the main inspirers of the conspiracy was the tutor of Tsarevich Pavel N.I. Panin. True, he pursued goals different from Catherine’s: the removal of Peter Fedorovich from power and the establishment of a regency under his pupil, the young Tsar Pavel Petrovich. Catherine knows about this, and, although such a plan is absolutely unacceptable for her, she, not wanting the fragmentation of forces, when talking with Panin, limits herself to a non-binding phrase: “It is nicer for me to be a mother than the wife of a ruler.”

An incident hastened the fall of Peter III: a reckless decision to start a war with Denmark (with a completely empty treasury) and command the troops himself, although the emperor’s inability to do military work was the talk of the town. His interests here were limited to a love of colorful uniforms, endless drills and the adoption of rude soldierly manners, which he considered an indicator of masculinity. Even the urgent advice of his idol Frederick II - not to go to the theater of military operations before the coronation - had no effect on Peter. And now the guard, spoiled under Empress Elizabeth Petrovna by the free life of the capital, and now, at the whim of the tsar, dressed in the hated Prussian-style uniforms, receives an order to urgently prepare for a campaign that does not at all meet the interests of Russia.

The immediate signal for the start of the conspirators' actions was the accidental arrest on the evening of June 27 of one of the conspirators, Captain Passek. The danger was great. Alexey Orlov and guards lieutenant Vasily Bibikov on the night of June 28 hastily galloped to Peterhof, where Catherine was. The brothers Grigory and Fyodor, who remained in St. Petersburg, prepared everything for a proper “royal” meeting in the capital. At six o’clock in the morning on June 28, Alexey Orlov woke up Catherine with the words: “It’s time to get up: everything is ready for your proclamation.” "Like what?" - says Ekaterina, half asleep. “Passek has been arrested,” was A. Orlov’s answer.

And now the hesitations are cast aside, Catherine and the maid of honor get into the carriage in which Orlov arrived. V.I. Bibikov and the chamberlain Shkurin sit at the back, and Alexey Orlov sits on the box next to the coachman. Five versts from the capital they are met by Grigory Orlov. Catherine transfers to his carriage with fresh horses. In front of the barracks of the Izmailovsky regiment, the guards are delighted to take the oath to the new empress. Then the carriage with Catherine and a crowd of soldiers, led by a priest with a cross, head to the Semenovsky regiment, which greeted Catherine with a thunderous “Hurray!” Accompanied by troops, she goes to the Kazan Cathedral, where a prayer service immediately begins and at the litanies “the autocratic Empress Ekaterina Alekseevna and the heir to the Grand Duke Pavel Petrovich were proclaimed.” From the cathedral, Catherine, already an empress, goes to the Winter Palace. Here, the guardsmen of the Preobrazhensky Regiment, who were a little late and terribly upset by this, joined the two guard regiments. By noon, army units also arrived.

Meanwhile, members of the Senate and Synod and other high officials of the state are already crowding the Winter Palace. Without any delay, they took the oath to the Empress according to a text hastily compiled by the future Secretary of State of Catherine II G. N. Teplov. The Manifesto on Catherine’s accession to the throne “at the request of all our subjects” was also published. Residents of the northern capital are rejoicing; wine flows like a river at public expense from the cellars of private wine merchants. Inflamed by the drink, the common people are having fun and waiting for good deeds from the new queen. But she has no time for them yet. To the exclamations of "Hurray!" The Danish campaign was cancelled. To attract the fleet to his side, a reliable person was sent to Kronstadt - Admiral I. L. Talyzin. Decrees on the change of power were prudently sent to the part of the Russian army located in Pomerania.

What about Peter III? Did he suspect the threat of a coup and what was happening in his inner circle on the ill-fated day of June 28? The surviving documentary evidence clearly shows that he did not even think about the possibility of a coup, confident in the love of his subjects. Hence his disregard for the previously received, admittedly vague, warnings.

Having sat at a late dinner the day before, Peter arrives in Peterhof at noon on June 28 to celebrate his upcoming name day. And he discovers that Catherine is not in Monplaisir - she unexpectedly left for St. Petersburg. Messengers were urgently sent to the city - N. Yu. Trubetskoy and A. I. Shuvalov (one was colonel of the Semenovsky regiment, the other of the Preobrazhensky regiment). However, neither one nor the other returned, swearing allegiance to Catherine without hesitation. But the disappearance of the messengers did not give Peter decisiveness, who from the very beginning was morally crushed by the complete, in his opinion, hopelessness of the situation. Finally, the decision was made to move to Kronstadt: according to a report from the commandant of the fortress P.A. Devier, they were supposedly ready to receive the emperor. But while Peter and his people were sailing to Kronstadt, Talyzin had already arrived there and, to the joy of the garrison, led everyone to the oath of allegiance to Empress Catherine II. Therefore, the flotilla of the deposed emperor (one galley and one yacht) that approached the fortress in the first hour of the night was forced to turn back to Oranienbaum. Peter also did not accept the advice of the elderly Count B. Kh. Minich, returned from exile, to act “like a king”, without delaying an hour, go to the troops in Revel and move with them to St. Petersburg.

And at this time, Catherine once again demonstrates her determination by ordering up to 14 thousand troops with artillery to be drawn to Peterhof. The task of the conspirators who seized the throne is complex and at the same time simple: to achieve the “voluntary” decent abdication of Peter from the throne. And on June 29, General M.L. Izmailov delivers to Catherine a pitiful message from Peter III asking for forgiveness and renouncing his rights to the throne. He also expressed his readiness (if allowed) together with E.R. Vorontsova, adjutant A.V. Gudovich, a violin and his beloved pug to go to live in Holstein, if only he was allocated a boarding house sufficient for a comfortable existence. They demanded from Peter “a written and handwritten certificate” that he renounced the throne “voluntarily and spontaneously.” Peter agreed to everything and humbly declared in writing “to the whole world solemnly”: “I renounce the government of the Russian state for my entire life.”

By noon, Peter was taken under arrest, taken to Peterhof, and then transferred to Ropsha - a small country palace 27 versts from Petersburg. Here he was put “under strong guard” supposedly until the premises in Shlisselburg were ready. Alexey Orlov was appointed as the main “guard.” So, the entire coup, which did not shed a single drop of blood, took less than two days - June 28 and 29. Frederick II later, in a conversation with the French envoy in St. Petersburg, Count L.-F. Segur gave the following review of the events in Russia: “The lack of courage in Peter III ruined him: he allowed himself to be dethroned like a child being sent to bed".

In the current situation, the physical elimination of Peter was the surest and most trouble-free solution to the problem. As if ordered, this is exactly what happened. On the seventh day after the coup, under circumstances that have not yet been fully clarified, Peter III was killed. It was officially announced to the people that Pyotr Fedorovich died from hemorrhoidal colic, which happened “by the will of divine Providence.”

Naturally, contemporaries, as well as historians later, were keenly interested in the question of Catherine’s involvement in this tragedy. There are different opinions on this matter, but they are all based on guesses and assumptions, and there are simply no facts incriminating Catherine of this crime. Apparently, the French envoy Beranger was right when, hot on the heels of the events, he wrote: “I do not suspect in this princess such a terrible soul as to think that she participated in the death of the king, but since the deepest secret will probably always be hidden from the public information about the real author of this terrible murder, suspicion and infamy will remain with the empress."

A. I. Herzen spoke more definitely: “It is very likely that Catherine did not give the order to kill Peter III. We know from Shakespeare how these orders are given - with a glance, a hint, silence.” It is important to note here that all participants in the “accidental” (as A. Orlov explained in his repentant note to the Empress) murder of the deposed emperor not only did not suffer any punishment, but were then superbly rewarded with money and serf souls. Thus, Catherine, willingly or unwillingly, took this grave sin upon herself. Perhaps this is why the empress showed no less mercy towards her recent enemies: practically none of them were not only sent into exile, according to the established Russian tradition, but were not punished at all. Even Peter’s mistress Elizaveta Vorontsova was only quietly installed in her father’s house. Moreover, Catherine II subsequently became the godmother of her first-born. Truly, generosity and forbearance are the faithful weapons of the strong, always bringing them glory and loyal admirers.

On July 6, 1762, the Manifesto signed by Catherine on her accession to the throne was announced in the Senate. On September 22, a solemn coronation took place in Moscow, which greeted her coolly. Thus began the 34-year reign of Catherine II.

Starting to characterize the long reign of Catherine II and her personality, let us pay attention to one paradoxical fact: the illegality of Catherine’s accession to the throne also had its undoubted advantages, especially in the first years of her reign, when she “had to atone for what that legitimate kings have without labor. This very necessity was partly the spring of her great and brilliant deeds." Not only the famous writer and memoirist N.I. Grech, to whom the above judgment belongs, thought so. In this case, he only reflected the opinion of the educated part of society. V. O. Klyuchevsky, speaking about the tasks facing Catherine, who took, but did not receive, power by law, and noting the extreme confusion of the situation in Russia after the coup, emphasized the same point: “The power seized always has the character of a bill of exchange, according to which are waiting for payment, and according to the mood of Russian society, Catherine had to justify various and discordant expectations.” Looking ahead, let's say that this bill was repaid on time.

Historical literature has long noted the main contradiction of Catherine’s “age of Enlightenment” (though not shared by all experts): the empress “wanted so much enlightenment and such light that she would not be afraid of its “inevitable consequences.” In other words, Catherine II found herself faced with an explosive dilemma: enlightenment or slavery? And since she never resolved this problem, leaving serfdom intact, it seemed to give rise to subsequent bewilderment as to why she did not do this. But the above formula (“enlightenment - slavery”) causes natural questions: were there appropriate conditions in Russia at that time for the abolition of “slavery” and did the society of that time realize the need for a radical change in social relations in the country? Let’s try to answer them.

In determining the course of her domestic policy, Catherine relied primarily on the book knowledge she acquired. But not only. At first, the empress’s transformative fervor was fueled by her initial assessment of Russia as “an unplowed country,” where it was best to carry out all sorts of reforms. That is why on August 8, 1762, only in the sixth week of her reign, Catherine II, by a special decree, confirmed the March decree of Peter III banning the purchase of serfs by industrialists. Owners of factories and mines must henceforth be content with the labor of civilian workers paid under a contract. It seems that she generally had the intention of abolishing forced labor and ridding the country of the “shame of slavery,” as required by the spirit of Montesquieu’s teachings. But her intention was not yet strong enough to decide on such a revolutionary step. In addition, Catherine did not yet have any complete understanding of Russian reality. On the other hand, as one of the smartest people of Pushkin’s era, Prince P. A. Vyazemsky, noted, when the actions of Catherine II had not yet become “a legend of ancient times,” she “loved reforms, but gradual ones, transformations, but not steep ones,” without breaking.

By 1765, Catherine II came to the idea of ​​​​the need to convene the Statutory Commission to bring the existing legislation “into better order” and in order to reliably find out “the needs and sensitive shortcomings of our people.” Let us recall that attempts to convene the current legislative body - the Legislative Commission - have been made more than once before, but all of them, for various reasons, ended in failure. Taking this into account, Catherine, endowed with a remarkable mind, resorted to an act unprecedented in the history of Russia: she personally drew up a special “Order”, which was a detailed program of action for the Commission.

As follows from a letter to Voltaire, she believed that the Russian people are “excellent soil on which good seed grows quickly; but we also need axioms that are indisputably recognized as true.” And these axioms are known - the ideas of the Enlightenment, which she laid as the basis for the new Russian legislation. Even V. O. Klyuchevsky specifically highlighted the main condition for the implementation of Catherine’s transformative plans, which she briefly outlined in her “Instructions”: “Russia is a European power; Peter I, introducing European morals and customs among the European people, found such conveniences as "I didn't expect it myself. The conclusion followed naturally: the axioms, which represent the last and best fruit of European thought, will find the same convenience in this people."

In the literature about the “Nakaz”, there has long been an opinion about the purely compilative nature of this main Catherine’s political work. When justifying such judgments, they usually refer to her own words spoken to the French philosopher and educator D'Alembert: “You will see how there I robbed President Montesquieu for the benefit of my empire, without naming him.” Indeed, from the 526 articles of the “Nakaz”, divided into 20 chapters, 294 go back to the work of the famous French educator Montesquieu “On the Spirit of Laws”, and 108 - to the work of the Italian legal scholar Cesare Beccaria “On Crimes and Punishments". Catherine also widely used the works of other European thinkers. However, this was not a simple translation into the Russian style of the works of famous authors, but their creative rethinking, an attempt to apply the ideas contained in them to Russian reality.

(To be continued.)

Coronation:

Predecessor:

Successor:

Religion:

Orthodoxy

Birth:

Buried:

Peter and Paul Cathedral, St. Petersburg

Dynasty:

Askania (by birth) / Romanov (by marriage)

Christian Augustus of Anhalt-Zerbst

Johanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp

Pavel I Petrovich

Autograph:

Origin

Domestic policy

Imperial Council and transformation of the Senate

Stacked commission

Provincial reform

Liquidation of the Zaporozhye Sich

Economic policy

Social politics

National politics

Legislation on estates

Religious politics

Domestic political problems

Sections of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

Relations with Sweden

Relations with other countries

Development of culture and art

Features of personal life

Catherine in art

In literature

In fine arts

Monuments

Catherine on coins and banknotes

Interesting Facts

(Ekaterina Alekseevna; at birth Sophia Frederica Augusta of Anhalt-Zerbst, German Sophie Auguste Friederike von Anhalt-Zerbst-Dornburg) - April 21 (May 2), 1729, Stettin, Prussia - November 6 (17), 1796, Winter Palace, St. Petersburg) - Empress of All Russia (1762-1796). The period of her reign is often considered the golden age of the Russian Empire.

Origin

Sophia Frederika Augusta of Anhalt-Zerbst was born on April 21 (May 2), 1729 in the German Pomeranian city of Stettin (now Szczecin in Poland). Father, Christian August of Anhalt-Zerbst, came from the Zerbst-Dorneburg line of the Anhalt house and was in the service of the Prussian king, was a regimental commander, commandant, then governor of the city of Stettin, where the future empress was born, ran for duke of Courland, but unsuccessfully , ended his service as a Prussian field marshal. Mother - Johanna Elisabeth, from the Holstein-Gottorp family, was a cousin of the future Peter III. Maternal uncle Adolf Friedrich (Adolf Fredrik) was King of Sweden from 1751 (elected heir in 1743). The ancestry of Catherine II's mother goes back to Christian I, King of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, first Duke of Schleswig-Holstein and founder of the Oldenburg dynasty.

Childhood, education and upbringing

The Duke of Zerbst's family was not rich; Catherine was educated at home. She studied German and French, dance, music, the basics of history, geography, and theology. She was brought up in strictness. She grew up a playful, inquisitive, playful and even troublesome girl, she loved to play pranks and flaunt her courage in front of the boys, with whom she easily played on the streets of Stetin. Her parents did not burden her with her upbringing and did not stand on ceremony when expressing their displeasure. Her mother called her Ficken as a child. Figchen- comes from the name Frederica, that is, “little Frederica”).

In 1744, the Russian Empress Elizaveta Petrovna and her mother were invited to Russia for subsequent marriage with the heir to the throne, Grand Duke Peter Fedorovich, the future Emperor Peter III and her second cousin. Immediately after arriving in Russia, she began to study the Russian language, history, Orthodoxy, and Russian traditions, as she sought to become more fully acquainted with Russia, which she perceived as a new homeland. Among her teachers are the famous preacher Simon Todorsky (teacher of Orthodoxy), the author of the first Russian grammar Vasily Adadurov (teacher of the Russian language) and choreographer Lange (dance teacher). Soon she fell ill with pneumonia, and her condition was so serious that her mother suggested bringing a Lutheran pastor. Sofia, however, refused and sent for Simon of Todor. This circumstance added to her popularity at the Russian court. On June 28 (July 9), 1744, Sofia Frederica Augusta converted from Lutheranism to Orthodoxy and received the name Ekaterina Alekseevna (the same name and patronymic as Elizabeth’s mother, Catherine I), and the next day she was engaged to the future emperor.

Marriage to the heir to the Russian throne

On August 21 (September 1), 1745, at the age of sixteen, Catherine was married to Pyotr Fedorovich, who was 17 years old and who was her second cousin. During the first years of their marriage, Peter was not at all interested in his wife, and there was no marital relationship between them. Catherine will later write about this:

I saw very well that the Grand Duke did not love me at all; two weeks after the wedding, he told me that he was in love with the maiden Carr, the maid of honor of the empress. He told Count Divier, his chamberlain, that there was no comparison between this girl and me. Divier argued the opposite, and he became angry with him; this scene took place almost in my presence, and I saw this quarrel. To tell the truth, I told myself that with this man I would certainly be very unhappy if I succumbed to the feeling of love for him, for which they paid so poorly, and that there would be no reason to die of jealousy without any benefit for anyone.

So, out of pride, I tried to force myself not to be jealous of a person who does not love me, but in order not to be jealous of him, there was no choice but not to love him. If he wanted to be loved, it would not be difficult for me: I was naturally inclined and accustomed to fulfilling my duties, but for this I would need to have a husband with common sense, and mine did not have this.

Ekaterina continues to educate herself. She reads books on history, philosophy, jurisprudence, works by Voltaire, Montesquieu, Tacitus, Bayle, and a large amount of other literature. The main entertainment for her was hunting, horse riding, dancing and masquerades. The absence of marital relations with the Grand Duke contributed to the appearance of lovers for Catherine. Meanwhile, Empress Elizabeth expressed dissatisfaction with the lack of children of the spouses.

Finally, after two unsuccessful pregnancies, on September 20 (October 1), 1754, Catherine gave birth to a son, who was immediately taken away from her by the will of the reigning Empress Elizabeth Petrovna, they call him Pavel (the future Emperor Paul I) and are deprived of the opportunity to raise him, allowing him to be seen only occasionally. A number of sources claim that Paul’s true father was Catherine’s lover S.V. Saltykov (there is no direct statement about this in the “Notes” of Catherine II, but they are also often interpreted this way). Others say that such rumors are unfounded, and that Peter underwent an operation that eliminated a defect that made conception impossible. The question of paternity also aroused interest among society.

After the birth of Pavel, relations with Peter and Elizaveta Petrovna completely deteriorated. Peter called his wife “spare madam” and openly took mistresses, however, without preventing Catherine from doing the same, who during this period developed a relationship with Stanislav Poniatowski, the future king of Poland, which arose thanks to the efforts of the English ambassador Sir Charles Hanbury Williams. On December 9 (20), 1758, Catherine gave birth to her daughter Anna, which caused strong dissatisfaction with Peter, who said at the news of a new pregnancy: “God knows why my wife became pregnant again! I’m not at all sure if this child is from me and whether I should take it personally.” At this time, Elizaveta Petrovna’s condition worsened. All this made the prospect of Catherine’s expulsion from Russia or her imprisonment in a monastery real. The situation was aggravated by the fact that Catherine’s secret correspondence with the disgraced Field Marshal Apraksin and the British Ambassador Williams, dedicated to political issues, was revealed. Her previous favorites were removed, but a circle of new ones began to form: Grigory Orlov and Dashkova.

The death of Elizabeth Petrovna (December 25, 1761 (January 5, 1762)) and the accession to the throne of Peter Fedorovich under the name of Peter III further alienated the spouses. Peter III began to live openly with his mistress Elizaveta Vorontsova, settling his wife at the other end of the Winter Palace. When Catherine became pregnant from Orlov, this could no longer be explained by an accidental conception from her husband, since communication between the spouses had stopped completely by that time. Catherine hid her pregnancy, and when the time came to give birth, her devoted valet Vasily Grigorievich Shkurin set fire to his house. A lover of such spectacles, Peter and his court left the palace to look at the fire; At this time, Catherine gave birth safely. This is how Alexey Bobrinsky was born, to whom his brother Pavel I subsequently awarded the title of count.

Coup of June 28, 1762

Having ascended the throne, Peter III carried out a number of actions that caused a negative attitude towards him from the officer corps. Thus, he concluded an unfavorable agreement for Russia with Prussia, while Russia won a number of victories over it during the Seven Years' War and returned the lands captured by the Russians to it. At the same time, he intended, in alliance with Prussia, to oppose Denmark (Russia’s ally), in order to return Schleswig, which it had taken from Holstein, and he himself intended to go on a campaign at the head of the guard. Peter announced the sequestration of the property of the Russian Church, the abolition of monastic land ownership, and shared with those around him plans for the reform of church rituals. Supporters of the coup also accused Peter III of ignorance, dementia, dislike for Russia, and complete inability to rule. Against his background, Catherine looked favorably - an intelligent, well-read, pious and benevolent wife, subjected to persecution by her husband.

After the relationship with her husband completely deteriorated, and dissatisfaction with the emperor on the part of the guard intensified, Catherine decided to participate in the coup. Her comrades-in-arms, the main of whom were the Orlov brothers, Potemkin and Khitrovo, began campaigning in the guards units and won them over to their side. The immediate cause of the start of the coup was rumors about the arrest of Catherine and the discovery and arrest of one of the participants in the conspiracy, Lieutenant Passek.

Early in the morning of June 28 (July 9), 1762, while Peter III was in Oranienbaum, Catherine, accompanied by Alexei and Grigory Orlov, arrived from Peterhof to St. Petersburg, where the guards units swore allegiance to her. Peter III, seeing the hopelessness of resistance, abdicated the throne the next day, was taken into custody and died in early July under unclear circumstances.

After her husband's abdication, Ekaterina Alekseevna ascended the throne as reigning empress with the name of Catherine II, publishing a manifesto in which the grounds for the removal of Peter were indicated as an attempt to change the state religion and peace with Prussia. To justify her own rights to the throne (and not the heir to Paul), Catherine referred to “the desire of all Our loyal subjects, obvious and unfeigned.” On September 22 (October 3), 1762, she was crowned in Moscow.

The reign of Catherine II: general information

In her memoirs, Catherine characterized the state of Russia at the beginning of her reign as follows:

The Empress formulated the tasks facing the Russian monarch as follows:

  1. The nation that is to be governed must be enlightened.
  2. It is necessary to introduce good order in the state, support society and force it to comply with the laws.
  3. It is necessary to establish a good and accurate police force in the state.
  4. It is necessary to promote the flourishing of the state and make it abundant.
  5. It is necessary to make the state formidable in itself and inspiring respect among its neighbors.

The policy of Catherine II was characterized by progressive development, without sharp fluctuations. Upon her accession to the throne, she carried out a number of reforms - judicial, administrative, provincial, etc. The territory of the Russian state increased significantly due to the annexation of fertile southern lands - Crimea, the Black Sea region, as well as the eastern part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, etc. The population increased from 23.2 million ( in 1763) to 37.4 million (in 1796), Russia became the most populous European country (it accounted for 20% of the European population). Catherine II formed 29 new provinces and built about 144 cities. As Klyuchevsky wrote:

The Russian economy continued to remain agricultural. The share of the urban population in 1796 was 6.3%. At the same time, a number of cities were founded (Tiraspol, Grigoriopol, etc.), iron smelting more than doubled (for which Russia took 1st place in the world), and the number of sailing and linen manufactories increased. In total, by the end of the 18th century. there were 1,200 large enterprises in the country (in 1767 there were 663). The export of Russian goods to other European countries has increased significantly, including through the established Black Sea ports.

Catherine II established a loan bank and introduced paper money into circulation.

Domestic policy

Catherine’s commitment to the ideas of the Enlightenment determined the nature of her domestic policy and the direction of reforming various institutions of the Russian state. The term “enlightened absolutism” is often used to characterize the domestic policy of Catherine’s time. According to Catherine, based on the works of the French philosopher Montesquieu, the vast Russian spaces and the severity of the climate determine the pattern and necessity of autocracy in Russia. Based on this, under Catherine, the autocracy was strengthened, the bureaucratic apparatus was strengthened, the country was centralized and the management system was unified. Their main idea was a critique of the outgoing feudal society. They defended the idea that every person is born free, and advocated the elimination of medieval forms of exploitation and oppressive forms of government.

Soon after the coup, statesman N.I. Panin proposed creating an Imperial Council: 6 or 8 senior dignitaries rule together with the monarch (as was the case in 1730). Catherine rejected this project.

According to another Panin project, the Senate was transformed - December 15. 1763 It was divided into 6 departments, headed by chief prosecutors, and the prosecutor general became its head. Each department had certain powers. The general powers of the Senate were reduced; in particular, it lost legislative initiative and became a body for monitoring the activities of the state apparatus and the highest court. The center of legislative activity moved directly to Catherine and her office with secretaries of state.

Stacked commission

An attempt was made to convene the Statutory Commission, which would systematize the laws. The main goal is to clarify the people's needs to carry out comprehensive reforms.

More than 600 deputies took part in the commission, 33% of them were elected from the nobility, 36% from the townspeople, which also included nobles, 20% from the rural population (state peasants). The interests of the Orthodox clergy were represented by a deputy from the Synod.

As a guiding document for the 1767 Commission, the Empress prepared the “Nakaz” - a theoretical justification for enlightened absolutism.

The first meeting was held in the Faceted Chamber in Moscow

Due to the conservatism of the deputies, the Commission had to be dissolved.

Provincial reform

7 Nov In 1775, the “Institution for the management of the provinces of the All-Russian Empire” was adopted. Instead of a three-tier administrative division - province, province, district, a two-tier administrative division began to operate - province, district (which was based on the principle of the size of the tax-paying population). From the previous 23 provinces, 50 were formed, each of which was home to 300-400 thousand people. The provinces were divided into 10-12 districts, each with 20-30 thousand d.m.p.

Governor-General (viceroy) - kept order in local centers and 2-3 provinces united under his authority were subordinate to him. He had extensive administrative, financial and judicial powers; all military units and commands located in the provinces were subordinate to him.

Governor - stood at the head of the province. They reported directly to the emperor. Governors were appointed by the Senate. The provincial prosecutor was subordinate to the governors. Finances in the province were handled by the Treasury Chamber, headed by the vice-governor. The provincial land surveyor was in charge of land management. The executive body of the governor was the provincial board, which exercised general supervision over the activities of institutions and officials. The Order of Public Charity was in charge of schools, hospitals and shelters (social functions), as well as class judicial institutions: the Upper Zemstvo Court for nobles, the Provincial Magistrate, which considered litigation between townspeople, and the Upper Justice for the trial of state peasants. The criminal and civil chambers judged all classes and were the highest judicial bodies in the provinces.

Captain police officer - stood at the head of the district, leader of the nobility, elected by him for three years. He was the executive body of the provincial government. In counties, as in provinces, there are class institutions: for nobles (district court), for townspeople (city magistrate) and for state peasants (lower reprisal). There was a county treasurer and a county surveyor. Representatives of the estates sat in the courts.

A conscientious court is called upon to stop strife and reconcile those who argue and quarrel. This trial was classless. The Senate becomes the highest judicial body in the country.

Since there were clearly not enough cities and district centers. Catherine II renamed many large rural settlements as cities, making them administrative centers. Thus, 216 new cities appeared. The population of the cities began to be called bourgeois and merchants.

The city was made a separate administrative unit. Instead of the governor, a mayor was placed at its head, endowed with all rights and powers. Strict police control was introduced in cities. The city was divided into parts (districts) under the supervision of a private bailiff, and the parts were divided into quarters controlled by a quarterly overseer.

Liquidation of the Zaporozhye Sich

Carrying out provincial reform in Left Bank Ukraine in 1783-1785. led to a change in the regimental structure (former regiments and hundreds) to the administrative division common to the Russian Empire into provinces and districts, the final establishment of serfdom and the equalization of the rights of the Cossack elders with the Russian nobility. With the conclusion of the Kuchuk-Kainardzhi Treaty (1774), Russia gained access to the Black Sea and Crimea. In the west, the weakened Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was on the verge of partition.

Thus, there was no further need to maintain the presence of Zaporozhye Cossacks in their historical homeland to protect the southern Russian borders. At the same time, their traditional way of life often led to conflicts with the Russian authorities. After repeated pogroms of Serbian settlers, as well as in connection with the Cossacks’ support for the Pugachev uprising, Catherine II ordered the disbandment of the Zaporozhye Sich, which was carried out by order of Grigory Potemkin to pacify the Zaporozhye Cossacks by General Peter Tekeli in June 1775.

The Sich was disbanded, and then the fortress itself was destroyed. Most of the Cossacks were disbanded, but after 15 years they were remembered and the Army of the Faithful Cossacks was created, later the Black Sea Cossack Army, and in 1792 Catherine signed a manifesto that gave them Kuban for eternal use, where the Cossacks moved, founding the city of Ekaterinodar.

Reforms on the Don created a military civil government modeled on the provincial administrations of central Russia.

Beginning of the annexation of the Kalmyk Khanate

As a result of general administrative reforms of the 70s aimed at strengthening the state, it was decided to annex the Kalmyk Khanate to the Russian Empire.

By her decree of 1771, Catherine abolished the Kalmyk Khanate, thereby beginning the process of annexing the Kalmyk state, which previously had vassalage relations with the Russian state, to Russia. The affairs of the Kalmyks began to be supervised by a special Expedition of Kalmyk Affairs, established under the office of the Astrakhan governor. Under the rulers of the uluses, bailiffs were appointed from among Russian officials. In 1772, during the Expedition of Kalmyk Affairs, a Kalmyk court was established - Zargo, consisting of three members - one representative each from the three main uluses: Torgouts, Derbets and Khoshouts.

This decision of Catherine was preceded by the empress’s consistent policy of limiting the khan’s power in the Kalmyk Khanate. Thus, in the 60s, crisis phenomena intensified in the Khanate associated with the colonization of Kalmyk lands by Russian landowners and peasants, the reduction of pasture lands, the infringement of the rights of the local feudal elite, and the intervention of tsarist officials in Kalmyk affairs. After the construction of the fortified Tsaritsyn Line, thousands of families of Don Cossacks began to settle in the area of ​​​​the main Kalmyk nomads, and cities and fortresses began to be built throughout the Lower Volga. The best pasture lands were allocated for arable land and hayfields. The nomadic area was constantly narrowing, in turn this aggravated internal relations in the Khanate. The local feudal elite was also dissatisfied with the missionary activities of the Russian Orthodox Church in Christianizing nomads, as well as with the outflow of people from the uluses to the cities and villages to earn money. Under these conditions, among the Kalmyk noyons and zaisangs, with the support of the Buddhist church, a conspiracy matured with the aim of leaving the people to their historical homeland - Dzungaria.

On January 5, 1771, the Kalmyk feudal lords, dissatisfied with the policy of the empress, raised the uluses, which were roaming along the left bank of the Volga, and set off on a dangerous journey to Central Asia. Back in November 1770, an army was gathered on the left bank under the pretext of repelling the raids of the Kazakhs of the Younger Zhuz. The bulk of the Kalmyk population lived at that time on the meadow side of the Volga. Many Noyons and Zaisangs, realizing the disastrous nature of the campaign, wanted to stay with their uluses, but the army coming from behind drove everyone forward. This tragic campaign turned into a terrible disaster for the people. The small Kalmyk ethnic group lost about 100,000 people along the way, killed in battles, from wounds, cold, hunger, disease, as well as prisoners, and lost almost all their livestock - the main wealth of the people.

These tragic events in the history of the Kalmyk people are reflected in Sergei Yesenin’s poem “Pugachev”.

Regional reform in Estland and Livonia

The Baltic states as a result of the regional reform in 1782-1783. was divided into 2 provinces - Riga and Revel - with institutions that already existed in other provinces of Russia. In Estland and Livonia, the special Baltic order was eliminated, which provided for more extensive rights of local nobles to work and the personality of the peasant than those of Russian landowners.

Provincial reform in Siberia and the Middle Volga region

Siberia was divided into three provinces: Tobolsk, Kolyvan and Irkutsk.

The reform was carried out by the government without taking into account the ethnic composition of the population: the territory of Mordovia was divided between 4 provinces: Penza, Simbirsk, Tambov and Nizhny Novgorod.

Economic policy

The reign of Catherine II was characterized by the development of the economy and trade. By a decree of 1775, factories and industrial plants were recognized as property, the disposal of which does not require special permission from their superiors. In 1763, the free exchange of copper money for silver was prohibited, so as not to provoke the development of inflation. The development and revival of trade was facilitated by the emergence of new credit institutions (state bank and loan office) and the expansion of banking operations (acceptance of deposits for safekeeping was introduced in 1770). A state bank was established and the issue of paper money - banknotes - was established for the first time.

Of great importance was the state regulation of prices for salt introduced by the empress, which was one of the most vital goods in the country. The Senate legislatively set the price of salt at 30 kopecks per pood (instead of 50 kopecks) and 10 kopecks per pood in regions where fish are mass-salted. Without introducing a state monopoly on the salt trade, Catherine hoped for increased competition and, ultimately, an improvement in the quality of the product.

Russia's role in the global economy has increased - Russian sailing fabric began to be exported in large quantities to England, and the export of cast iron and iron to other European countries increased (consumption of cast iron on the domestic Russian market also increased significantly).

Under the new protectionist tariff of 1767, the import of those goods that were or could be produced inside Russia was completely prohibited. Duties of 100 to 200% were imposed on luxury goods, wine, grain, toys... Export duties amounted to 10-23% of the value of exported goods.

In 1773, Russia exported goods worth 12 million rubles, which was 2.7 million rubles more than imports. In 1781, exports already amounted to 23.7 million rubles against 17.9 million rubles of imports. Russian merchant ships began to sail in the Mediterranean Sea. Thanks to the policy of protectionism in 1786, the country's exports amounted to 67.7 million rubles, and imports - 41.9 million rubles.

At the same time, Russia under Catherine experienced a series of financial crises and was forced to make external loans, the size of which by the end of the Empress’s reign exceeded 200 million silver rubles.

Social politics

In 1768, a network of city schools was created, based on a class-lesson system. Schools began to open actively. Under Catherine, the systematic development of women's education began; in 1764, the Smolny Institute for Noble Maidens and the Educational Society for Noble Maidens were opened. The Academy of Sciences has become one of the leading scientific bases in Europe. An observatory, a physics laboratory, an anatomical theater, a botanical garden, instrumental workshops, a printing house, a library, and an archive were founded. The Russian Academy was founded in 1783.

In the provinces there were orders for public charity. In Moscow and St. Petersburg there are educational homes for street children (currently the building of the Moscow Orphanage is occupied by the Peter the Great Military Academy), where they received education and upbringing. To help widows, the Widow's Treasury was created.

Compulsory smallpox vaccination was introduced, and Catherine was the first to receive such a vaccination. Under Catherine II, the fight against epidemics in Russia began to acquire the character of state measures that were directly included in the responsibilities of the Imperial Council and the Senate. By decree of Catherine, outposts were created, located not only on the borders, but also on the roads leading to the center of Russia. The “Border and Port Quarantine Charter” was created.

New areas of medicine for Russia developed: hospitals for the treatment of syphilis, psychiatric hospitals and shelters were opened. A number of fundamental works on medical issues have been published.

National politics

After the annexation of lands that had previously been part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth to the Russian Empire, about a million Jews ended up in Russia - a people with a different religion, culture, way of life and way of life. To prevent their resettlement in the central regions of Russia and attachment to their communities for the convenience of collecting state taxes, Catherine II in 1791 established the Pale of Settlement, beyond which Jews had no right to live. The Pale of Settlement was established in the same place where Jews had lived before - on the lands annexed as a result of the three partitions of Poland, as well as in the steppe regions near the Black Sea and sparsely populated areas east of the Dnieper. The conversion of Jews to Orthodoxy lifted all restrictions on residence. It is noted that the Pale of Settlement contributed to the preservation of Jewish national identity and the formation of a special Jewish identity within the Russian Empire.

In 1762-1764, Catherine published two manifestos. The first - “On the permission of all foreigners entering Russia to settle in whichever provinces they wish and the rights granted to them” - called on foreign citizens to move to Russia, the second defined a list of benefits and privileges for immigrants. Soon the first German settlements arose in the Volga region, reserved for settlers. The influx of German colonists was so great that already in 1766 it was necessary to temporarily suspend the reception of new settlers until those who had already arrived were settled. The creation of colonies on the Volga was increasing: in 1765 - 12 colonies, in 1766 - 21, in 1767 - 67. According to the census of colonists in 1769, 6.5 thousand families lived in 105 colonies on the Volga, which amounted to 23.2 thousand people. In the future, the German community will play a significant role in the life of Russia.

By 1786, the country included the Northern Black Sea region, the Azov region, Crimea, Right Bank Ukraine, the lands between the Dniester and the Bug, Belarus, Courland and Lithuania.

The population of Russia in 1747 was 18 million people, by the end of the century - 36 million people.

In 1726 there were 336 cities in the country, by the beginning. XIX century - 634 cities. In con. In the 18th century, about 10% of the population lived in cities. In rural areas, 54% are privately owned and 40% are state-owned

Legislation on estates

21 Apr In 1785, two charters were issued: “Charter on the rights, liberties and advantages of the noble nobility” and “Charter granted to cities.”

Both charters regulated legislation on the rights and duties of estates.

Letter of grant to the nobility:

  • Already existing rights were confirmed.
  • the nobility were exempt from the poll tax
  • from the quartering of military units and commands
  • from corporal punishment
  • from compulsory service
  • the right to unlimited disposal of the estate was confirmed
  • the right to own houses in cities
  • the right to establish enterprises on estates and engage in trade
  • ownership of the subsoil of the earth
  • the right to have their own class institutions
    • The name of the 1st estate changed: not “nobility”, but “noble nobility”.
    • it was forbidden to confiscate the estates of nobles for criminal offenses; the estates were to be transferred to the legal heirs.
    • nobles have the exclusive right of ownership of land, but the Charter does not say a word about the monopoly right to have serfs.
    • Ukrainian elders were given equal rights with Russian nobles.
      • a nobleman who did not have an officer rank was deprived of the right to vote.
      • Only nobles whose income from estates exceeded 100 rubles could hold elected positions.

Certificate of rights and benefits to cities of the Russian Empire:

  • the right of the elite merchant class not to pay the poll tax was confirmed.
  • replacement of conscription with a cash contribution.

Division of the urban population into 6 categories:

  1. nobles, officials and clergy (“real city dwellers”) - can have houses and land in cities without engaging in trade.
  2. merchants of all three guilds (the lowest amount of capital for merchants of the 3rd guild is 1000 rubles)
  3. artisans registered in workshops.
  4. foreign and out-of-town merchants.
  5. eminent citizens - merchants with a capital of over 50 thousand rubles, rich bankers (at least 100 thousand rubles), as well as the city intelligentsia: architects, painters, composers, scientists.
  6. townspeople, who “support themselves by fishing, handicrafts and work” (who do not have real estate in the city).

Representatives of the 3rd and 6th categories were called “philistines” (the word came from the Polish language through Ukraine and Belarus, originally meaning “city dweller” or “citizen”, from the word “place” - city and “shtetl” - town).

Merchants of the 1st and 2nd guilds and eminent citizens were exempt from corporal punishment. Representatives of the 3rd generation of eminent citizens were allowed to file a petition for conferment of nobility.

Serf peasantry:

  • The decree of 1763 entrusted the maintenance of military commands sent to suppress peasant uprisings to the peasants themselves.
  • According to the decree of 1765, for open disobedience, the landowner could send the peasant not only to exile, but also to hard labor, and the period of hard labor was set by him; The landowners also had the right to return those exiled from hard labor at any time.
  • A decree of 1767 prohibited peasants from complaining about their master; those who disobeyed were threatened with exile to Nerchinsk (but they could go to court),
  • The peasants could not take an oath, take farm-outs or contracts.
  • Trade by peasants reached wide proportions: they were sold in markets, in advertisements on the pages of newspapers; they were lost at cards, exchanged, given as gifts, and forced into marriage.
  • The decree of May 3, 1783 prohibited the peasants of Left-Bank Ukraine and Sloboda Ukraine from passing from one owner to another.

The widespread idea of ​​Catherine distributing state peasants to landowners, as has now been proven, is a myth (peasants from lands acquired during the partitions of Poland, as well as palace peasants, were used for distribution). The zone of serfdom under Catherine extended to Ukraine. At the same time, the situation of the monastic peasants was alleviated, who were transferred to the jurisdiction of the College of Economy along with the lands. All their duties were replaced by monetary rent, which gave the peasants more independence and developed their economic initiative. As a result, the unrest of the monastery peasants ceased.

Clergy lost its autonomous existence due to the secularization of church lands (1764), which made it possible to exist without the help of the state and independently of it. After the reform, the clergy became dependent on the state that financed them.

Religious politics

In general, a policy of religious tolerance was pursued in Russia under Catherine II. Representatives of all traditional religions did not experience pressure or oppression. Thus, in 1773, a law on tolerance of all faiths was issued, prohibiting the Orthodox clergy from interfering in the affairs of other faiths; secular authorities reserve the right to decide on the establishment of churches of any faith.

Having ascended the throne, Catherine canceled the decree of Peter III on the secularization of lands from the church. But already in February. In 1764 she again issued a decree depriving the Church of land property. Monastic peasants numbering about 2 million people. of both sexes were removed from the jurisdiction of the clergy and transferred to the management of the College of Economy. The state came under the jurisdiction of the estates of churches, monasteries and bishops.

In Ukraine, the secularization of monastic properties was carried out in 1786.

Thus, the clergy became dependent on secular authorities, since they could not carry out independent economic activities.

Catherine obtained from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth government equalization of the rights of religious minorities - Orthodox and Protestants.

Under Catherine II, persecution stopped Old Believers. The Empress initiated the return of Old Believers, an economically active population, from abroad. They were specially allocated a place in Irgiz (modern Saratov and Samara regions). They were allowed to have priests.

The free resettlement of Germans to Russia led to a significant increase in the number Protestants(mostly Lutherans) in Russia. They were also allowed to build churches, schools, and freely perform religious services. At the end of the 18th century, there were more than 20 thousand Lutherans in St. Petersburg alone.

Behind Jewish religion retained the right to publicly practice faith. Religious matters and disputes were left to the Jewish courts. Jews, depending on the capital they had, were assigned to the appropriate class and could be elected to local government bodies, become judges and other civil servants.

By decree of Catherine II in 1787, in the printing house of the Academy of Sciences in St. Petersburg, for the first time in Russia, a complete Arabic text was printed Islamic the holy book of the Koran for free distribution to the “Kyrgyz”. The publication differed significantly from European ones, primarily in that it was Muslim in nature: the text for publication was prepared by Mullah Usman Ibrahim. In St. Petersburg, from 1789 to 1798, 5 editions of the Koran were published. In 1788, a manifesto was issued in which the Empress commanded “to establish in Ufa a spiritual assembly of the Mohammedan law, which has under its authority all the spiritual officials of that law, ... excluding the Tauride region.” Thus, Catherine began to integrate the Muslim community into the system of government of the empire. Muslims received the right to build and restore mosques.

Buddhism also received government support in the regions where he traditionally practiced. In 1764, Catherine established the post of Hambo Lama - the head of the Buddhists of Eastern Siberia and Transbaikalia. In 1766, the Buryat lamas recognized Catherine as the incarnation of the Bodhisattva White Tara for her benevolence towards Buddhism and her humane rule.

Domestic political problems

At the time of Catherine II’s accession to the throne, the former Russian Emperor Ivan VI continued to remain alive and imprisoned in the Shlisselburg Fortress. In 1764, Second Lieutenant V. Ya. Mirovich, who was on guard duty in the Shlisselburg fortress, won over part of the garrison to his side in order to free Ivan. The guards, however, in accordance with the instructions given to them, stabbed the prisoner, and Mirovich himself was arrested and executed.

In 1771, a major plague epidemic occurred in Moscow, complicated by popular unrest in Moscow, called the Plague Riot. The rebels destroyed the Chudov Monastery in the Kremlin. The next day, the crowd took the Donskoy Monastery by storm, killed Archbishop Ambrose, who was hiding there, and began to destroy quarantine outposts and houses of the nobility. Troops under the command of G. G. Orlov were sent to suppress the uprising. After three days of fighting, the riot was suppressed.

Peasant War of 1773-1775

In 1773-1774 there was a peasant uprising led by Emelyan Pugachev. It covered the lands of the Yaik army, the Orenburg province, the Urals, the Kama region, Bashkiria, part of Western Siberia, the Middle and Lower Volga region. During the uprising, the Cossacks were joined by Bashkirs, Tatars, Kazakhs, Ural factory workers and numerous serfs from all the provinces where hostilities took place. After the suppression of the uprising, some liberal reforms were curtailed and conservatism intensified.

Main stages:

  • Sep. 1773 - March 1774
  • March 1774 - July 1774
  • July 1774-1775

17 Sep. 1773 The uprising begins. Near the Yaitsky town, government detachments went over to the side of 200 Cossacks, going to suppress the rebellion. Without taking the town, the rebels go to Orenburg.

March - July 1774 - the rebels seize factories in the Urals and Bashkiria. The rebels are defeated near the Trinity Fortress. On July 12, Kazan was captured. On July 17, they were defeated again and retreated to the right bank of the Volga. 12 Sep. 1774 Pugachev was captured.

Freemasonry, Novikov Case, Radishchev Case

1762-1778 - characterized by the organizational design of Russian Freemasonry and the dominance of the English system (Elagin Freemasonry).

In the 60s and especially in the 70s. XVIII century Freemasonry is becoming increasingly popular among the educated nobility. The number of Masonic lodges increases several times, despite even the skeptical (if not to say semi-hostile) attitude towards Freemasonry of Catherine II. The question naturally arises: why did a significant part of Russian educated society become so interested in Masonic teaching? The main reason, in our opinion, was the search by a certain part of the noble society for a new ethical ideal, a new meaning of life. Traditional Orthodoxy could not satisfy them for obvious reasons. During Peter's state reforms, the church turned into an appendage of the state apparatus, serving it and justifying any, even the most immoral, actions of its representatives.

That is why the order of free masons became so popular, because it offered its adherents brotherly love and sacred wisdom based on the undistorted true values ​​of early Christianity.

And, secondly, in addition to internal self-improvement, many were attracted by the opportunity to master secret mystical knowledge.

And finally, the magnificent rituals, attire, hierarchy, romantic atmosphere of the meetings of Masonic lodges could not fail to attract the attention of Russian nobles as people, especially military people, accustomed to military uniforms and paraphernalia, veneration of rank, etc.

In the 1760s A large number of representatives of the highest noble aristocracy and the emerging noble intelligentsia, who, as a rule, were in opposition to the political regime of Catherine II, entered Freemasonry. It is enough to mention Vice-Chancellor N.I. Panin, his brother General P.I. Panin, their great-nephew A.B. Kurakin (1752–1818), Kurakin’s friend Prince. G. P. Gagarin (1745–1803), Prince N. V. Repnin, future Field Marshal M. I. Golenishchev-Kutuzov, Prince M. M. Shcherbatov, secretary N. I. Panin and the famous playwright D. I. Fonvizin and many others.

As for the organizational structure of Russian Freemasonry of this period, its development proceeded in two directions. Most Russian lodges were part of the system of English or St. John's Freemasonry, which consisted of only 3 traditional degrees with elected leadership. The main goal was declared to be the moral self-improvement of man, mutual assistance and charity. The head of this direction of Russian Freemasonry was Ivan Perfilyevich Elagin, appointed in 1772 by the Grand Lodge of London (Old Masons) as the Grand Provincial Master of Russia. After his name, the entire system is partly called Elagin Freemasonry.

A minority of lodges operated under various systems of Strict Observation, which recognized higher degrees and emphasized the achievement of higher mystical knowledge (German branch of Freemasonry).

The exact number of lodges in Russia of that period has not yet been established. Of those that are known, the majority entered (albeit on different conditions) into an alliance led by Elagin. However, this union turned out to be extremely short-lived. Elagin himself, despite the fact that he denied the highest degrees, nevertheless reacted with sympathy to the aspirations of many Masons to find the highest Masonic wisdom. It was at his suggestion that Prince A.B. Kurakin, a childhood friend of Tsarevich Pavel Petrovich, under the pretext of announcing to the Swedish royal house about the new wedding of the heir, went to Stockholm in 1776 with a secret mission to establish contacts with Swedish masons, who were rumored to have this higher knowledge.

However, Kurakin’s mission gave rise to another split in Russian Freemasonry.

MATERIALS ABOUT THE PERSECUTION OF NOVIKOV, HIS ARREST AND CONSEQUENCES

Novikov's investigative file includes a huge number of documents - letters and decrees of Catherine, correspondence between Prozorovsky and Sheshkovsky during the investigation - with each other and with Catherine, numerous interrogations of Novikov and his detailed explanations, letters, etc. The main part of the case fell into its own time in the archive and is now stored in the funds of the Central State Archive of Ancient Acts in Moscow (TSGADA, category VIII, case 218). At the same time, a significant number of the most important papers were not included in Novikov’s file, since they remained in the hands of those who led the investigation - Prozorovsky, Sheshkovsky and others. These originals subsequently passed into private ownership and remained forever lost to us. Fortunately, some of them turned out to be published in the middle of the 19th century, and therefore we know them only from these printed sources.

The publication of materials from the investigation of the Russian educator began in the second half of the 19th century. The first large group of documents was published by the historian Ilovaisky in the Chronicles of Russian Literature, published by Tikhonravov. These documents were taken from a genuine investigative case conducted by Prince Prozorovsky. In those same years, new materials appeared in a number of publications. In 1867, M. Longinov, in his study “Novikov and the Moscow Martinists,” published a number of new documents taken from the “Novikov Case” and reprinted all previously published papers from the investigation case. Thus, Longin’s book contained the first and most complete set of documents, which until today, as a rule, was used by all scientists when studying Novikov’s activities. But this Longinian arch is far from complete. Many of the most important materials were unknown to Longinov and therefore were not included in the book. A year after the publication of his research - in 1868 - in volume II of the "Collection of the Russian Historical Society" Popov published a number of the most important papers given to him by P. A. Vyazemsky. Apparently, these papers came to Vyazemsky from the archives of the chief executioner of Radishchev and Novikov - Sheshkovsky. From Popov’s publication, for the first time, the questions asked by Sheshkovsky to Novikov became known (Longinov knew only the answers), and objections, apparently written by Sheshkovsky himself. These objections are important for us in that they undoubtedly arose as a result of the comments made by Ekaterina to the answers of Novikov, whose case she was personally involved in. Among the questions asked to Novikov was question No. 21 - about his relationship with the heir Pavel (in the text of the question Pavel’s name was not indicated, and it was about a “person”). Longinov did not know this question and the answer to it, since it was not on the list that Longinov used. Popov was the first to publish both this question and the answer to it.

A year later - in 1869 - Academician Pekarsky published the book “Addition to the history of Freemasons in Russia in the 18th century.” The book contained materials on the history of Freemasonry, among many papers there were also documents related to Novikov’s investigative case. Pekarskaya’s publication is of particular value to us, since it characterizes in detail Novikov’s educational publishing activities. In particular, the papers characterizing the history of Novikov’s relationship with Pokhodyashin deserve special attention; from them we learn about Novikov’s most important activity - organizing assistance to starving peasants. The significance of Novikov's investigative case is extremely great. First of all, it contains abundant biographical material, which, given the general paucity of information about Novikov, is sometimes the only source for studying the life and work of the Russian educator. But the main value of these documents lies elsewhere - a careful study of them clearly convinces us that Novikov was persecuted for a long time and systematically, that he was arrested, having previously destroyed the entire book publishing business, and then secretly and cowardly, without trial, he was imprisoned in a dungeon in the Shlisselburg fortress - not for Freemasonry, but for enormous educational activities independent of the government, which became a major phenomenon in public life in the 80s.

The answers to questions 12 and 21, which speak of "repentance" and place hopes in "royal mercy", must be understood historically correctly by the modern reader, with a clear understanding not only of the era, but also of the circumstances under which these confessions were made. We must also not forget that Novikov was in the hands of the cruel official Sheshkovsky, whom contemporaries called the “domestic executioner” of Catherine II. Questions 12 and 21 concerned matters that Novikov could not deny - he published books, he knew about relations with the “special one” - Pavel. Therefore, he testified that he committed these “crimes” “out of thoughtlessness about the importance of this act,” and pleaded “guilty.” It is worth recalling that in similar conditions Radishchev did exactly the same thing when, forced to admit that he really called on the serfs to revolt or “threatened the kings with the scaffold,” he showed: “I wrote this without consideration” or: “I admit my error,” etc. d.

Appeals to Catherine II were of an officially binding nature. So in Radishchev’s answers to Sheshkovsky we will find appeals to Catherine II, which quite obviously do not express the revolutionary’s actual attitude towards the Russian Empress. The same necessity forced Novikov to “throw himself at the feet of Her Imperial Majesty.” A serious illness, a depressed state of mind from the consciousness that not only his entire life’s work had been destroyed, but also his name had been tarnished by slander - all this, of course, also determined the nature of emotional appeals to the empress.

At the same time, it must be remembered that, despite the courage shown by Novikov during the investigation, his behavior differs from the behavior of the first Russian revolutionary. Radishchev drew the firmness so necessary in such circumstances from the proud consciousness of his historical correctness, based his behavior on the morality of the revolutionary forged by him, which called for openly going towards danger, and if necessary, then death, in the name of the triumph of the great cause of liberation of the people. Radishchev fought, and, sitting in the fortress, he defended himself; Novikov made excuses.

Novikov's investigative case has not yet been subjected to systematic and scientific study. Until now, people have resorted to him only for information. Systematic study was undoubtedly hampered by the following two circumstances: a) the extreme dispersion of documents from publications that have long become a bibliographic rarity, and b) the established tradition of printing documents from Novikov’s investigative case surrounded by abundant materials on the history of Freemasonry. In this sea of ​​Masonic papers, the Novikov case itself was lost, the main thing in it was lost - the increase in Catherine’s persecution of Novikov, and him alone (and not Freemasonry), for book publishing, for educational activities, for writings - persecution that ended not only with the arrest and imprisonment in the fortress of a leading public figure hated by the empress, but also the destruction of the entire educational cause (a decree prohibiting the rental of a university printing house to Novikov, the closure of a bookstore, the confiscation of books, etc.).

Russian foreign policy during the reign of Catherine II

The foreign policy of the Russian state under Catherine was aimed at strengthening Russia's role in the world and expanding its territory. The motto of her diplomacy was as follows: “you need to be on friendly terms with all powers in order to always retain the opportunity to take the side of the weaker... to keep your hands free... not to be dragged behind anyone.”

Expansion of the Russian Empire

The new territorial growth of Russia begins with the accession of Catherine II. After the first Turkish war, Russia acquired in 1774 important points at the mouths of the Dnieper, Don and in the Kerch Strait (Kinburn, Azov, Kerch, Yenikale). Then, in 1783, Balta, Crimea and the Kuban region are annexed. The Second Turkish War ends with the acquisition of the coastal strip between the Bug and the Dniester (1791). Thanks to all these acquisitions, Russia is becoming a firm foot on the Black Sea. At the same time, the Polish partitions give Western Rus' to Russia. According to the first of them, in 1773 Russia received part of Belarus (the provinces of Vitebsk and Mogilev); according to the second partition of Poland (1793), Russia received the regions: Minsk, Volyn and Podolsk; according to the third (1795-1797) - Lithuanian provinces (Vilna, Kovno and Grodno), Black Rus', the upper reaches of Pripyat and the western part of Volyn. Simultaneously with the third partition, the Duchy of Courland was annexed to Russia (the act of abdication of Duke Biron).

Sections of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth

The federal Polish-Lithuanian state of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth included the Kingdom of Poland and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania.

The reason for intervention in the affairs of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was the question of the position of dissidents (that is, the non-Catholic minority - Orthodox and Protestants), so that they were equalized with the rights of Catholics. Catherine put strong pressure on the gentry to elect her protege Stanislav August Poniatowski to the Polish throne, who was elected. Part of the Polish gentry opposed these decisions and organized an uprising in the Bar Confederation. It was suppressed by Russian troops in alliance with the Polish king. In 1772, Prussia and Austria, fearing the strengthening of Russian influence in Poland and its successes in the war with the Ottoman Empire (Turkey), offered Catherine to carry out a division of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in exchange for ending the war, otherwise threatening war against Russia. Russia, Austria and Prussia sent in their troops.

In 1772 took place 1st section of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Austria received all of Galicia with its districts, Prussia - Western Prussia (Pomerania), Russia - the eastern part of Belarus to Minsk (Vitebsk and Mogilev provinces) and part of the Latvian lands that were previously part of Livonia.

The Polish Sejm was forced to agree to the division and give up claims to the lost territories: Poland lost 380,000 km² with a population of 4 million people.

Polish nobles and industrialists contributed to the adoption of the Constitution of 1791. The conservative part of the population of the Targowica Confederation turned to Russia for help.

In 1793 there took place 2nd section of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, approved at the Grodno Seim. Prussia received Gdansk, Torun, Poznan (part of the lands along the Warta and Vistula rivers), Russia - Central Belarus with Minsk and Right Bank Ukraine.

In March 1794, an uprising began under the leadership of Tadeusz Kosciuszko, the goals of which were to restore territorial integrity, sovereignty and the Constitution on May 3, but in the spring of that year it was suppressed by the Russian army under the command of A.V. Suvorov.

In 1795 took place 3rd partition of Poland. Austria received Southern Poland with Luban and Krakow, Prussia - Central Poland with Warsaw, Russia - Lithuania, Courland, Volyn and Western Belarus.

October 13, 1795 - a conference of the three powers on the fall of the Polish state, it lost statehood and sovereignty.

Russian-Turkish wars. Annexation of Crimea

An important area of ​​Catherine II’s foreign policy also included the territories of Crimea, the Black Sea region and the North Caucasus, which were under Turkish rule.

When the uprising of the Bar Confederation broke out, the Turkish Sultan declared war on Russia (Russian-Turkish War 1768-1774), using as a pretext the fact that one of the Russian troops, pursuing the Poles, entered the territory of the Ottoman Empire. Russian troops defeated the Confederates and began to win victories one after another in the south. Having achieved success in a number of land and sea battles (the Battle of Kozludzhi, the battle of Ryabaya Mogila, the Battle of Kagul, the Battle of Larga, the Battle of Chesme, etc.), Russia forced Turkey to sign the Kuchuk-Kainardzhi Treaty, as a result of which the Crimean Khanate formally gained independence, but de facto became dependent on Russia. Turkey paid Russia military indemnities in the order of 4.5 million rubles, and also ceded the northern coast of the Black Sea along with two important ports.

After the end of the Russian-Turkish War of 1768-1774, Russia's policy towards the Crimean Khanate was aimed at establishing a pro-Russian ruler in it and joining Russia. Under pressure from Russian diplomacy, Shahin Giray was elected khan. The previous khan, Turkey's protege Devlet IV Giray, tried to resist at the beginning of 1777, but it was suppressed by A.V. Suvorov, Devlet IV fled to Turkey. At the same time, the landing of Turkish troops in the Crimea was prevented and thus an attempt to start a new war was prevented, after which Turkey recognized Shahin Giray as khan. In 1782, an uprising broke out against him, which was suppressed by Russian troops introduced into the peninsula, and in 1783, with the manifesto of Catherine II, the Crimean Khanate was annexed to Russia.

After the victory, the Empress, together with the Austrian Emperor Joseph II, made a triumphal tour of the Crimea.

The next war with Turkey occurred in 1787-1792 and was an unsuccessful attempt by the Ottoman Empire to regain the lands that had gone to Russia during the Russian-Turkish War of 1768-1774, including Crimea. Here, too, the Russians won a number of important victories, both land - the Battle of Kinburn, the Battle of Rymnik, the capture of Ochakov, the capture of Izmail, the battle of Focsani, the Turkish campaigns against Bendery and Akkerman were repulsed, etc., and sea - the battle of Fidonisi (1788), Kerch naval battle (1790), Battle of Cape Tendra (1790) and Battle of Kaliakria (1791). As a result, the Ottoman Empire in 1791 was forced to sign the Treaty of Yassy, ​​which assigned Crimea and Ochakov to Russia, and also pushed the border between the two empires to the Dniester.

The wars with Turkey were marked by major military victories of Rumyantsev, Suvorov, Potemkin, Kutuzov, Ushakov, and the establishment of Russia in the Black Sea. As a result, the Northern Black Sea region, Crimea, and the Kuban region went to Russia, its political positions in the Caucasus and Balkans strengthened, and Russia’s authority on the world stage was strengthened.

Relations with Georgia. Treaty of Georgievsk

Under the king of Kartli and Kakheti, Irakli II (1762-1798), the united Kartli-Kakheti state was significantly strengthened, and its influence in Transcaucasia was growing. The Turks are expelled from the country. Georgian culture is being revived, book printing is emerging. Enlightenment is becoming one of the leading trends in social thought. Heraclius turned to Russia for protection from Persia and Turkey. Catherine II, who fought with Turkey, on the one hand, was interested in an ally, on the other hand, did not want to send significant military forces to Georgia. In 1769-1772, a small Russian detachment under the command of General Totleben fought against Turkey on the side of Georgia. In 1783, Russia and Georgia signed the Treaty of Georgievsk, establishing a Russian protectorate over the kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti in exchange for Russian military protection. In 1795, the Persian Shah Agha Mohammed Khan Qajar invaded Georgia and, after the Battle of Krtsanisi, ravaged Tbilisi.

Relations with Sweden

Taking advantage of the fact that Russia entered into a war with Turkey, Sweden, supported by Prussia, England and Holland, started a war with it for the return of previously lost territories. The troops that entered Russian territory were stopped by General-in-Chief V.P. Musin-Pushkin. After a series of naval battles that did not have a decisive outcome, Russia defeated the Swedish battle fleet in the battle of Vyborg, but due to a storm, it suffered a heavy defeat in the battle of the rowing fleets at Rochensalm. The parties signed the Treaty of Verel in 1790, according to which the border between the countries did not change.

Relations with other countries

In 1764, relations between Russia and Prussia normalized and an alliance treaty was concluded between the countries. This treaty served as the basis for the formation of the Northern System - an alliance of Russia, Prussia, England, Sweden, Denmark and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth against France and Austria. Russian-Prussian-English cooperation continued further.

In the third quarter of the 18th century. There was a struggle of the North American colonies for independence from England - the bourgeois revolution led to the creation of the USA. In 1780, the Russian government adopted the “Declaration of Armed Neutrality”, supported by the majority of European countries (ships of neutral countries had the right of armed defense if they were attacked by the fleet of a warring country).

In European affairs, Russia's role increased during the Austro-Prussian War of 1778-1779, when it acted as a mediator between the warring parties at the Congress of Teschen, where Catherine essentially dictated her terms of reconciliation, restoring balance in Europe. After this, Russia often acted as an arbiter in disputes between German states, which turned directly to Catherine for mediation.

One of Catherine’s grandiose plans in the foreign policy arena was the so-called Greek project - joint plans of Russia and Austria to divide Turkish lands, expel the Turks from Europe, revive the Byzantine Empire and proclaim Catherine’s grandson, Grand Duke Konstantin Pavlovich, as its emperor. According to the plans, a buffer state of Dacia is created in place of Bessarabia, Moldova and Wallachia, and the western part of the Balkan Peninsula is transferred to Austria. The project was developed in the early 1780s, but was not implemented due to the contradictions of the allies and Russia’s independent conquest of significant Turkish territories.

In October 1782, a Treaty of Friendship and Trade with Denmark was signed.

On February 14, 1787, she received the Venezuelan politician Francisco Miranda at the Mariinsky Palace in Kyiv.

After the French Revolution, Catherine was one of the initiators of the anti-French coalition and the establishment of the principle of legitimism. She said: “The weakening of monarchical power in France endangers all other monarchies. For my part, I am ready to resist with all my might. It's time to act and take up arms." However, in reality, she avoided participating in hostilities against France. According to popular belief, one of the real reasons for the creation of the anti-French coalition was to divert the attention of Prussia and Austria from Polish affairs. At the same time, Catherine abandoned all treaties concluded with France, ordered the expulsion of all those suspected of sympathizing with the French Revolution from Russia, and in 1790 she issued a decree on the return of all Russians from France.

During the reign of Catherine, the Russian Empire acquired the status of a “great power”. As a result of two successful Russian-Turkish wars for Russia, 1768-1774 and 1787-1791. The Crimean Peninsula and the entire territory of the Northern Black Sea region were annexed to Russia. In 1772-1795 Russia took part in three sections of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, as a result of which it annexed the territories of present-day Belarus, Western Ukraine, Lithuania and Courland. The Russian Empire also included Russian America - Alaska and the West Coast of the North American continent (the current state of California).

Catherine II as a figure of the Age of Enlightenment

The long reign of Catherine II 1762-1796 was filled with significant and highly controversial events and processes. The “Golden Age of the Russian Nobility” was at the same time the age of Pugachevism, the “Nakaz” and the Statutory Commission coexisted with persecution. And yet it was an integral era, which had its own core, its own logic, its own ultimate task. This was a time when the imperial government was trying to implement one of the most thoughtful, consistent and successful reform programs in Russian history. The ideological basis of the reforms was the philosophy of the European Enlightenment, with which the empress was well acquainted. In this sense, her reign is often called the era of enlightened absolutism. Historians argue about what enlightened absolutism was - the utopian teaching of the enlighteners (Voltaire, Diderot, etc.) about the ideal union of kings and philosophers or a political phenomenon that found its real embodiment in Prussia (Frederick II the Great), Austria (Joseph II), Russia (Catherine II), etc. These disputes are not unfounded. They reflect the key contradiction in the theory and practice of enlightened absolutism: between the need to radically change the existing order of things (class system, despotism, lawlessness, etc.) and the inadmissibility of shocks, the need for stability, the inability to infringe on the social force on which this order rests - the nobility . Catherine II, like perhaps no one else, understood the tragic insurmountability of this contradiction: “You,” she blamed the French philosopher D. Diderot, “write on paper that will endure everything, but I, poor empress, write on human skin, so sensitive and painful." Her position on the issue of the serf peasantry is very indicative. There is no doubt about the empress's negative attitude towards serfdom. She thought more than once about ways to cancel it. But things did not go further than cautious reflection. Catherine II clearly realized that the abolition of serfdom would be received with indignation by the nobles. Feudal legislation was expanded: landowners were allowed to exile peasants to hard labor for any period of time, and peasants were forbidden to file complaints against landowners. The most significant transformations in the spirit of enlightened absolutism were:

  • convening and activities of the Legislative Commission 1767-1768. The goal was to develop a new set of laws, which was intended to replace the Council Code of 1649. Representatives of the nobility, officials, townspeople, and state peasants worked in the Code Commission. For the opening of the commission, Catherine II wrote the famous “Instruction”, in which she used the works of Voltaire, Montesquieu, Beccaria and other educators. It talked about the presumption of innocence, the eradication of despotism, the spread of education, and public welfare. The commission's activities did not bring the desired result. A new set of laws was not developed, the deputies were unable to rise above the narrow interests of the classes and did not show much zeal in developing reforms. In December 1768, the Empress dissolved the Statutory Commission and did not create any more similar institutions;
  • reform of the administrative-territorial division of the Russian Empire. The country was divided into 50 provinces (300-400 thousand male souls), each of which consisted of 10-12 districts (20-30 thousand male souls). A uniform system of provincial government was established: a governor appointed by the emperor, a provincial government that exercised executive power, the Treasury Chamber (collection of taxes, their expenditure), the Order of Public Charity (schools, hospitals, shelters, etc.). Courts were created, built on a strictly class principle - for nobles, townspeople, and state peasants. Administrative, financial and judicial functions were thus clearly separated. The provincial division introduced by Catherine II remained until 1917;
  • the adoption in 1785 of the Charter of the Nobility, which secured all the class rights and privileges of the nobles (exemption from corporal punishment, the exclusive right to own peasants, pass them on by inheritance, sell, buy villages, etc.);
  • adoption of the Charter to the cities, formalizing the rights and privileges of the “third estate” - the townspeople. The city estate was divided into six categories, received limited rights of self-government, elected the mayor and members of the city Duma;
  • the adoption in 1775 of a manifesto on freedom of enterprise, according to which permission from government bodies was not required to open an enterprise;
  • reforms 1782-1786 in the field of school education.

Of course, these transformations were limited. The autocratic principle of governance, serfdom, and the class system remained unshakable. Pugachev's Peasant War (1773-1775), the capture of the Bastille (1789) and the execution of King Louis XVI (1793) did not contribute to the deepening of reforms. They went intermittently in the 90s. and stopped altogether. The persecution of A. N. Radishchev (1790) and the arrest of N. I. Novikov (1792) were not random episodes. They testify to the deep contradictions of enlightened absolutism, the impossibility of unambiguous assessments of the “golden age of Catherine II”.

And yet, it was during this era that the Free Economic Society appeared (1765), free printing houses operated, heated journal debates took place, in which the Empress personally participated, the Hermitage (1764) and the Public Library in St. Petersburg (1795), and the Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens were founded (1764) and pedagogical schools in both capitals. Historians also say that the efforts of Catherine II, aimed at encouraging the social activity of the classes, especially the nobility, laid the foundations of civil society in Russia.

Ekaterina - writer and publisher

Catherine belonged to a small number of monarchs who communicated so intensely and directly with their subjects through the drafting of manifestos, instructions, laws, polemical articles and indirectly in the form of satirical works, historical dramas and pedagogical opuses. In her memoirs, she admitted: “I cannot see a clean pen without feeling the desire to immediately dip it in ink.”

She had an extraordinary talent as a writer, leaving behind a large collection of works - notes, translations, librettos, fables, fairy tales, comedies “Oh, time!”, “Mrs. Vorchalkina’s Name Day,” “The Hall of a Noble Boyar,” “Mrs. Vestnikova with her Family,” “The Invisible Bride” (1771-1772), essays, etc., participated in the weekly satirical magazine “All sorts of things,” published since 1769. The Empress turned to journalism in order to influence public opinion, so the main idea of ​​the magazine was criticism of human vices and weaknesses. Other subjects of irony were the superstitions of the population. Catherine herself called the magazine: “Satire in a smiling spirit.”

Development of culture and art

Catherine considered herself a “philosopher on the throne” and had a favorable attitude toward the Age of Enlightenment, and corresponded with Voltaire, Diderot, and d’Alembert.

During her reign, the Hermitage and the Public Library appeared in St. Petersburg. She patronized various fields of art - architecture, music, painting.

It is impossible not to mention the mass settlement of German families in various regions of modern Russia, Ukraine, as well as the Baltic countries, initiated by Catherine. The goal was the modernization of Russian science and culture.

Features of personal life

Ekaterina was a brunette of average height. She combined high intelligence, education, statesmanship and a commitment to “free love.”

Catherine is known for her connections with numerous lovers, the number of which (according to the list of the authoritative Catherine scholar P. I. Bartenev) reaches 23. The most famous of them were Sergei Saltykov, G. G. Orlov (later count), horse guard lieutenant Vasilchikov, G. A Potemkin (later prince), hussar Zorich, Lanskoy, the last favorite was the cornet Platon Zubov, who became a count of the Russian Empire and a general. According to some sources, Catherine was secretly married to Potemkin (1775, see Wedding of Catherine II and Potemkin). After 1762, she planned a marriage with Orlov, but on the advice of those close to her, she abandoned this idea.

It is worth noting that Catherine’s “debauchery” was not such a scandalous phenomenon against the backdrop of the general debauchery of morals in the 18th century. Most kings (with the possible exception of Frederick the Great, Louis XVI and Charles XII) had numerous mistresses. Catherine's favorites (with the exception of Potemkin, who had state abilities) did not influence politics. Nevertheless, the institution of favoritism had a negative effect on the higher nobility, who sought benefits through flattery to the new favorite, tried to make “their own man” become lovers of the empress, etc.

Catherine had two sons: Pavel Petrovich (1754) (it is suspected that his father was Sergei Saltykov) and Alexei Bobrinsky (1762 - son of Grigory Orlov) and two daughters: Grand Duchess Anna Petrovna (1757-1759, possibly daughter) who died in infancy the future king of Poland Stanislav Poniatovsky) and Elizaveta Grigorievna Tyomkina (1775 - daughter of Potemkin).

Famous figures of Catherine's era

The reign of Catherine II was characterized by the fruitful activities of outstanding Russian scientists, diplomats, military men, statesmen, cultural and artistic figures. In 1873, in St. Petersburg, in the park in front of the Alexandrinsky Theater (now Ostrovsky Square), an impressive multi-figure monument to Catherine was erected, designed by M. O. Mikeshin, sculptors A. M. Opekushin and M. A. Chizhov and architects V. A. Schröter and D.I. Grimm. The foot of the monument consists of a sculptural composition, the characters of which are outstanding personalities of Catherine’s era and associates of the Empress:

  • Grigory Aleksandrovich Potemkin-Tavrichesky
  • Alexander Vasilievich Suvorov
  • Petr Aleksandrovich Rumyantsev
  • Alexander Andreevich Bezborodko
  • Alexander Alekseevich Vyazemsky
  • Ivan Ivanovich Betskoy
  • Vasily Yakovlevich Chichagov
  • Alexey Grigorievich Orlov
  • Gabriel Romanovich Derzhavin
  • Ekaterina Romanovna Vorontsova-Dashkova

The events of the last years of the reign of Alexander II - in particular, the Russian-Turkish War of 1877-1878 - prevented the implementation of the plan to expand the memorial of the Catherine era. D. I. Grimm developed a project for the construction in the park next to the monument to Catherine II of bronze statues and busts depicting figures of the glorious reign. According to the final list, approved a year before the death of Alexander II, six bronze sculptures and twenty-three busts on granite pedestals were to be placed next to the monument to Catherine.

The following should have been depicted full-length: Count N.I. Panin, Admiral G.A. Spiridov, writer D.I. Fonvizin, Prosecutor General of the Senate Prince A.A. Vyazemsky, Field Marshal Prince N.V. Repnin and General A. I. Bibikov, former chairman of the Code Commission. The busts include publisher and journalist N. I. Novikov, traveler P. S. Pallas, playwright A. P. Sumarokov, historians I. N. Boltin and Prince M. M. Shcherbatov, artists D. G. Levitsky and V. L. Borovikovsky, architect A.F. Kokorinov, favorite of Catherine II Count G.G. Orlov, admirals F.F. Ushakov, S.K. Greig, A.I. Cruz, military leaders: Count Z.G. Chernyshev, Prince V M. Dolgorukov-Krymsky, Count I. E. Ferzen, Count V. A. Zubov; Moscow Governor General Prince M. N. Volkonsky, Novgorod Governor Count Y. E. Sivers, diplomat Ya. I. Bulgakov, pacifier of the “plague riot” of 1771 in Moscow P. D. Eropkin, who suppressed the Pugachev riot Count P. I. Panin and I. I. Mikhelson, the hero of the capture of the Ochakov fortress I. I. Meller-Zakomelsky.

In addition to those listed, such famous figures of the era are noted as:

  • Mikhail Vasilievich Lomonosov
  • Leonard Euler
  • Giacomo Quarenghi
  • Vasily Bazhenov
  • Jean Baptiste Vallin-Delamott
  • N. A. Lvov
  • Ivan Kulibin
  • Matvey Kazakov

Catherine in art

To the cinema

  • “The Best Film 2”, 2009. In the role of Catherine - Mikhail Galustyan
  • "Catherine's Musketeers", 2007. In the role of Catherine - Alla Oding
  • “The Secret of the Maestro”, 2007. In the role of Catherine - Olesya Zhurakovskaya
  • “The Favorite (TV series)”, 2005. In the role of Ekaterina - Natalya Surkova
  • “Catherine the Great”, 2005. In the role of Catherine - Emily Brun
  • “Emelyan Pugachev (film)”, 1977; “Golden Age”, 2003. In the role of Catherine - Via Artmane
  • “Russian Ark”, 2002. In the role of Catherine - Maria Kuznetsova, Natalya Nikulenko
  • “Russian Revolt”, 2000. In the role of Catherine - Olga Antonova
  • “Countess Sheremeteva”, 1988; “Evenings on a farm near Dikanka”, 2005. In the role of Catherine - Lydia Fedoseeva-Shukshina
  • “Catherine the Great”, 1995. Catherine Zeta-Jones plays Catherine
  • “Young Catherine” (“Young Catherine”), 1991. In the role of Catherine - Julia Ormond
  • “Anecdotiada”, 1993. In the role of Catherine - Irina Muravyova
  • “Vivat, midshipmen!”, 1991; “Midshipmen 3 (film)”, 1992. In the role of Catherine - Kristina Orbakaite
  • “The Tsar’s Hunt”, 1990. Svetlana Kryuchkova plays the role of Catherine.
  • "Dreams about Russia." In the role of Catherine - Marina Vladi
  • "Captain's daughter". In the role of Ekaterina - Natalya Gundareva
  • “Katharina und ihre wilden hengste”, 1983. Sandra Nova plays the role of Katharina.

black and white movie stars:

  • “Great Catherine”, 1968. In the role of Catherine - Jeanne Moreau
  • “Evenings on a farm near Dikanka”, 1961. Zoya Vasilkova plays the role of Catherine.
  • “John Paul Jones”, 1959. Bette Davis as Catherine
  • “Admiral Ushakov”, 1953. In the role of Catherine - Olga Zhizneva.
  • “A Royal Scandal”, 1945. Tallulah Bankhead plays Catherine.
  • "The Scarlet Empress", 1934. Ch. role - Marlene Dietrich
  • “Forbidden Paradise”, 1924. Pola Negri as Catherine

In the theatre

  • “Catherine the Great. Musical Chronicles of the Times of the Empire", 2008. In the role of Catherine - People's Artist of Russia Nina Shamber

In literature

  • B. Shaw. "Great Catherine"
  • V. N. Ivanov. "Empress Fike"
  • V. S. Pikul. "Favorite"
  • V. S. Pikul. "Pen and Sword"
  • Boris Akunin. "Extracurricular reading"
  • Vasily Aksenov. "Voltairians and Voltairians"
  • A. S. Pushkin. "Captain's daughter"
  • Henri Troyat. "Catherine the Great"

In fine arts

Memory

In 1778, Catherine composed the following humorous epitaph for herself (translated from French):
Buried here
Catherine the Second, born in Stettin
April 21, 1729.
She spent 1744 in Russia, and left
There she married Peter III.
Fourteen years old
She made a triple project - like it
To my spouse, Elizabeth I and the people.
She used everything to achieve success in this.
Eighteen years of boredom and solitude forced her to read many books.
Having ascended the Russian throne, she strove for good,
She wanted to bring happiness, freedom and property to her subjects.
She easily forgave and did not hate anyone.
Indulgent, loved ease in life, cheerful by nature, with the soul of a republican
And with a kind heart - she had friends.
The work was easy for her,
In society and verbal sciences she
I found pleasure.

Monuments

  • In 1873, a monument to Catherine II was unveiled on Alexandrinskaya Square in St. Petersburg (see section Famous figures of the Catherine era).
  • In 1907, a monument to Catherine II was opened in Yekaterinodar (it stood until 1920, and was restored on September 8, 2006).
  • In 2002, in Novorzhevo, founded by Catherine II, a monument was unveiled in her honor.
  • On October 27, 2007, monuments to Catherine II were unveiled in Odessa and Tiraspol.
  • On May 15, 2008, a monument to Catherine II was unveiled in Sevastopol.
  • On September 14, 2008, a monument to Catherine II the Great was unveiled in Podolsk. The monument depicts the Empress at the moment of signing the Decree of October 5, 1781, which reads: “... we most graciously command that the economic village of Podol be renamed a city...”.
  • In Veliky Novgorod, on the Monument “1000th Anniversary of Russia”, among the 129 figures of the most outstanding personalities in Russian history (as of 1862), there is the figure of Catherine II.
    • Catherine made four mistakes in a three-letter word. Instead of “yet” she wrote “ischo”.

Russian Empress Catherine II the Great was born on May 2 (April 21, old style), 1729 in the city of Stettin in Prussia (now the city of Szczecin in Poland), died on November 17 (November 6, old style), 1796 in St. Petersburg (Russia). The reign of Catherine II lasted more than three and a half decades, from 1762 to 1796. It was filled with many events in internal and external affairs, the implementation of plans that continued what was done under. The period of her reign is often called the “golden age” of the Russian Empire.

By Catherine II's own admission, she did not have a creative mind, but she was good at catching every sensible thought and using it for her own purposes. She skillfully selected her assistants, not being afraid of bright and talented people. That is why Catherine’s time was marked by the appearance of a whole galaxy of outstanding statesmen, generals, writers, artists, and musicians. Among them are the great Russian commander, Field Marshal Pyotr Rumyantsev-Zadunaisky, satirist Denis Fonvizin, outstanding Russian poet, Pushkin's predecessor Gabriel Derzhavin, Russian historian-historiographer, writer, creator of "History of the Russian State" Nikolai Karamzin, writer, philosopher, poet Alexander Radishchev , outstanding Russian violinist and composer, founder of Russian violin culture Ivan Khandoshkin, conductor, teacher, violinist, singer, one of the creators of Russian national opera Vasily Pashkevich, composer of secular and church music, conductor, teacher Dmitry Bortyansky.

In her memoirs, Catherine II characterized the state of Russia at the beginning of her reign:

Finances were depleted. The army did not receive pay for 3 months. Trade was in decline, because many of its branches were given over to monopoly. There was no correct system in the state economy. The War Department was plunged into debt; the sea barely held on, being in extreme neglect. The clergy was dissatisfied with the taking of lands from him. Justice was sold at auction, and laws were followed only in cases where they favored the powerful.

The Empress formulated the tasks facing the Russian monarch as follows:

“We need to educate the nation that is to be governed.”

— It is necessary to introduce good order in the state, support society and force it to comply with the laws.

— It is necessary to establish a good and accurate police force in the state.

— It is necessary to promote the flourishing of the state and make it abundant.

“We need to make the state formidable in itself and inspiring respect among its neighbors.”

Based on the assigned tasks, Catherine II carried out active reform activities. Her reforms affected almost all areas of life.

Convinced of the unsuitable management system, Catherine II carried out a Senate reform in 1763. The Senate was divided into 6 departments, losing its significance as the body that manages the state apparatus, and became the highest administrative and judicial institution.

Faced with financial difficulties, Catherine II in 1763-1764 carried out secularization (turning into secular property) church lands. 500 monasteries were abolished, and 1 million peasant souls were transferred to the treasury. Due to this, the state treasury was significantly replenished. This made it possible to ease the financial crisis in the country and pay off the army, which had not received a salary for a long time. The influence of the Church on the life of society has decreased significantly.

From the very beginning of her reign, Catherine II began to strive to achieve the internal structure of the state. She believed that injustices in the state could be eradicated with the help of good laws. And she decided to adopt new legislation instead of the Council Code of Alexei Mikhailovich of 1649, which would take into account the interests of all classes. For this purpose, the Statutory Commission was convened in 1767. 572 deputies represented the nobility, merchants, and Cossacks. Catherine tried to incorporate the ideas of Western European thinkers about a fair society into the new legislation. Having revised their works, she compiled the famous “Order of Empress Catherine” for the Commission. The "Mandate" consisted of 20 chapters, divided into 526 articles. It is about the need for strong autocratic power in Russia and the class structure of Russian society, about the rule of law, about the relationship between law and morality, about the dangers of torture and corporal punishment. The commission worked for more than two years, but its work was not crowned with success, since the nobility and the deputies themselves from other classes stood guard only for their rights and privileges.

In 1775, Catherine II made a clearer territorial division of the empire. The territory began to be divided into administrative units with a certain number of taxable (who paid taxes) population. The country was divided into 50 provinces with a population of 300-400 thousand each, the provinces into districts of 20-30 thousand inhabitants. The city was an independent administrative unit. Elective courts and “trial chambers” were introduced to deal with criminal and civil cases. Finally, “conscientious” courts for minors and the sick.

In 1785, the “Charter of Grant to Cities” was published. It determined the rights and responsibilities of the urban population and the management system in cities. Residents of the city elected a self-government body every 3 years - the General City Duma, the mayor and judges.

Since the time of Peter the Great, when all the nobility owed lifelong service to the state, and the peasantry the same service to the nobility, gradual changes have occurred. Catherine the Great, among other reforms, also wanted to bring harmony to the life of the classes. In 1785, the “Charter of Grant to the Nobility” was published, which was a code, a collection of noble privileges formalized by law. From now on, the nobility was sharply separated from other classes. The freedom of the nobility from paying taxes and from compulsory service was confirmed. Nobles could only be tried by a noble court. Only nobles had the right to own land and serfs. Catherine forbade the subjecting of nobles to corporal punishment. She believed that this would help the Russian nobility get rid of the servile mentality and acquire personal dignity.

These charters streamlined the social structure of Russian society, divided into five classes: nobility, clergy, merchants, petty bourgeoisie (“middle class of people”) and serfs.

As a result of the educational reform in Russia during the reign of Catherine II, a secondary education system was created. In Russia, closed schools, educational homes, institutes for girls, nobles, and townspeople were created, in which experienced teachers were involved in the education and upbringing of boys and girls. In the province, a network of people's non-class two-class schools was created in counties and four-class schools in provincial cities. A classroom lesson system was introduced in schools (uniform start and end dates for classes), teaching methods and educational literature were developed, and unified curricula were created. By the end of the 18th century, there were 550 educational institutions in Russia with a total number of 60-70 thousand people.

Under Catherine, the systematic development of women's education began; in 1764, the Smolny Institute of Noble Maidens and the Educational Society of Noble Maidens were opened. The Academy of Sciences has become one of the leading scientific bases in Europe. An observatory, a physics laboratory, an anatomical theater, a botanical garden, instrumental workshops, a printing house, a library, and an archive were founded. The Russian Academy was founded in 1783.

Under Catherine II, Russia's population increased significantly, hundreds of new cities were built, the treasury quadrupled, industry and agriculture rapidly developed - Russia began to export grain for the first time.

Under her, paper money was introduced for the first time in Russia. On her initiative, the first smallpox vaccination was carried out in Russia (she herself set an example and became the first to be vaccinated).

Under Catherine II, as a result of the Russian-Turkish wars (1768-1774, 1787-1791), Russia finally gained a foothold in the Black Sea, and the lands called Novorossiya were annexed: the Northern Black Sea region, Crimea, and the Kuban region. Accepted Eastern Georgia under Russian citizenship (1783). During the reign of Catherine II, as a result of the so-called partitions of Poland (1772, 1793, 1795), Russia returned the Western Russian lands seized by the Poles.

The material was prepared on the basis of information from open sources