How Did the Russian Empire Actually Work?

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  • Опубліковано 20 лис 2022
  • How did the autocratic Tsars, the emperors of Russia, control their massive state? The Russian Empire stretched from Poland to the Pacific Ocean and ruled over tens of millions of people, but for almost its entire existence the Russian Empire was presided over by just a single man. Over the decades the Tsars had to adapt to a changing world, and a changing Russia, and they did so with varying degrees of success. From the absolutist Nicholas I to his reformist son, Alexander II, to the last of them all, Nicholas II, each Tsar approached governing with his own ideas, strategies, and plans for greatness.
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    Sources Consulted:
    Miller, Stuart T. Mastering Modern European History. London: Macmillan Education LTD, 1990.
    Seton-Watson, Hugh. The Russian Empire 1801-1917. London: Oxford University Press, 1967.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 218

  • @josecarlosmoreno9731
    @josecarlosmoreno9731 Рік тому +647

    This didn't actually explain how the Russian Empire worked. It was just a brief history lesson of a certain period. How did the empire manage communication over such vast distances? How did it manage taxation, military recruitment and transport? What were the main products, exports, imports? Etc, etc.

    • @alisagman362
      @alisagman362 Рік тому +53

      I see your point, but it is really supposed to be an explanation on how the Russian government worked

    • @Captain_wikee27
      @Captain_wikee27 Рік тому +104

      He did explain how the empire work
      Ruler:Czar
      Legislature:Czar
      Upper and lower legislature:Czar
      Parliament:Czar
      Litteraly the army command:Czar

    • @walterwalters5443
      @walterwalters5443 Рік тому +13

      I guess it goes to prove that how Russia was ruled was an open question before the Soviet Union

    • @sodinc
      @sodinc Рік тому +1

      Exactly

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Рік тому +6

      @@alisagman362 Yes, since its in the title of the video.

  • @bbdanny
    @bbdanny Рік тому +71

    finns definitely liked alexander II. in many major towns such as: tampere, helsinki, and lahti have streets named after him, and there's a statue of him on the senate square in helsinki

    • @fgkuv5232
      @fgkuv5232 3 дні тому

      There were also many statues of him in Russia, and the streets too, but the Bolsheviks got rid of all of them

  • @americanmapping832
    @americanmapping832 Рік тому +156

    It's quite surprising that they held a kingdom that large

    • @Portugalisbased
      @Portugalisbased Рік тому +18

      united kingdom: am i a joke to you?

    • @LookBackHistory
      @LookBackHistory  Рік тому +94

      It helped that a lot of the empire's land was quite sparsely populated.

    • @1224chrisng
      @1224chrisng Рік тому +35

      @@Portugalisbased by the time they had an empire, Parliament had long became the real power, the Monarchy was already a figurehead at that point

    • @Portugalisbased
      @Portugalisbased Рік тому +9

      @@1224chrisng that doesn't stop it from being an empire

    • @1224chrisng
      @1224chrisng Рік тому +12

      @@Portugalisbased it's still an empire, just not really a kingdom

  • @alejandror.planas9802
    @alejandror.planas9802 Рік тому +107

    Just a correction: Russia was never feudal. Feudalism is a system of reciprocal contractualism where lords must benefit their vassals in return for their service and loyalty. Under feudalism, a lord's authority is derived not from divine right or a vague appeal to obedience, but from the fulfillment of the legal obligations the lord has promised their vassal in the hommage contract. When a lord broke said obligation, all authority was removed (see Barcelona's independence from France in 987 if you want an example... The King of France did not offer help in protecting Barcelona from the Saracens, so the hommage between Borrell II, the then count of Barcelona, and the King of France, was broken, not to be renewed) and the lord ceased to be such. Granted, these obligations extended to other nobles (vassals) and to free men, not to serfs, but regardless, this was not present in Russia.
    Additionally, under feudalism, serfs were co-owners of the land they worked (yes, under feudalism work = property). There was a division between direct property and usage property (this is a contract called emphiteusis). So serfs would be proprietors of their work and houses so long as they kept working the land, and their obligations weren't to any particular lord, but to their land (and that land could be that of a lord, commonly owned, or of the church).
    Although the values behind capitalism are different to those of feudalism, a lot of its components (contractualism, a high trust society, etc.) are evolutions of components already present under feudalism.
    There is a reason why countries like Russia, or Spain (with the exception of Catalonia) remained "backwards" and corrupt while the rest of Europe adopted capitalism and democratic institutions: they were never feudal. Feudalism created a system of checks and balances, oath fulfillment, rule of law, and contractualism, that allowed capitalism to take hold of Europe. Spain (Castille) and Russia, lacked those components, so they remained seigneurial, authoritarian societies, where the King set the law in accordance to their own convenience. (In Castile this was less intense because the Catholic church enforced the rule of law and "just kingship")
    For future reference, feudalism is generally found in the descendants of the Frankish empire (Catalonia, France, Occitania, Northern Italy, Switzerland, Germany, England through the Norman conquest) and a few other countries like early Hungary and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Countries like Greece, Russia, Spain (Castile, Leon, Galicia, Portugal), Iceland, etc. weren't feudal.

    • @bloodkelp
      @bloodkelp Рік тому

      Yet iceland is more successful than russia overall. Imo its only a matter of time when russia turns into democratic state. First was france after defeat in 1810s, then it was germany 2 times in 2 world wars, now its russias turn to lose and review their worldview

    • @alejandror.planas9802
      @alejandror.planas9802 Рік тому +13

      @@bloodkelp I mean, Iceland may not have had feudalism, just like Russia, nevertheless, the systems of these 2 countries were worlds apart.
      Iceland was, in many ways, an alternative to feudalism. One could even say, a more democratic path to a society built upon rule of law.
      Unlike feudalism, where the parliaments were comprised of the aristocracy (be that nobles, the high officers of the church, or wealthy free men), Iceland's Allþing was open to all free men, and the laws set by the high chieftains were socially upheld rather than imposed through the use of force. The ending result was a society that democratically organized itself and socially enforced its internal rules. A high trust society built upon consensus.
      Both feudal societies and Iceland's system depended upon the fulfillment of oaths (be them individual or collective -like the laws set by the allþing). Russia instead, evolved to give almost total authority to the king, who used the law as he pleased, had no oaths to keep to his inferiors, etc.
      Russia doesn't necessarily have an inferior system, but it has a fundamentally different system which emphasizes authority over justice. Both the feudal and icelandic (more democratic) systems emphasized justice over authority. So for a Russian, justice was what the Tsar said to be just. For a Catalan, a Swiss person, or an Icelandic person, authority is held by he who is just.
      Russia changes its laws, Feudal societies and Iceland changed their leaders.
      In a sense, Russians are right when they say they are a separate civilization to the West.

    • @bloodkelp
      @bloodkelp Рік тому +4

      @@alejandror.planas9802 i got you. So it seems that russia is neither asia nor the west

    • @igoralmeida9136
      @igoralmeida9136 Рік тому

      so much gross generalization

    • @alejandror.planas9802
      @alejandror.planas9802 Рік тому +5

      @@igoralmeida9136 Which parts do you believe are grossly generalized?

  • @mikedrewson5545
    @mikedrewson5545 Рік тому +63

    I like this series on how empires worked. Please do the Ottoman Empire next.

    • @LookBackHistory
      @LookBackHistory  Рік тому +10

      Possibly! I do have a video on the end of the empire if you need something to tide you over.

  • @colindaniels945
    @colindaniels945 5 місяців тому +8

    The big reason why Russia sold Alaska to the US was so Britain couldn't get it

  • @knightofhistory
    @knightofhistory Рік тому +23

    The empire was so large and so disconnected because of its size and it's difficult to manage population as well as it's terrain and weather, it's a surprise it lasted so long. By the way I have a history channel of my own, I hope you give it a visit!

  • @nononoyesyesyes4748
    @nononoyesyesyes4748 Рік тому +85

    Loving these types of videos. You've captured a niche and I'm looking forward for more videos on the political governance/administrations of past states

  • @jjjjjaakko
    @jjjjjaakko Рік тому +23

    Borders of the Grand Duchy of Finland in this video are those of Republic of Finland after 1945.

    • @thelastprussian6491
      @thelastprussian6491 Рік тому

      well done, than we already have 2 modern borders. Good work indeed

  • @largerpizza190
    @largerpizza190 Рік тому +5

    Love the vidoes! The way you structure the information is amazing!

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory Рік тому +5

    great video, keep doing more of these

  • @bibet361
    @bibet361 Рік тому +1

    Well made video, this channel is really underrated.

  • @prakyathkumar8618
    @prakyathkumar8618 Рік тому +9

    You do know that a centralised autocracy in a feudal society is a oxymoron

  • @laiva2175
    @laiva2175 Рік тому +10

    This didn't explain at all how the russian state worked?? It was just stated that serfs existed and that the tsar ruled as an autocrat.

    • @unigaming9921
      @unigaming9921 10 днів тому +1

      Yes it did. It was an autocratic empire that was constantly changing to survive a shifting world without losing it's autocracy. A breakdown of how it operated over time will look like a history video, and it's true imperial nature meant the czar was the only true central power since poland, finland, and other regions were governed separately

  • @MrEFMinecraft
    @MrEFMinecraft День тому +2

    Click bait. Correct title would've been 'a brief history of the Russian empire.
    Didn't even talk about how it worked, just politics.

  • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
    @user-cd4bx6uq1y Рік тому +4

    Dude, very cool!

  • @Veriox22
    @Veriox22 Рік тому +12

    quite enlightening. we should learn something from the management of such a vast state

  • @funz7293
    @funz7293 Рік тому +2

    Yes new video!!

  • @pinguofthehill7635
    @pinguofthehill7635 Рік тому +2

    what do you use for your maps?

  • @solgerWhyIsThereAnAtItLooksBad
    @solgerWhyIsThereAnAtItLooksBad Рік тому +22

    How did it work?
    Did it even work?

    • @bloodkelp
      @bloodkelp Рік тому

      Well they managed to last quite long

    • @bloodkelp
      @bloodkelp Рік тому

      In fact russia is the only remaining empire in modern world (not for long ofc)

    • @elyisusking3603
      @elyisusking3603 Рік тому +8

      @@bloodkelp i'm not seeing Russia balkanizate any time soon
      Considering Russia managed to stay together in their most brutal civil war, i don't think we Will ever be alive until that happens

    • @bloodkelp
      @bloodkelp Рік тому +2

      @@elyisusking3603 i mean it will cease to be authocratic imperialist state after inevitable loss in ukraine. The only ones who might possibly separate from us are chechens

    • @elyisusking3603
      @elyisusking3603 Рік тому +1

      @@bloodkelp ohhh i see

  • @grandcommander1140
    @grandcommander1140 Рік тому +2

    Nice vid bro!
    ...

  • @alexandryakovlev5697
    @alexandryakovlev5697 Рік тому +2

    Hello, my friend!
    Thank you! Your video is very great!
    Do you have this book: "Nations and states : an enquiry into the origins of nations and the politics of nationalism" by Seton-Watson Hugh ? I couldn't find it and download it free.

  • @moderatemapper9440
    @moderatemapper9440 Рік тому +6

    Could you make one on the late Ottoman Empire?

  • @reorioOrion
    @reorioOrion Місяць тому +1

    0:48 "The Russian Army played an important role in the defeat of Napoleon"
    Yup. Just a little. During the invasion of Russia, Napoleon's army numbered 685 thousand, and during the retreat it decreased to 75 thousand.
    Wellington's army, which destroyed 27 thousand Napoleon's soldiers at Waterloo, of course made an equal contribution to the defeat of Napoleon's army as Russia did.

  • @Zeyede_Siyum
    @Zeyede_Siyum Рік тому +7

    I want a video like this for Ethiopia 🇪🇹

  • @Everydayfunguy
    @Everydayfunguy Рік тому +3

    David Smith, my professor at Eastern Illinois University, taught us that absolutism didn't exist in reality. The sovereigns (like the Czar's) relied on the support of the nobility, military, and even the support of the majority of the populace. Just look at the coup against Paul I, Peter I, and other Czar's. Their was even a significant peasant revolt against Katherine the Great during her Reign. One can look at all of these examples to say that Absolutism didn’t actually exist in Europe, where the sovereign's "Divine Right," met everyone had to shut up and do what they said.

    • @fonvizin5280
      @fonvizin5280 4 місяці тому +1

      Возможно вы и правы, но стоит так же учесть, что крестьяне в те времена были необразованны и сильно религиозными. Так как в России с давних времён цари считались посланниками Бога, то крестьяне крайне редко(лишь при острой необходимости) начинали восстания

  • @thelastprussian6491
    @thelastprussian6491 Рік тому +1

    0:57 and 9:10 Once again the border between Prussia and Belgium / Netherlands are the modern bordes, since 1919. I wonder why? You already have it correct at 0:41
    Good Video so, well done.

  • @shivanshna7618
    @shivanshna7618 Рік тому +6

    By saying dibs first which legally binding everyone knows that

  • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
    @user-cd4bx6uq1y Рік тому +1

    Very cool

  • @denzblog2710
    @denzblog2710 19 днів тому

    I loved the part where he actually explained how the country functioned

  • @bahutbharatiya3946
    @bahutbharatiya3946 Рік тому +2

    Hi! Could you do a video on India and how the republic was formed? Ie the ousting of Indian Rajas and the confederation of the provinces of the former Raj.

  • @sammakkotonttu
    @sammakkotonttu Рік тому +1

    You have the border of the Grand Duchy of Finland wrong trough out the whole video. The border showed in the video is only from the 1940s. The border of the Grand Duchy in the 1800s ran trough the Karelian isthmus and lake Ladoga.

  • @alisagman362
    @alisagman362 Рік тому +8

    Can we get a, “How did the (late) Ottoman Empire work?”

  • @Mightfox
    @Mightfox 29 днів тому

    Could you do a video on why France changed governments so much in 1800s while prussia/austria/russia didnt as much?

  • @SantaFe19484
    @SantaFe19484 5 місяців тому

    I had heard of the assassination of Alexander II before, but this was the first I had heard it was done by bombs.

  • @Portugalisbased
    @Portugalisbased Рік тому +6

    that's the neat part, it didn't

  • @maxwalker1159
    @maxwalker1159 Рік тому

    Interesting

  • @nosredep7873
    @nosredep7873 Рік тому +10

    Why are certain countries always one color? Whenever i see russia its green, prussia is always grey, france is always blue

    • @Kirb-kc4vs
      @Kirb-kc4vs Рік тому +16

      Its propably a combination of the colours on the countrys flag and just what fits best.

    • @thelvadam2884
      @thelvadam2884 Рік тому

      @@Kirb-kc4vs yes , and its also done historically i think

    • @sircoloniser5454
      @sircoloniser5454 Рік тому +3

      Just what’s associated with the countries

    • @shivanshna7618
      @shivanshna7618 Рік тому

      @@Kirb-kc4vs Russia had green flag?

    • @Kirb-kc4vs
      @Kirb-kc4vs Рік тому +1

      @@shivanshna7618 No but the country Was always seen as very agrarian, and combining this with the blue and White a more nature like colour would fit well.

  • @BozheTsaryaKhrani
    @BozheTsaryaKhrani Рік тому +4

    long live the russian empire hope it gets reinstated long live st nicholas ii and the holy romanov family

  • @KingGeorgeV1914
    @KingGeorgeV1914 Рік тому +1

    Has anyone ever told you you kind of sound like the guy from Biographics?

  • @Zycore1
    @Zycore1 Рік тому +12

    Russia before Communism 📈📈📈📈
    Russia after Communism 📉📉📉📉

    • @k0mentator507
      @k0mentator507 Рік тому

      Not really tho

    • @americanmapping832
      @americanmapping832 10 місяців тому +2

      Russian before communism 📉📉📉📉
      Russia during communism 📈📈📈📈📈📈📈📈📈📈📈
      Russia during the Brezhnev era 📉📉📉📉📉📉📉
      Russia after communism 📉📉📉📉📉📉📉

    • @abcjuniormilton
      @abcjuniormilton 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@americanmapping832communism destroyed Russia, killed up to 20 million Russians, and the USSR lagged behind the rest of the West. Before WW1 Russia was industrializing fast, it had more engineers than Germany. William Howard Taft praised the Empire's labor laws. Lenin admitted that if Pyotr Stolypin's reforms had succeeded, the Bolshevik Revolution would have failed. The French economist Edmund Thierry said that if trends continued, Russia would dominate Europe by 1950. Russia would have caught up to Europe if not for the Bolshevik Revolution, which was a major catastrophe for Russia, the West and the world.

    • @archer8849
      @archer8849 2 місяці тому

      @@americanmapping832Brezhnev era was more like a horizontal line. Near end of it and after it was recession. And after the collapse of USSR it was in steep dive.

  • @FulmenTheFinn
    @FulmenTheFinn Рік тому +2

    You drew Finland with her 1947 borders.

    • @thelastprussian6491
      @thelastprussian6491 Рік тому +1

      correct, thats 1 out of 2 errors (so far) . Can you find the 2nd?

  • @happyhipi5471
    @happyhipi5471 10 місяців тому +1

    is it normal that you have a history based on Soviet textbooks?

  • @konycurrentyear7053
    @konycurrentyear7053 10 місяців тому +1

    2:26 - 2:42 BAAAAAASED

  • @brucekelly6144
    @brucekelly6144 Рік тому +1

    What happened to the Irish royal family?

  • @Moechtegernpilot1
    @Moechtegernpilot1 23 дні тому

    What’s the Dumer?

  • @bernhartschmieder9401
    @bernhartschmieder9401 Рік тому +1

    back then finlands borders were different.

  • @user-gz3eh1ow3w
    @user-gz3eh1ow3w Рік тому +16

    Tsars and Tsarinas were ethnic Germans under nickname "Romanovs". General-governors of Muscovy, Poland,Siberia,Finland,Turkistan,Georgia,Kievan province,etc. were also Romanovs. 300 years ethnic Germans ruled Russia,even bigger territory,than it is now.

    • @burnadze
      @burnadze Рік тому +20

      Well, no one denies Romanovs german origins. The thing is, they were as much germans, as russians. Both genetically and culturally.

    • @chombus2602
      @chombus2602 Рік тому +7

      Like all european monarchies

    • @necrofile
      @necrofile Рік тому

      Like about 500 thousand of German ethnic Russians living in Russia now.

    • @olegshtolc7245
      @olegshtolc7245 7 місяців тому +2

      @@burnadze wrong , the origin was russian. But they kept marrying the germans to the point they become one

    • @doncorleone1553
      @doncorleone1553 4 місяці тому +1

      @@olegshtolc7245 How did they “become Germans”? Interesting that boomer Soviet Russians like you and Anna who left the original comment, become suddenly racist against Germans and Imperial family for no reason.

  • @P4Tri0t420
    @P4Tri0t420 Рік тому +9

    If you Look at the Sovjet's Flag its clearly what tools where used by the russian peasants at that time and the state of industrialism

    • @sillygoose9791
      @sillygoose9791 Рік тому

      The class collaboration between workers in the factories and peasants in the fields. It's just a shame the communists were so afraid of the peasants and their control over the nation's food that they were effectively brought back into serfdom with the onset of forced collectivization.
      Can't have people helping people, that's the state's job, you filthy Kulak.

  • @alexvig2369
    @alexvig2369 9 місяців тому +3

    This is just a bad historical video. Very much west-centric view of Russia. If you look at Russian writings from the 19th century and early 20th century, it's far from what this video described. But it's not that I expected any better than a westerner trying to explain Russian history...

  • @Lucasp110
    @Lucasp110 Рік тому +1

    So. It mostly didnt?

  • @Surinamecool
    @Surinamecool 8 місяців тому

    I like the Russian Empire but the thing I hate is the Emperors,and the surfs, at least pay them and give them food and care for them and everyone not just your friends, but still I like them but not how they rule the country.

  • @jmwh9654
    @jmwh9654 10 місяців тому

    It did work?

  • @matheuspinho4987
    @matheuspinho4987 Рік тому +18

    The Russian Empire looked very based 😎

    • @BozheTsaryaKhrani
      @BozheTsaryaKhrani Рік тому +4

      quite st nicholas ii and the holy romanov family is the best royal family ever

  • @christopherwood9009
    @christopherwood9009 Рік тому +2

    The ruler of the Russian Empire (Imperiya) was the Emperor (Imperator Rossii), not Tsar. Tsar means King. The Tsardom (Kingdom) ended in 1721, when Peter I the Great made russia an empire, ceasing to be a Tsar. colloquially however, the Emperor was unofficially called the Tsar.
    Much like the old title Tsarevich (Prince, as the eldest son of, and heir apparent to, the Tsar), literally meaning "King-descendent" under the Tsardom became Tsesarevich (Crown Prince), and Tsarevich became how people colloquially referred to all Princes "of the Blood" (Knyaz), including those who held the title of Great Prince (Velikiy Knyaz) and Crown Prince (Tsesarevich, literally Ceaser-descendent, as in the old Roman Imperial title "Ceasar") - but again, these were unofficial references.

    • @CMitchell808
      @CMitchell808 9 місяців тому

      Yeah, but everyone called them the Tsar colloquially and we still do today.

    • @fonvizin5280
      @fonvizin5280 4 місяці тому

      Насколько я знаю титул императора не лишал титула царя. Так что их правильно называть и императорами и царями

  • @michaelfritts6249
    @michaelfritts6249 Рік тому +6

    Failure to "read the room" has often been the primary reason why Russia failed as an Empire.
    A vague attempt at democracy after a brutal (useless, misguided) experience with a concept (Communism) proved that "Russia" could create a union based on a self serving
    ideal of egalitarianism, wholeheartedly and consistently proclaimed...
    Inconsistently applied..

    • @BozheTsaryaKhrani
      @BozheTsaryaKhrani Рік тому

      russia fell because a western funded coup and a masonic aristocracy that the church condemned too lat

    • @michaelfritts6249
      @michaelfritts6249 Рік тому

      @@BozheTsaryaKhrani ok... please explain.

    • @BozheTsaryaKhrani
      @BozheTsaryaKhrani Рік тому

      @@michaelfritts6249 watch jay dyer i think it was either his book review on either angloamerican establishment or tragedy and hope he can explain a lot better than i can

  • @pyropulseIXXI
    @pyropulseIXXI Рік тому +1

    Lords didn't own serfs

  • @thejustifier5566
    @thejustifier5566 Рік тому +13

    Russia has always loved despotism. Nothing ever changes.

    • @user-yb3fh6vr3t
      @user-yb3fh6vr3t Рік тому +15

      Yes, love for despotism perfectly explains revolts of 17 century, Pugachev's uprising, 2 revolutions and many more...

    • @user-vd7fu3sv6x
      @user-vd7fu3sv6x Рік тому +3

      Russia loves despotism so much that it overthrew the government three times in the 20th century alone

    • @burnadze
      @burnadze Рік тому +2

      Some thing do not need to change

    • @BozheTsaryaKhrani
      @BozheTsaryaKhrani Рік тому +1

      long live the holy russian empire

    • @Intel-i7-9700k
      @Intel-i7-9700k Рік тому

      Not really. The communism that started in 1917 was more or less forced upon them by a small group of extremists, most russians back then would have preferred some form of democracy (The Duma).

  • @GeistInTheMachine
    @GeistInTheMachine Рік тому +1

    It worked?

  • @patrickjeffers7864
    @patrickjeffers7864 Рік тому

    ..did it? Lol **jk, it did just not very well**

  • @rafanadir6958
    @rafanadir6958 Рік тому +7

    I have a theory that the Russian state collapsed in the 1990s, as the Soviet union, because of what happened in 1917. In fact, I believe that the slaughter of the Bolshevik revolution that killed the vast majority of the professional Civil servants killed the system that was holding that huge territory together. If you look at the demographic statistics, by the 1980s all the possible civil servants that had been prepared before 1917 had already died whether because of natural causes or because of repression. By 1989 the territory of the former Russian empire had to be govern entirely by the aparatchiks brought up and educated by the Soviet system where disingenuousness and incompetence were encouraged and cultivated by state institutions. The abysmal level of incompetence that was fostered during the Soviet union is even strongly seen now with the way Putin is managing his war in Ukraine and the way his cronies are governing Russia.

    • @lox000zavr
      @lox000zavr Рік тому +7

      You're ridiculously brainwashed. How can you even say at the same time that the entire intellectual and professional class was destroyed, and then attribute all the achievements of the Soviet Union to it? The people killed by the "Bolshevik Revolution" (the Bolsheviks were supported by the entire working class of the RSFSR and most of the population) lost their war. Although not completely, but for the most part the army and economy were built anew in Soviet times, after the revolution, which was, of course, incredibly destructive (although we must not forget that a huge number of tsarist generals, such as Brusilov, as well as a huge part of the Russian intelligentsia supported the Bolsheviks). The Soviet people did not destroy the Soviet Union, it was destroyed in 7 years by the Gorbachev government (you can just compare the GDP of the USSR in 1984 and in 1991). I agree that the Soviet System has rotted at some point, but 1-it started back in the 60s, 2-it's not because the monarchists died. The man who launched us into space-Korolev studied in the Soviet Union.

    • @happyhipi5471
      @happyhipi5471 10 місяців тому

      I speak as a Russian you're mostly right but the union's problems were much broader. Collaborationist regimes don't last forever.

    • @marcusaurelius4941
      @marcusaurelius4941 10 місяців тому +3

      ​@@lox000zavryou clearly didn't get what they were trying to say in the slightest, and just spat out some senseless neostalinist propaganda

    • @lox000zavr
      @lox000zavr 10 місяців тому +1

      @@marcusaurelius4941
      1.What did I get wrong?
      2.Which of this argumens is neostalinist?
      3.Which of this facts isn't true?
      4.You can't response to big argument with: "nah, you're wrong"

    • @doncorleone1553
      @doncorleone1553 4 місяці тому +1

      @@lox000zavr You are also spreading false information, the Bolsheviks were not supported by all of the workers, or even close to a majority of the RSFSR population. They in fact lost the elections before they dissolved it. And they do not fight or murder “monarchists” only, there were many factions of White Army in Civil War.

  • @mauricegriffith3100
    @mauricegriffith3100 Рік тому

    【promosm】

  • @olegd3860
    @olegd3860 9 місяців тому

    DijOTsvv8

  • @user-mx2or5hr7e
    @user-mx2or5hr7e Рік тому +23

    Fun fact: Ukraine doesn't exist until 1991,but many people say Ukraine is a old country......

    • @machnimismic
      @machnimismic Рік тому +8

      what? this is just Putin's "Lenin made the ukranians"
      ukranian people are real (can't believe i have to say this,but yes) they're a separate nation with a different language, different culture, different traditions.
      ukranian language is still a dialect from the russian.

    • @burnadze
      @burnadze Рік тому +9

      @@machnimismic
      People LIVING on the LAND which is NOW ukraine have always existed. Just like in case of any single inch land all over the world. Ukraininan identity, as we know it today, was created by communists.

    • @RichtKarver
      @RichtKarver Рік тому +7

      @@burnadze No it was not. Ukrainian national identity was formed in 19th century.

    • @gnezlukc
      @gnezlukc Рік тому +4

      Kievan rus existed but it was conquered by the mongols.
      Also fun fact Kievan rus was the political entity that chartered the founding of moscow.

    • @mint8648
      @mint8648 Рік тому +9

      The Cossack hetmanate of the 16th 17th and 18th century was known as the “country of ukraine”

  • @ptero
    @ptero Рік тому +1

    Gonna be actually guy and say that peasantry didn't "support the monarchy", because they were pretty much oppressed (and were oppressed centuries before) And you can't speculate on their opinion on political regime because it's simply impossible to do, and peasantry opinion was very irrelevant anyway. It also is simply not polite to say that peasants supported the state. You got migrants, who traveled the country to evade the government, you got tons of minorities, and even then among orthodox russians large portion of population didn't trust the church and the governmen as their religion states. So the situation was pretty much complicated and fucked.
    But at least we got cool political philosophies, political movements and full force anarchist societies revolved around the idea of peasantry freedom and happiness

  • @user-gz3eh1ow3w
    @user-gz3eh1ow3w Рік тому +7

    Bismark said that Russia is German India,colony,which gives resources and food and get technology for them.Still not much changed from that time

    • @user-yb3fh6vr3t
      @user-yb3fh6vr3t Рік тому +26

      Bismarck never said anything like that...

    • @ernstachterhof6481
      @ernstachterhof6481 Рік тому +1

      I don't think Bismarck would ever say that.
      But anyway, we just returned to everything what we left after the October Revolution.

  • @ian2372
    @ian2372 Рік тому +12

    Ukraine was always Russian. They will be again.

    • @americanmapping832
      @americanmapping832 10 місяців тому +1

      Cope

    • @ironzombie3987
      @ironzombie3987 2 місяці тому

      If Ukraine should be a part of Russia because both are Slavic, then by that logic, the Netherlands, half of Belgium, Luxembourg, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, the United Kingdom, (and maybe Austria, Lichtenstein, and Switzerland) should join Germany because they're all Germanic

  • @FPSGamer48
    @FPSGamer48 Рік тому +1

    Poorly

  • @3jacen
    @3jacen Рік тому +1

    POORLY!!!

  • @ogerpinata-nu2th
    @ogerpinata-nu2th Рік тому

    It didn't.

  • @ArdaSReal
    @ArdaSReal Рік тому +1

    I think the whole world can agree that if Russia never existed, the planet would be much much better off

    • @elyisusking3603
      @elyisusking3603 Рік тому +24

      No

    • @ArdaSReal
      @ArdaSReal Рік тому +1

      @@elyisusking3603 cope

    • @lox000zavr
      @lox000zavr Рік тому +19

      The planet would be better if humanity didn't exist. And your comment reminds me of what a famous Austrian artist tried to do, are you by any chance a fan?

    • @elyisusking3603
      @elyisusking3603 Рік тому +3

      @@ArdaSReal the world would be better if the germans didn't exist because of the nazis
      see how dumb you sound ?

    • @user-yb3fh6vr3t
      @user-yb3fh6vr3t Рік тому +8

      No, it wouldn't be...