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The Decembrists' Uprising
Anti-authoritarian sentiments burst into open
demonstration when Alexander died in December 1825.
The throne passed to his younger brother, Nicholas I,
who had a reputation as an autocratic hard-ass. A
group of disgruntled army officers gathered in Senate
Square, proclaimed their loyalty to Nicholas' older
brother, Constantine, and demanded such outrageous
things as representation in the government and an end
to serfdom. Nicholas responded by bringing in loyal
troops and forcing the rebels (later known as the
Decembrists) to surrender. They were sent to the
dungeons at the Peter and Paul Fortress, the
ringleaders were hanged, and that was the last Russia
heard of reform for a while.
There is no question that this revolt, combined with
the waning of autocracy across Europe, profoundly
affected Nicholas I's way of thinking. Fearing
revolution in any shape or form, his reign became
intensely repressive with censorship heavily
enforced, education abroad curtailed, and a system of
secret police and internal spies put into operation.
Nonetheless Petersburg was buzzing with underground
discussion groups working out alternative ideas and
philosophies, and Russia experienced a golden age of
literature with Pushkin, Lermontov, and Gogol writing
their seminal works and Dostoevsky and Turgenev
launching their literary careers.
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