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    Tsarist autocracy - Wikipedia

    Tsarist autocracy (Russian: царское самодержавие, romanized: tsarskoye samoderzhaviye), also called Tsarism, was an autocracy, a form of absolute monarchy localised with the Grand Duchy of Moscow and its successor states, the Tsardom of Russia and the Russian Empire. In it, the Tsar … See more

    Imperial autocracy, Russian autocracy, Muscovite autocracy, tsarist absolutism, imperial absolutism, Russian absolutism, Muscovite absolutism, Muscovite despotism, Russian despotism, tsarist despotism or … See more

    Ivan III (reigned 1462–1505) built upon Byzantine traditions and laid foundations for the tsarist autocracy which with some variations would govern Russia for centuries. See more

    Some historians see the traditions of tsarist autocracy as partially responsible for laying the groundwork for the totalitarianism in the Soviet Union. They see the traditions of … See more

    1462−1505
    Ivan III built upon Byzantine traditions and laid foundations for the tsarist autocracy which with some variations would govern Russia for centuries.
    1598–1613
    The chaotic Time of Troubles.
    1613–1645
    Michael of Russia was elected to the throne by a Zemsky Sobor.
    1682–1725
    Peter the Great reduced the power of the nobility and strengthened the central power of the tsar, establishing a bureaucratic civil service based on the Table of Ranks but theoretically open to all classes of the society, in place of the nobility-only mestnichestvo which Feodor III had abolished in 1682 at the request of the highest boyars.
    1762–1796
    Catherine the Great issued the Charter to the Gentry, legally affirming the rights and privileges they had acquired in preceding years, and the Charter of the Towns, establishing municipal self-government.
    1801–1825
    Alexander I established the State council as an advisory legislative body.
    1855–1881
    Alexander II established a system of elected local self-government (Zemstvo) and an independent judicial system, but Russia did not have a national-level representative assembly (Duma) or a constitution until the 1905 Revolution.
    1917
    The system was abolished after the Russian Revolution of 1917.

    The tsar himself, the embodiment of sovereign authority, stood at the center of the tsarist autocracy, with full power over the state and its people. The autocrat delegated power to persons and institutions acting on his orders, and within the limits of his … See more

    Historians of different backgrounds have criticized the concept of tsarist autocracy in its various forms. Their complaints range from the … See more

    a As used in those publications.
    b The existing literature pairs the words Russian, tsarist, Muscovite and imperial with despotism, absolutism and autocracy in all possible combinations, rarely giving clear definitions. Tsarist can be indeed applicable to the … See more

     
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  3. Tsarist government - Alpha History

    WEBTsarist government. Members of the Russian Orthodox Church’s Holy Synod, which effectively functioned as a branch of the tsarist …

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      WEBTsar, title associated primarily with rulers of Russia. The term tsar, a form of the ancient Roman imperial title caesar, generated a series of …

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