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Topic: Konstantin Pobedonostsev


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In the News (Wed 11 Nov 09)

  
 Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev Biography | Encyclopedia of World Biography
The Russian statesman and jurist Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev (1827-1907), as director general of the Holy Synod, became a champion of czarist autocracy, orthodoxy, and Russian nationalism.
Konstantin Pobedonostsev was born on May 21, 1827, in Moscow.
In 1846 Pobedonostsev was assigned to the eighth department of the Senate in Moscow.
www.bookrags.com /biography/konstantin-petrovich-pobedonostsev   (569 words)

  
 Konstantin Pobedonostsev - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In 1868, he became a senator in St. Petersburg, in 1874 - a member of the Council of the Empire, and in 1880 - chief procurator of the Holy Synod.
In addition, Pobedonostsev published in 1865 in Moskovskie Vedomosti several anonymous articles on the judicial reform of Alexander II.
Pobedonostsev held the view that human nature is sinful.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pobedonostsev   (1242 words)

  
 HIS 241 Nicholas II CTE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Pobedonostsev was Ober Procurator of the Holy Synod from 1880 to 1905, which meant that he was the chief state official in charge of all Russian Orthodox Church affairs.
Pobedonostsev felt that the people needed to maintain their respect for the traditional institutions of Russia.
Pobedonostsev exercised considerable influence on the policies of Alexander III (a bit less so on Nicholas II), for example, by encouraging an official policy of Russification directed against the minority populations of the empire.
novaonline.nv.cc.va.us /eli/evans/HIS241/Remarks/Nicholas2CTE.html   (1804 words)

  
 HIS 241 Nicholas II BB   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Pobedonostsev was the most prominent and articulate defender of Russian autocracy between 1881 and 1905.
Pobedonostsev drafted, for instance, Alexander III's 29 April 1881 manifesto, which stated that the autocracy would be maintained in unaltered form.
At the time, democracy was not an option for Russia, but his vehement rejection of it as “the great falsehood of our time,” had the unfortunate spillover effect of even damping down Russian nationalism (in favor of the author's dynastic conception of autocracy), which could have become a bolster for the regime.
novaonline.nv.cc.va.us /eli/evans/HIS241/Remarks/Nicholas2BB.html   (1020 words)

  
 Konstantin Pobedonostsev   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Alexander III assigned his former tutor, the reactionary Konstantin Pobedonostsev, to be the procurator of and Ivan of the Orthodox Church...
Konstantin Petrovich in Russian Pobedonostsev 1827 - 1907 was a...
Prior to the to Konstantin Pobedonostsev, three-storey mansion belonged the Holy Synod.
konstantincgly.fatpuj.info   (490 words)

  
 The Corrs Online
After the assassination in 1881 of Tsar Alexander II who had relieved some of the Jewish disabilities in the Russian Empire, the persecution of the Jews was resumed under Alexander III.
The chief organiser of the persecution, on behalf of the Tsar, was Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev, and Pobedonostsev's most trusted adviser, in relation to the implementation of anti-Jewish policy, was Dostoevsky.
Pobedonostsev's policy for the Jews was that the problem was to be solved by the conversion of one-third of the Jews to Orthodoxy, the emigration of one-third and the deaths of the remaining third.
www.corrsonline.com /home/cil/009-0022.shtml   (478 words)

  
 Reloj de Vapor / Konstantin Pobedonostsev
Pobedonostsev se encuentra a la cabeza del [Consejo Imperial], organismo asesor del Tzar, así como de la [Iglesia Ortodoxa Rusa], siendo Procurador en Jefe del [Sínodo Sagrado] y líder de facto de la institución religiosa.
Aunque oficialmente niega su participación, es un secreto a voces que Pobedonostsev guarda gran simpatía por el [Pochvennichestvo], un movimiento de ideología eslavófila extrema que ha ganado especial fuerza en los últimos años, y no es ningún misterio que sus políticas estatales se ciñen muy de cerca de las proposiciones de dicha organización.
Pobedonostsev suele bromear que es el hombre que más veces ha sido blanco de intentos de asesinato, contando treinta hasta el año recién pasado.
relojdevapor.pbwiki.com /Konstantin+Pobedonostsev?raw=1   (283 words)

  
 Russia's Secret -- Hoover and Petrov -- Chapter 15
People called Konstantin the "Grand Inquisitor." Like the new tsar, he hated democracy and did all he could to keep Russia, the tsar, and Orthodoxy together.
Aleksandr III and Konstantin Pobedonostsev believed in letting those go whom they did not trust.
Those who could not escape Konstantin Pobedonostsev's long arm for lack of funds and legal permission to travel could do nothing but stay behind and suffer-like Vasily Pavlov.
www.molokane.org /molokan/History/Russians_Secret/Chapter_15.htm   (2817 words)

  
 My World and Welcome... Info Pages: Tsarist Occupation Government
Within a week, he was out of his Nazi uniform and into a U.S. Army General's uniform; the U.S. intelligence services, in return, got the info about the Soviets, including access to Gehlen's agents in the Soviet government -- a group of Mystical Tsarists who had infiltrated both the Red Army and the KGB.
His body was found floating in a barrel in the Gulf of Mexico.
The FDA operates similarly but with less publicity; it was described in these terms by Saul Kent of the Life Extension Foundation: "The FDA's strong-arm tactics are used to intimidate and terrorize Americans into toeing their police-state line on health care and medicine."
web.mit.edu /dryfoo/www/Info/tsog.html   (2745 words)

  
 Pobedonostsev on democracy, general education
Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev (1827-1907) began his career as a writer, editor, and translator.
Pobedonostsev, Konstantin P., Reflections of a Russian Statesman (translated 1898 by Grant Richards), reprinted by Ann Arbor Paperbacks/University of Michigan Press, 1973; paper, 271 pp.
Americans encourage secondary-school students to take part-time jobs after school, but not as a substitute for school.
www.cyberussr.com /rus/pobedonostsev.html   (564 words)

  
 Kremlin Portraits - Johnson's Russia List 2-12-03
Although the artist accepts that the president will "most likely" adopt the place originally occupied by Nicholas II, Kalinin's initial draft dresses Mr Putin in clothes worn by Konstantin Pobedonostsev, the tsarist court's senior prosecutor.
The head of the Holy Synod of Russia's orthodox church, Pobedonostsev was one of the tsarist regime's most reactionary figures, a fierce opponent of democracy and a keen supporter of censorship.
Critics who consider Mr Putin's regime authoritarian and illiberal will delight in seeing the president take the tsar's throne, only to be dressed in the plain garb of the monarch's chief prude and censor.
www.cdi.org /russia/Johnson/7059-9.cfm   (554 words)

  
 Philosophical Discussions on the Eve of the Revolution
To none other than the Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod Konstantin Pobedonostsev.
According to Gippius this was “a semi-permission, a semi-acquiescence, an unspoken promise to tolerate the meeting “for the time being.” (By this action Pobedonostsev responded to Dostoyevsky’s ideas, whom he knew personally).
Metropolitan Anthony of Petersburg permitted all monastic and secular clergy, the professors and lecturers, as well as selected students of the Theological academy to attend.
www.berdyaev.com /berdiaev/Smirensky/kling_Meetings.html   (1253 words)

  
 Slavophile - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Russian Slavophiles denounced Western culture and "westernizations" by Peter the Great and Catherine the Great, and some of them even adopted the traditional pre-Petrine dress.
The doctrines of Khomyakov, Ivan Kireevsky (1806-56), Konstantin Aksakov (1817-60) and other Slavophiles had a deep impact on Russian culture, including the Russian Revival school of architecture, The Five of Russian composers, the novelist Nikolai Gogol, the poet Fyodor Tyutchev, the lexicographer Vladimir Dahl, and others.
Later writers Fyodor Dostoevsky, Konstantin Leontyev, and Nikolay Danilevsky developed a peculiar conservative and according to some, anti-Semitic version of Slavophilism called pochvennichestvo (from the Russian word for soil).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Slavophilism   (538 words)

  
 Yourlit.com -- Fyodor Dostoevsky
Dostoevsky abandoned his earlier liberal sentiments and became deeply conservative and extremely religious.
He later formed a peculiar friendship with another archconservative, Konstantin Pobedonostsev.
He began an affair with, and later married, Maria Dmitrievna Isaeva, the widow of an acquaintance in Siberia.
www.yourlit.com /dost.html   (1112 words)

  
 Robert Anton Wilson--TSOG: The Thing That Ate The Constitution   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Within a week, he got out of his Nazi uniform and into a U.S. Army General's uniform; the U.S. intelligence services, in return, got the info about the Soviets, including access to Gehlen's agents in the Soviet government--a group of Mystical Tsarists who had infiltrated both the Red Army and the KGB.
Pobedonostsev, popularly called "The Grand Inquisitor" because of the vast platoons of spies, snoops, agents provocateur and informers he unleashed upon the Russian people, combined theological obsessions with reactionary politics, always an explosive and nefarious mixture.
Besides, Roman Catholics of the old school have similar attitudes, but merely prefer a Pope to do their thinking for them instead of a Tsar, and most of us consider them sane, but just "dumb."
www.newfalcon.com /excerpts/tsog_e.htm   (632 words)

  
 Russian Political Culture
Konstantin Pobedonostsev (government official; Procurator of the Holy Synod)
Right-wing ideas and movements = Konstantin Pobedonostsev (prm), Hans Rogger (ndr)
Margaret McGlinn on Pobedonostsev [LOOP] Interlocutor = Blake
darkwing.uoregon.edu /~kimball/hst407.R.plt.clt.htm   (1410 words)

  
 RUSSIAN AND SLAVIC-RELATED COLLECTIONS
There is also a file of material concerning Lev Trotskii.
are papers collected by Robert Francis Byrnes, for his book Pobedonostsev, consisting of correspondence of Konstantin Petrovich Pobedonostsev, statesman.
This collection consists of photocopies, positive microfilm and typescripts of letters in Russian and French.
www.indiana.edu /~liblilly/lilly/mss/subject/russia.html   (998 words)

  
 15. Christ in Camouflage
He made a tall man with little fl spectacles on the end of his nose—Konstantin Pobedonostsev—his Oberprokuror.
Those who could not escape Konstantin Pobedonostsev’s long arm for lack of funds and legal permission to travel could do nothing but stay behind and suffer—like Vasily Pavlov.
Converted as a young man at Tiflis (he worked for the Nikita Voronin, the tea merchant) Vasily was only married a few years when tsarist officials exiled him to the Ural Mountains.
www.gw.org /Trs/Trs15.htm   (2810 words)

  
 From "AUSZRA" to the Great War: the Emergence of the Lithuanian Nation - Strazas   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
It was even said that the new Tsar Alexander III (1881-1894) would restore the freedom to publish Lithuanian books in the Latin alphabet.
Under the tutelage of the reactionary Konstantin Pobedonostsev (1827-1907), Alexander III instituted a reactionary policy including increased suppression of Russia's nationalities.
One of the great achievements of Auszra was the propagation of new Lithuanian literary works which appeared on its pages and some of which became classics.
www.lituanus.org /1996/96_4_03.htm   (11592 words)

  
 BYRNES MSS.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
This collection contains xerox copies in eight volumes, positive microfilm, and typescripts of letters in Russian and French to Pobedonostsev from Nikolai Baranov, Anna Grigorevna (Snitkina) Dostoevskaia (Fedor Mikhauilovich Dostoevskaia), Sergei Rachinskii, Sofia Rachinskii, and Catherine Tiutchev; from Pobedonostsev to Anna (Tiutchev) Aksakov, Mikhail Nikiforovich Katkov, Ol'ga Aleksieevna Novikova, Sergiei Aleksandrovich Petrovskii, and Catherine Tiutchev.
The negatives of the microfilm are in the East European Division of the Library of Congress, Washington D.C. Accompany this collection is a copy of R.F. Byrnes' book Pobedonostsev, (Lilly DK236.P6 B9).
For more information about this collection and any related materials contact the Public Services Department, Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405.
www.indiana.edu /~liblilly/lilly/mss/html/byrnes.html   (218 words)

  
 Quotequeen's Castle
These Things I Wish For Each Of You Paul Harvey on life
The Falsehood of Democracy Excerpts from the essay on the flaws of democracy by Konstantin Pobedonostsev
Journey From St. Petersburg to Moscow Excerpts from the work by Alexander Radischev focusing on the value of a free press
www.geocities.com /quotequeen81   (345 words)

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