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Zemstvo

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Zemstvo having a dinner by Grigoriy Myasoyedov. 1872.

Zemstvo (Russian: Земство) was a form of local government instituted during the great liberal reforms performed in Imperial Russia by Alexander II of Russia. The idea of zemstvo was elaborated by Nikolay Milyutin, and the first zemstvo laws were promulgated in 1864. After the October Revolution of 1917, the zemstvo system was shut down.

The system of local self-government the Russian Empire was presented at the lowest level by mir and volosts and was continued, so far as the 34 Guberniyas of old Russia are concerned,[1] in the elective district and provincial assemblies (zemstvos).

These bodies, one for each district and another for each province or government, were created by Alexander II in 1864. They consisted of a representative council (zemskoye sobranye) and of an executive board (zemskaya uprava) nominated by the former. The board consists of five classes of members:

  • large landed proprietors (nobles owning 590 acres (2.4 km2) and over), who sit in person;
  • delegates of the small landowners, including the clergy in their capacity of landed proprietors;
  • delegates of the wealthier townsmen;
  • delegates of the less wealthy urban classes;
  • delegates of the peasants, elected by the volosts.[2]

The nobles were given more weight in voting for a zemstvo, as evidenced by the fact that 74% of the zemstvo members were of nobles, even though nobles were 1.3% of the population. Even so, the zemstvo did allow the greater population more say in the ways they wanted a small part of their lives to be run.

The rules governing elections to the zemstvos were taken as a model for the electoral law of 1906 and are sufficiently indicated by the account of this given below. The zemstvos were originally given large powers in relation to the incidence of taxation, and such questions as education, medical relief, public welfare, food supply, and road maintenance in their localities, but were met with hostility by radicals, such as the Socialist Revolutionary Party, the intelligentsia, and the nihilists who wanted more reform.. These powers were, however, severely restricted by the emperor Alexander III (law of 12/25 June 1890), the zemstvos being absolutely subordinated to the governors, whose consent was necessary to the validity of all their decisions, and who received drastic powers of discipline over the members. In spite of these restrictions and of an electoral system which tended to make these assemblies as strait-laced and reactionary as any government bureau, the zemstvos did good work, notably educational, in those provinces where the proprietors were inspired with a more liberal spirit. Many zemstvos also made extensive and valuable inquiries into the condition of agriculture, industry, healthcare and the like. It was not till 1905 that the zemstvos regained, at least de facto, some of their independent initiative.

The term Zemstvo is also used in philately to refer to local-issue Russian postage stamps from this period.

Appearances in media

Levin, a protagonist of Tolstoys novel Anna Karenina, has an assocation with Zemstvo and it is refered to numerous times.

Notes and references

  1. ^ Sixteen provinces have no zemstvos, i.e. the three Baltic provinces, the nine western governments annexed from Poland by Catherine II, and the Cossack provinces of the Don, Astrakhan, Orenburg and Stavropol.
  2. ^ By the law of 12 (25) June 1890 the peasant members of the zemstvos were to be nominated by the governor of the government or province from a list elected by the volosts.
  • Public Domain This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)