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Encyclopedia Britannica



PROVINCE OR

This article appears in Volume V23, Page 874 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: PRE-PYR
PROVINCE OR GOVERNMENT
European Russia
Archangel Livonia Saratov
Astrakhan Minsk Simbirsk
Bessarabia Mogilev Smolensk
Chernigov Moscow Tambov
Courland Nizhniy-Novgorod Taurida
Don Cossacks' territory Novgorod
Tula
 
Ekaterinoslav Olonets Tver
Esthonia Orel Ufa
Grodno Orenburg Vilna
Kaluga Penza Vitebsk
Kazan Perm Vladimir
Kiev Podolia Volhynia
Kostroma Poltava Vologda
Kovno Pskov Voronezh
Kursk
Ryazan
  Vyatka
Kharkov St
Petersburg
  Yaroslavl
Kherson
  Samara Poland
Kalisz Piotrkow Siedlce
Kielce Plock Suwalki
Lomza Radom Warsaw Lublin
Grand-Duchy of Finland
Abo-Bjorneborg St Michel Viborg
Kuopio Tavastehus Vasa
Nyland Uleaborg Caucasia
Kuban Stavropol Terek
Baku Elizavetpol Kutais
Black Sea territory Erivan Tiflis with Zaka-
Dahestan Kars taly
Russia in Asia
Akmolinsk
Semipalatinsk
The Steppes 1 Turgai
Uralsk
Samarkand
Transcaspia Western Siberia) Tobolsk
j Tomsk Eastern Siberia
Irkutsk
Yakutsk
 
Transbaikalia Yeniseisk
Amur Region
Amur
Maritime Province
Sakhalin
It has been found, from a comparison of the densities of population of the various provinces in 1859 with the distribution in 1897, that the centre of density has distinctly moved S., towards the shores of the Black Sea, and W., the greatest increase having taken place in the E. Polish and in the Lithuanian provinces, along the S.W. border, in the prairie belt beside the Black Sea, and in Orenburg. N. Caucasia and S.W. Siberia likewise show a considerable increase. The census of 1897 revealed in several provinces a remarkably low proportion of men to women. This was owing to the fact that large numbers of the men engaged in agricultural pursuits during the summer temporarily move every year into the large industrial centres for the winter. Consequently there were only 87.4 and 89.8 women to every too men in the governments of St
Petersburg
  and Taurida respectively, but as many as 133.8 in Yaroslavl, 119 in Tver and 117 in Kostroma. The average number of women to every too men in the Russian governments proper was 102.9; in Poland, 98.6; in Finland, Io2.2; in Caucasia, 88.9; in Siberia, 93'7; and in Turkestan and Transcaspia, 83o.
Turkestan
Ferghana Syr-darya
The effects of emigration and immigration cannot be estimated with accuracy, because only those who cross the frontier with pass-ports are taken account of. The statistics of these show that there was during the thirty-two years, 185688, an excess of emigration over immigration of 1,146,052 in the case of Russians, and a surplus of immigration of 2,304,717 foreigners. On the other hand, in the six years, 1892-97, the excess of Russian emigration over immigration was 207,353, as compared with an excess of foreign immigration over emigration of only 136,740. During the years 19004 inclusive the total emigrants from Russia numbered 2,358,539, of whom 1,144,246 were Russians; while the immigrants numbered 2,333,053, of whom 1,432,057 were foreigners. It is also known that the number of Russian immigrants into the United States in 18911902 was 742,869, as compared with 313,469 in 1873-90, or a grand total since 1873 of 1,056,338. By far the greater part of these were
Jews. The emigration to Siberia varies much from year to year. It was 26,129 in 1888, and 6o,000 in 1898. During the two following years it amounted to an average of over 160,000, but in the years 19013 to an average of 84,638 per annum. Altogether some 800,000 peasants are estimated to have settled in Siberia during the period 188696, but during the years 18931905 no less than four millions in all. There is also some emigration from central Russia to the S. Urals, as well as to some of the steppe governments.
Within the empire a very great diversity of nationalities is coin-prised, due to the amalgamation or absorption by the Slav race of a variety of Ural-Altaic stocks, of Turko-Tatars, Turko-Mongols and various Caucasian races. In some cases their ethnical relations have not yet been completely determined. According to the results obtained by the census committee of 1897, working on a linguistic basis, the distribution of races was as given in the table opposite :
Taken as a whole, only 13% of the population of Russia 1'ved in towns in 1897, but in the years 185760 less than io% was urban.
Cities.
In Russia proper less than 2 % emigrated from the
villages to the towns during the forty years ending 1897. The following table shows the urban population in the various divisions of the empire in 1897:
Urban Percentage
Population. of Total.
European Russia . 12,027,038 12.8
Poland 2,055,892 21.7
Finland 281,216 IIo
Caucasia r,olo,6i5 10.9
Siberia 473,796 9'3
Central Asia 936,655 12.0
Russian Empire 16,785,212 13.0
.
i
There e were in European Russia and Poland only twelve cities with more than ioo,000 inhabitants in 1884; in 1900 there were sixteen, namely, St Petersburg, Moscow, Warsaw, Odessa, Lodz,
Riga
 , Kiev, Kharkov, Vilna, Saratov, Kazan, Ekaterinoslav, Rostov-on-the Don, Astrakhan,
Tula
  and Kishinev. In other parts of the empire there were four cities each having over roo,000 Inhabitants in that year, namely, Baku, Tiflis, Tashkent and Helsingfors. While only three of these are in middle Russia (Moscow, Tula and Kazan), eight are in S. Russia. There are thirty-four cities in European Russia and Poland, and forty in the entire empire, with from 50,000 to Ioo,000 inhabitants each. The rural population live for the most part in villages, not as a rule scattered about the country. In the inclement regions of the N. and in the N. parts of the forest zone the villages are very small. They are larger, but still small, in White Russia, Lithuania and the region of the lakes; but in the steppe governments they are very appreciably bigger, some of the Cossack stanitsas or settlements exceeding 20.000, and many of them numbering more than io,000 inhabitants each. The houses are generally built of wood and wear a poverty-stricken aspect. Owing to the great risks from fire the villages usually cover a large area of ground, and the houses are scattered and straggling. The mortality in most towns is so great that during the last ten years of the 19th century, in a very great number of cities, the deaths exceeded the births by I to 4 in the thousand. (P. A. K.; J. T. BE.)
Government and Administration.Russia was described in the Almanach de Gotha for 1910 as " a constitutional monarchy under an autocratic tsar." This obvious contradiction in terms well illustrates the difficulty of defining in a single
formula
  the system, essentially transitional and meanwhile sui generic, established in the Russian empire since October 1905.. Before this date the fundamental laws of Russia described the power of the emperor as " autocratic and unlimited." The imperial style is still " Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias" ; but in the fundamental laws as remodelled between the imperial manifesto of 17/30 October and the opening of the first Duma
1 See A. Aitoff, Peuples et langages de la P.ussie (Paris, 1906), based on the report of the Russian Census Committee of 1897.on the 27th of April 1906, while the name and principle of autocracy was jealously preserved, the word " unlimited " vanished. Not that the regime in Russia had become in any true sense constitutional, far less parliamentary; but the " unlimited autocracy " had given place to a " self-limited autocracy," whether permanently so limited, or only at the discretion of the autocrat, remaining a subject of heated controversy between conflicting parties in the state? Provisionally, then, the Russian governmental system may perhaps be best definedas M. Chasles suggests3as " a limited monarchy under an autocratic emperor."
At the head of the government is the emperor,' `whose power is limited only by the provisions of the fundamental laws of the empire. Of these some are ancient and undis- The puted: the empire may not be partitioned, but emperor. descends entire in order of primogeniture, and by preference to the male
heir
 ; the emperor and his consort must belong to the Eastern Orthodox Church; the emperor can wear no crown that entails residence abroad. By the manifesto of the 17/30th of October 1905 the emperor voluntarily limited his legislative power by decreeing that no measure was to become law without the consent of the Imperial Duma, a freely elected national assembly. By the law of the loth of February 1906 the Council of the Empire was associated with the Duma as a legislative Upper
House
 ; and from this time the legislative power has been exercised normally by the emperor only in concert with the two chambers.
The Council of the Empire, or Imperial Council (Gosudarstvenniy Sovyet), as reconstituted for this purpose, consists of 196 members, of whom 98 are nominated by the emperor, The while 98 are elective. The ministers, also nominated, council are ex officio members. Of the elected members of the 3 are returned by the " black " clergy (the monks), Empire. 3 by the " white " clergy (seculars),5 18 by the corporations of nobles, 6 by the academy of sciences and the universities, 6 by the chambers of commerce, 6 by the industrial councils, 34 by the governments having zemstvos, 16 by those having no zemstvos, and 6 by Poland. As a legislative
body
  the powers of the Council are co-ordinate with those of the Duma; in practice, however, it has seldom if ever initiated legislation .6
The Duma of the Empire or Imperial Duma (Gosudarstvennaya Duma), which forms the Lower House of the Russian parliament, consists (since the ukaz of the 2nd of June 1907)
of 442 members, elected by an exceedingly complicated The Dum&
process, so manipulated as to secure an overwhelming preponderance for the wealthy, and especially the landed classes, and also for the representatives of the Russian as opposed to the subject peoples. Each province of the empire, except the now disfranchised steppes of Central Asia,' returns a
certain of members fixed in each case b Electoral
proportion ( Y system.
law in such a way as to give a preponderance to the
Russian element), in addition to those returned by certain of
2 M. Stolypin defended the ukaz of the 2nd of June 1907, which in flat contradiction of the provisions of the fundamental laws altered the electoral law without the consent of the legislature, on the ground that what the autocrat had granted the autocrat could take away. The members of the Opposition, on the other hand, quoting Art. 84 of the fundamental laws (" The empire is governed on the immutable basis of laws issued according to the established order "), argued that the emperorhimself could only act within the limits of the order established by those laws. It is noteworthy that even the third Duma in its address to the throne, if it avoided the tabooed word " Constitution," avoided also all mention of autocracy.
3 Le Parlement russe, p. 151.
Imperator is the official style. The Russian translation is Gosudar. Popularly, however, the emperor is known by his old Russian title of tsar (q.v.).
5 This is the first time since Peter the Great that the clergy have been given a voice in secular affairs in Russia.
6 The number of the council was formerly not fixed, and there are still honorary councillors who have no right to sit. Thus in 1910 the honorary president of the council was the grand-duke Michael Nicolaievich, the actual president M. G. Akimov. The judicial and administrative work of the old council was in 19011 assigned to sepa_ate committees.
7 These returned 23 members in the first and second Dumas.
74
RUSSIA
[GOVERNMENT
Russia in Poland. Caucasia. Siberia. Central Finland. Totals.'
Europe. Asia.
Great Russians . 48,558,721 267,160 1,829,793 4,423,803 587,992 5,939 55,673,408
Slays Little Russians . 20,414,866 335,337 1,305,463 223,274 IoI,61 I 22,380,551
White Russians 5,823,383 29,347 19,642 12+346 829 5,885,547
Poles 1,109,934 6,755,503 25,117 29,177 I1,576 7,931,307
Other Slays2. 213,268 7,365 3,855' 182 189 224,859
1,345,160 305,322 5,121 1,877 I,042 .. 1,658+532
Lithuanians{Lithuanians3 1,422,021 5,064 1,511 6,714 627 1,435,937
Letts
Rumanians . I,121,669 5,223 7,232 .. .. 1,134,124
Latin and Germans 1,312,188 407,274 56,729 5,424 8,874 1,925 1,790,489
Teutonic Greeks 86,626 .. 100,299 . . .. .. 186,925


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