The Westernizers and Slavophiles were in a strong position in 1881 when Alexander II was assassinated, but the Slavophiles' influence declined after the 1891-92 famine
A key thinker who was initially enthusiastic about Alexander II's reforms, but later concluded that more radical change was needed to end Tsarist autocracy
Bakunin published the Catechism of Revolution with Sergei Nechayev in 1869 while they were on the run in Switzerland, encouraging the opposition to assassinate the Tsar
Group of about 100 people in Russia, primarily a literary society concentrating on distributing scientific and revolutionary literature like Das Capital
The Chaikovskii Circle realised they needed to go to the peasants in the countryside and spread these ideas, as the peasants could make a big difference in overthrowing the Tsar
In 1874, Lavrov set off with about 2,000 young, idealistic people to try to turn the peasants against the Tsar, but it was an abject failure as the peasants remained loyal to the Tsar
In 1877, a new, more radical populist group called Land and Liberty was set up, pursuing two courses of action: living alongside peasants to understand them better, and assassinating Tsarist officials
Land and Liberty split into two groups in 1879: Black Partition, which favoured the long-term tactic of living with peasants, and People's Will, which favoured terrorist tactics and assassination