19th-Century Europe's View of Russia: Huge, Barbarous, and Blind |
From the beginning of the 16th-century through the middle of the 17th, Russia on average annually added territory equivalent to the size of the Netherlands, and it continued expanding until World War I. No other state in world history has expanded so persistently.
Richard Pipes
Looking at a map of the world, one cannot help but be impressed by the sheer vastness of Russia. . . Russia grew as a multinational and multicultural empire along with the Western European empires, but there was an important difference between them—the colonies of the Western European empires (those of Great Britain, France, Holland, Portugal, and Spain) were overseas, physically separated from their capitals. Russia, however, was a continental empire without a clear differentiation between the ruling core and its colonies, more like the Ottoman Empire. Although the Western European states developed national identities separate from their colonial possessions, Russia did not. Many historians have argued that Russia never was a nation-state but developed as an empire from the beginning. Its need for expansion was self-perpetuating: It was constantly conquering or acquiring territory populated by non-Russian ethnic and nationalist groups.
The Muscovite principality marked the geographic center of the territory settled by ethnic Russians in medieval times, and the Muscovite court formed an efficient capital with a monolithic, militarized political organization. Neighboring political-military groupings were comparatively weak and vulnerable to invasion. However, these acquisitions formed a belt of regions of dubious political loyalty, arousing permanent insecurity in the core state, which responded with repression and further expansion of boundaries to create buffer zones. Because the Russians' deeply ingrained sense of territorial security created the need for both large and expensive state bureaucracy and military, Russia's commerce, economic growth, and technological development consistently lagged behind those of its European neighbors.
Yet Russia's vast natural resources, large territory and population and ability to mobilize a large army made the country a formidable player in European politics. After the defeat of Charles XII and Sweden at Poltava in 1709 and the relocation of the capital from Moscow to the newly built St. Petersburg on the Baltic Sea in 1713, Russia continued to expand in the Baltic region. Later in the century, under Catherine the Great, Russia expanded in the west through the three partitions of Poland (in 1772, 1793, and 1795) and to the south at the expense of the Ottoman Empire.
In the 19th-century expansion continued to the south into the Caucasus and to the southwest into Central Asia. Historians have argued that the geography of Eurasia was as conducive for the Russians as it had been for the Golden Horde and Tamerlane, enabling the creation of a huge continental empire. Professor Edward Keenan has suggested that the tsars were pragmatic opportunists—in other words Russia expanded because it could.
Guarding the Muscovite State Border, Sergey Ivanov, 1907 |
The Cossacks were an interesting aspect of Russian imperialism. They were originally refugees from the Turkic states of Central Asia, who preferred a nomadic life on the steppes to serfdom. Their cultural inclinations made them perfect for fighting along the rough borderlands. After a centuries-long process they were co-opted into Russian service, becoming the vanguards of expansion and the protectors of the frontier.
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Beginning with the Napoleonic Wars, however, Russia's imperial ambitions brought it into conflict with other nations and empires similarly ambitious or anxious about their declining fortunes. Throughout the 19th-century, Russian rebuffs or defeats in Europe were repeatedly followed by greater attention and expansions to the East. For example, the defeat of Russia in the 1853-56 Crimean War at the hands of a coalition of France, Sardinia, the United Kingdom, and the Ottoman Empire was followed by extensive Russian conquests in the East. In the Caucasus, Russia had been fighting for decades, but pacification was nearly complete when in 1859 legendary Chechen leader Shamil was captured. In a series of successful military expeditions from 1865 to 1876 in Central Asia, Russia conquered the khanates of Kokand, Bokhara, and Khiva. The far eastern boundary of Russia had remained unchanged from the Treaty of Nerchinsk with China in 1689, but in 1858 China gave up the left bank of the Amur River to Russia through the Treaty of Aigun, and in the 1860 Treaty of Beijing, China ceded the Ussuri River region.
Different parts of the area that is today Ukraine were invaded and occupied in the 1st millennium BCE by the Cimmerians, Scythians, and Sarmatians and in the 1st millennium CE by the Goths, Huns, Bulgars, Avars, Khazars, and Magyars (Hungarians). Slavic tribes settled there after the 4th century. Kyiv was the chief town. The Mongol conquest in the mid-13th century decisively ended Kyivan power.From the 14th to the 18th century, portions of Ukraine were ruled by Lithuania, Poland, and Russia. In addition, Cossacks controlled a largely self-governing territory known as the Hetmanate. Most of Ukraine fell to Russian rule in the 18th century.In the aftermath of World War I and the Russian Revolution of 1917, most of the Ukrainian region became a republic of the Soviet Union, though parts of western Ukraine were divided between Poland, Romania, and Czechoslovakia. Ukraine suffered a severe famine, called Holodomor [The Starvation], in 1932–33 under Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. Overrun by Axis armies in 1941 during World War II, Ukraine was further devastated before being retaken by the Soviets in 1944. By the end of the war, the borders of the Ukrainian S.S.R. had been redrawn to include the western Ukrainian territories.Ukraine was the site of the 1986 Chernobyl accident at a Soviet-built nuclear power plant. In 1991 Ukraine declared independence. The turmoil it experienced in the 1990s as it attempted to implement economic and political reforms culminated in the disputed presidential election of 2004. The mass protests in Ukraine over its results came to be known as the Orange Revolution. The effects of the revolution were short-lived, however, and the country remained divided along regional and ethnic lines.Another mass protest movement—this one centered on Kyiv’s Maidan (Independence Square)—toppled the government in 2014. As the interim government struggled to resolve the country’s dire economic situation, Russian troops occupied the Ukrainian autonomous republic of Crimea. Shortly thereafter, in March 2014, Crimea declared independence from Ukraine and was annexed by Russia. Fighting between pro-Russian separatist militias and Ukrainian government forces remained ongoing in eastern Ukraine. Volodymyr Zelensky was elected president of Ukraine in 2019. In late 2021 Russia began a military buildup along its border with Ukraine, and in February 2022 Russia invaded Ukraine. Ukrainian forces successfully defended Kyiv and soon launched a counteroffensive, but by 2023 the front lines had largely stagnated, and the conflict became a war of attrition as it continued into 2024.
Sources: “Russia’s Early Identity Questions” from the chapter "Russia's Historical Roots" in the book The Russia Balance Sheet by Anders Åslund and Andrew Kuchins. Copyright: Peterson Institute for International Economics. Reprinted with permission; and the Encyclopedia Britannica Online.
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