Nikolay Bogolepov
Nikolay Pavlovich Bogolepov | |
---|---|
Николай Павлович Боголепов | |
Minister of National Enlightenment | |
In office 1898 – February 27, 1901 | |
Prime Minister | Ivan Durnovo |
Preceded by | Count Ivan Delyanov |
Succeeded by | Pyotr Vannovskiy |
Personal details | |
Born | Serpukhov, Moscow Governorate, Russian Empire | December 9, 1846
Died | March 15, 1901 Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire | (aged 54)
Resting place | Dorohomilovskoye Cemetery |
Citizenship | Russian Empire |
Nationality | Russian |
Alma mater | Moscow State University (1868) |
Occupation | statesman, rector |
Nikolay Pavlovich Bogolepov (Template:Lang-ru) (9 December 1846 – 15 March 1901) was a Russian jurist and Minister of National Enlightenment, assassinated by a Socialist-Revolutionary activist.
Bogolepov was born in Serpukhov, in the Moscow Governorate of the Russian Empire. His father was a police inspector. In 1857 he moved to Moscow to continue his education in secondary school because his father did not find a satisfactory one in Serpukhov. The father could not afford moving to Moscow himself and Bogolepov had to live alone in a school boarding house. In 1864 he finished the school and entered the Law faculty of the Moscow State University. After graduation he worked in the Criminal Department of the Senate but left it a year after and in 1869 returned to the University for academic studies in Roman law. In 1881 he was appointed professor and two years later he was elected rector of the Moscow University continuing lecturing in Roman law. In 1886 two of his children died in a row. Being unable to work in the University after this tragedy he resigned. In 1891 Bogolepov was made rector again but resigned two years after due to constant students' unrest.
In 1895 Minister of Popular Enlightenment Ivan Delyanov died. Nicholas II appointed Bogolepov as his successor. Bogolepov faced an enormous bulk of problems, firstly student disturbances that ranged from typical protests and demands for autonomy for universities to revolutionary propaganda. The government introduced various restrictive measures which only made the situation worse. In 1900 Minister of Finance Witte introduced "Temporary Regulations" according to which a university student could be conscripted into the army as a punishment for participation in student riots. Bogolepov was not the author of this highly unpopular innovation, but he approved of it and in the beginning of 1901 he commanded that 183 students of Kiev University were conscripted into the army. On 27 February he was shot in the neck by Pyotr Karpovich, supporter of the Socialist-Revolutionary Party and died on 15 March. Karpovich was sentenced to twenty years of katorga. Five years later he escaped and died in 1917 when a ship with Russian émigrés was sunk by a German submarine.