An extreme Russian terrorist organisation that split off form Land and Liberty. It was led by Aleksander Mikhailov and a spy in the Third Section kept the group informed on actions by the Secret Police. In 1879, they declared that the Tsar must be removed if he did not agree to a constitution and they successfully assassinated him in 1881
A populist faction of Land and Liberty set up in 1879 that was more moderate in methods and wanted to partition the black soil provinces of Russia among the peasants. It was weakened in 1880-81 by arrests and ceased to exist after 1881. Its leader, Georgi Plekhanov, then turned to Marxism.
A populist movement who tried to go to the people in 1874 in a group of 2000 only for around 1600 to be arrested. They tried again in 1876, but were no more successful. It did, however, give publicity to the opposition.
A radical circle, including Nikolai Tchaikovsky, who circulated scientific and revolutionary literature comprising of no more than 100 people spread through St Petersburg and other major cities. In 1872, it began organising workers to send them to work among peasants in the countryside
An anarchist and socialist who put forward the idea of collective ownership and pay based on hours worked and the first person to translate the Communist Manifesto into Russian in 1869
Author of What Is To Be Done? in 1862 and author of the journal The Contemporary, he was an influential nihilist and spent time in the Peter and Paul Fortress in St Petersburg
Russian intellectuals in the early nineteenth century who favoured resisting European influences in favour traditional peasant values and institutions of the Slavic people, e.g. Leo Tolstoy
- Count Mikhail Loris-Melikov proposed the inclusion of elected representatives of the nobility and town governments in debating some drafts of state decrees
- Only students from Gimnazii could go to University (1871)
- More liberal university courses were replaced with a traditional curriculum, seeing courses such as Lierature, Science, Modern Foreign Languages and History forced out in favour of Maths, Latin, Greek and Divinity
- Stronger censorship increased with government powers to veto university appointments
- This led to many wealthier students studying abroad
- Equality before the law with a single system of local, provincial and national courts although volost courts continued to deal exclusively with peasant cases
- The defendant could employ a defence lawyer
- Criminal cases were heard before barristers and a jury, selected from a list of property owners
- Judges were appointed by the Tsar and given improved training and pay
- Local justices of the peace were elected every three years by the Zemstva and were supposed to be independent from political control
- Courts were opened to the public and could be reported upon, including by the government newspaper The Russian Courier