Tsar Alexander II’s assassination

6 Jan, 2005 940 History of Europe

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the assassination of Tsar Alexander II. On 1st March 1881, the Russian Tsar, Alexander II, was travelling through the snow to the Winter Palace in St Petersburg. An armed Cossack sat with the coach driver, another six Cossacks followed on horseback and behind them came a group of police officers in sledges. It was the day that the Tsar, known for his liberal reforms, had signed a document granting the first ever constitution to the Russian people.But his journey was being watched by a group of radicals called ‘Narodnaya Volya’ or ‘The People’s Will’. On a street corner near the Catherine Canal, they hurled the first of their bombs to halt the Tsar’s iron-clad coach. When Alexander ignored advice and ventured out onto the snow to comfort his dying Cossacks, he was killed by another bomber who took his own life in the blast.Why did they kill the reforming Tsar? What was the political climate that inspired such extreme acts? And could this have been the moment that the Russian state started an inexorable march towards revolution?With Orlando Figes, Professor of History at Birkbeck College, University of London; Dominic Lieven, Professor of Russian Government, London School of Economics; Catriona Kelly, Professor of Russian, Oxford University.

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Guests

  • Orlando Figes No other episodes
    Professor of History at Birkbeck College
  • Dominic Lieven No other episodes
    Professor of Russian Government, London School of Economics
  • Catriona Kelly 3 episodes
    Professor of Russian, Oxford University

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Programme ID: p003k9b2

Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/p003k9b2

Auto-category: 947.084 (Assassination of Tsar Alexander II and political climate of late 19th century Russia)

Hello (First sentence from this episode) Hello on the 1st of March 1881 the Russian Tsar Alexander II was traveling through the snow to the Winter Palace in St. Petersburg.