Everything about Yemelyan Pugachev totally explained
Yemelyan Ivanovich Pugachov (
1740 or
1742 - ), also transliterated
Emelian Pugachev, was a pretender to the
Russian throne who led a great
Cossack insurrection during the reign of
Catherine II.
Alexander Pushkin wrote a remarkable history of the rebellion, and he recounted some of the events in his novel
The Captain's Daughter (1836).
Background
Pugachev, the son of a small
Don Cossack landowner, married a Cossack girl, Sofia Nedyuzheva, in
1758, and, in the same year, participated the
Seven Years' War as part of the Cossack expedition to
Prussia under the command of Count
Zakhar Chernyshev. In the first
Russo-Turkish War (
1768–
1774), Pugachev, now a Cossack
khorunzhiy (corresponding to the regular army rank of
podporuchik, or junior lieutenant), served under Count
Peter Panin and participated in the siege of
Bender (1770).
Invalided home, Pugachev led for the next few years a wandering life. More than once, the authorities arrested and imprisoned him as a deserter. In
1773, after frequenting the monasteries of the
Old Believers, who exercised considerable influence over him, he suddenly proclaimed himself
tsar Peter III and organised the insurrection of the
Yaik Cossacks which ignited the flames of a full-blown insurrection in the lower
Volga region.
Insurrection 1773–1774
See Main Article: Pugachev's Rebellion
The story of Pugachev's strong resemblance to the murdered tsar Peter III, whom his wife, the future empress Catherine II, had overthrown in
1762, comes from a later legend. Pugachev was a Don Cossack and deserter of Catherine's Imperial army. Pugachev told the story that he and his principal adherents had escaped from the clutches of Catherine, and had now resolved to redress the grievances of the people, give absolute liberty to the Cossacks, and put Catherine herself away in a
monastery.
Having amassed an army through propaganda, active recruitment and promises for reform, with this army and the coordination of his generals, Pugachev was able to overtake much of the region stretching between the Volga River and the Urals. Pugachev's
greatest victory of the insurgency was the taking of
Kazan.
In response, General Peter Panin thereupon set out against the rebels with a large army, but difficulty of transport, lack of discipline, and the gross insubordination of his ill-paid soldiers paralysed all his efforts for months, while the innumerable and ubiquitous bands of Pugachev gained victories in nearly every engagement. Not until August
1774 did General
Mikhelson inflict a crushing defeat upon the rebels near
Tsaritsyn, when they lost ten thousand killed or taken prisoner. Panin's savage reprisals, after the capture of
Penza, completed their discomfiture. On
September 14,
1774 Pugachev's own Cossacks delivered him up when he attempted to flee to the
Urals.
Aleksandr Suvorov had him placed in a metal cage and sent to Moscow for a public execution which took place on
January 10 1775 (OS = 21 January 1775 NS). In the public square, he was diced into quarters.
Legacy of Pugachev
The Pugachev rebellion had a long lasting effect on Russia for years to come. While Catherine II tried to reform the provincial administration, the horrors of the revolt caused her to scrap other reforms, particularly attempts to emancipate the peasant serfs of Russia. Her regime became one of increasing conservativism. The Russian writer
Alexander Radishchev, in
Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow, attacked the Russian government and, in particular the institution of
serfdom. In the book, he refers to Pugachev and the rebellion as a warning.
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The term "Pugachevs of the University" was frequently used to describe the generation of the Russian
Nihilist movement.
The town in which Pugachev was born was later named in his honor by the Soviet government.
Today, the central square in the Kazakh town of
Uralsk is named Pugachev Square.
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Pugachov's Oak
Bibliography
- N. Dubrovin, Pugachiev and his Associates (Rus.; Petersburg, 1884)
- Catherine II., Political Correspondence (Rus. Fr. Ger.; Petersburg, 1885, &c.)
- S. I. Gnyedich, Emilian Pugachev (Rus.; Petersburg, 1902).
- "Dokumenty stavki EI Pugacheva, povstancheskikh vlastei i uchrezhdenii, 1773-1774 gg."
- AN SSSR, In-t istorii SSSR, TSentr. gos. arkhiv drev. aktov (Rus. Moscow, 1975.)
- Pugachevshchina. Moscow : Gosizdat, 1926-1931.
- Longworth, Philip. "The Pretender Phenomenon in Eighteenth-Century Russia", Past and Present, No. 66. (Feb., 1975), pp. 61–83.
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