Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Before 1914 the Tsarist autocracy was very gradually being liberalised.
Although earlier considered fairly liberal, Protopopov saw his new role as that of preserving Tsarist autocracy.
The events destroyed the Tsarist autocracy.
Georgian dissatisfaction with Tsarist autocracy and Armenian economic domination led to the development of a national liberation movement in the second half of the 19th century.
It outlived both the Tsarist autocracy that founded it and the Soviet junta that adopted it.
These referred to Tsarist autocracy as a source of "darkness and slavery", whereas the more liberal regime of Bukovina offered its subjects "golden chains".
Throughout his life, Nabokov would remain committed to the classical liberal political philosophy of his father, and equally opposed Tsarist autocracy, communism and fascism.
Bloody Sunday caused grave consequences for the Tsarist autocracy governing Imperial Russia, showing disregard for ordinary people which undermined the state.
Nicholas II had decided to return Russia to the absolute Tsarist autocracy of his father, Alexander III.
Charles was a Russian Jewish émigré brought to France as a young boy by his parents, to escape the persecution of the Jews under the Tsarist autocracy.
The rebellion dismantled the Tsarist autocracy in Russia and paved the way for the creation of the USSR, led by communist revolutionary Lenin.
The Russian Revolution is the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union.
It is widely regarded as one of the key events that sparked the eventual Russian Revolution of 1917, which led to the dismantling of the country's Tsarist autocracy.
In the early 1900s, Baruch Charney was drawn to the revolutionary movement for the overthrow of the Tsarist autocracy, becoming an activist in the Jewish Labour Bund.
In Russia, the February Revolution of 1917 had destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and the Kerensky government tried to build a democratic system while continuing the war against the Central Powers.
However, it is questionable the extent that these reforms benefited the Russians and the Tsarist autocracy, as it could be said that these policies merely supported the collapse of Tsarism.
A practical politician, his political ideas were "quintessentially Russian", and he believed in the superiority of the Tsarist autocracy (he once described the French revolutionaries as "a pack of madmen").
The Russians were survivors of the Bolshevik Russian Revolution of 1917 and Russian Civil War of 1919-1920, when the Tsarist autocracy was overthrown by the socialists.
It followed and capitalized on the February Revolution of the same year, which overthrew the Tsarist autocracy and established a provisional government composed predominantly of former nobles and aristocrats.
Joseph Conrad Joseph Conrad (originally Jozef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski) was born in the Ukraine in 1857 and grew up under Tsarist autocracy.
Through the voice of another contributor, the old anarchist scholar Zamfir Arbore, Seara was focusing its criticism on Russia's Tsarist autocracy, against whom Arbore had been fighting for decades.
Nour furthered his studies in other regions of the Russian Empire, where he became a familiar figure to those who opposed Tsarist autocracy, and exchanged ideas with radical young men of various ethnic backgrounds.
During his troubled youth, Arbore-Ralli underwent medical training in Moscow and Saint Petersburg, but was more involved within the revolutionary, nihilist and pan-Russian anarchist underground, with the goal of subverting Tsarist autocracy.
The boyars fought among themselves, the lower classes revolted blindly, and foreign armies occupied the Kremlin in Moscow, prompting many to accept Tsarist autocracy as a necessary means to restoring order and unity in Russia.
In New York Gordon was active in the American section of the Russian Socialist Revolutionary Party (PSR), an organization dedicated to the forcible overthrow of Tsarist autocracy in Russia.
Thus Tsarism did show signs of establishing its power after the 1905 revolution.
Initially well supported, was it only hatred of Tsarism that kept everyone together?
He anticipated that workers would lead the poor peasantry in the struggle against Tsarism.
It was upon serfdom that the critics of Tsarism rapidly came to focus their attention.
Pre-revolutionary Russia will be studied along with the end of Tsarism.
Tsarism was inherently incapable of resolving the country's problems.
Even if given time, Stolypin's measures were far from the solution required to save Tsarism.
Yet within two years three parties illegally took to the field in opposition to Tsarism, demonstrating the strength of feeling against the autocracy.
Tsarism was 'a deadlocked political system, drifting helplessly toward destruction.'
This effectively restored, and then extended, the territory controlled by the Russian state under Tsarism.
Did Tsarism show any real signs of re-establishing its grip on Russia in the period after the 1905 revolution?
I call upon all the socialist parties of Russia to come to an immediate agreement among themselves and bring an armed uprising against Tsarism.
The growth of a heavy industrial base, itself not imposed to Tsarism, unleashed enormous tensions in Russian society and politics.
Instead, Sharikov mocks manners as a relic of Tsarism.
After the 1917 revolution and the Russian Civil War, the most of his poems was dedicated for the struggle against the Tsarism.
It conjures up the picture of an omnipotent and independent sovereign - the image actively cultivated by the ideology of Tsarism.
For the Left, the end of Tsarism was the culmination of years of effort by socialists and anarchists everywhere.
Nevertheless, the crude and uncomplicated alliance between State and nobility which had characterized the heyday of Tsarism could never be the same again.
Basmachi opponents of Tsarism and Bolshevism in Central Asia (1916 to the 1930s) called themselves mojahed.
His sharp caricatures and grotesques scoffing at social inequality, ignorance, fanaticism and oppression by Tsarism are also famous.
Following the overthrow of Tsarism in the February Revolution of 1917, workers found no governmental obstacles to their self-organization into labor unions.
Dr Chubarov's recent work has traced the history of Russia from Peter the Great to the end of Tsarism in 1917.
He also saw the Leninist Party as an appropriate form for the overthrow of Tsarism, but ultimately an inappropriate form for a proletarian revolution.
Union discontent was lead by a well-organised unified opposition front, and the Rasputin affair further lost legitimacy of Tsarism with an opposition stronger than in 1905.
Ziegler, Charles E. "Russian-American relations: From Tsarism to Putin."