Russian Assembly Explained
The Russian Assembly (Russian: link=no|Русское собрание) was a Russian loyalist, right-wing, monarchist political group (party). It was founded in Saint Petersburg in October−November 1900,[1] [2] and dismissed in 1917. It was led by Prince Dmitry Golitsyn.[3] It opposed liberal western parliamentarianism, and advocated 'the old formula of Autocracy, Orthodoxy and Nationality'.[3]
It consisted mainly of right-wing officers and civil-servants in St. Petersburg.[3]
Leaders
The first congress (rally) of the Russian Assembly took place on in Petersburg. It approved the rights of 120 full members of the party and elected the supreme governing body, the Board of 18 members. Prince Dmitri Petrovich Golitsyn was elected a chairman of the Council; members of the Board journalist Aleksey Suvorin and writer Sergei Syromyatnikov as his two deputies (Russian: link=no|товарищи председателя).
Another 15 members of the first Board were:
Among those elected to the Board subsequently were
- Nobility: Princes – Michael Volkonsky (later one of the leaders of the Union of Russian People), А. А. Куракин, A. Lobanov-Rostovsky, M. Shakhovskoy; Counts – P. Apraksin, Aleksei Bobrinsky, Sergei Toll; Baron M. Taube.
- Clergy: bishop Seraphim Chichagov (later one of the founders of the Union of Russian People)
- Statesmen: Alexei Khvostov, Vladimir Gurko, M. Govorukha-Otrok, A. Karamzin, N. Myasoedov, A. Chemodurov, Nikolai Zverev (later one of the founders of the Russian Peripheral Society),
Notable members
Bibliography
- Book: Figes. Orlando. A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924. The Bodley Head. London. 9781847922915. 2014.
- Book: Rawson, Don C.. March 1995. Cambridge University Press. Russian rightists and the revolution of 1905. Cambridge Russian, Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies (No. 95). 978-0-521-48386-5. xv, 312, 1 map, 28 tables.
- Book: Rogger, Hans. 1986. University of California Press. Jewish policies and right-wing politics in imperial Russia. 0-520-04596-3. The Formation of the Russian Right: 1900–1906 . https://books.google.com/books?id=utu3By-p-kEC&dq=Russian+Fascism&pg=PA212. 188–210.
Notes and References
- http://encspb.ru/article.php?kod=2804022217 Энциклопедия Санкт-Петербурга
- http://www.hrono.ru/organ/rossiya/russ_sobr.html Русское собрание
- Figes, p. 196