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explain how the policies of Tsar Nicholas II were responsible for outbreak of Russian revolution​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
8

the policies of tsar Nicholas 2 were responsible for outbreak of Russian revolution

Explanation:

if tsar Nicholas 2 were not there Russian revolution would not be taken place.

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Answered by Anonymous
0

Explanation:

The death of Alexander III on November 1 (October 20, Old Style), 1894, like that of Nicholas I nearly 40 years earlier, aroused widespread hopes of a milder regime and of social reforms. Nicholas II had neither the imposing physical presence nor the strong will of his father. He had all the virtues of a country gentleman and would have had a happy and useful life as a private landowner. He had little taste for the splendours of monarchy and even less ability to handle the cumbrous, complex, and antiquated mechanism of Russian government. Moreover, unfortunately, he had little aptitude for choosing good subordinates or delegating authority to them.His personal charm at first captured those who came into contact with him. However, his tendency to change his mind, agreeing with the last person he had been talking to, was the cause of many disappointments and won him a reputation for bad faith. His wife, Princess Alexandra of Hesse, was a granddaughter of Queen Victoria. Nicholas was utterly devoted to Alexandra; she had a much stronger will than the emperor’s, and she greatly influenced him.Moderate liberal opinion received an early rebuff when at a reception of zemstvo delegates on January 29 (January 17, Old Style), 1895, Nicholas denounced as “senseless dreams” any suggestion of “participation of zemstvo representatives in internal government.” On the contrary, he intended to defend the principles of autocracy “as unswervingly” as his late father had. Nicholas indeed, under the influence of Pobedonostsev, believed the maintenance of autocracy to be a sacred obligation toward God himself. This view was consistently supported by the empress, who, since her official conversion to Orthodoxy before marriage to Nicholas, had become a devoted believer in the doctrines of the Russian church. When in 1904 a male heir, Grand Duke Alexis, was born, the emperor felt that it was his duty to maintain the imperial heritage unimpaired—that is, with autocracy unchanged—for his son. The precarious health of the prince, who had inherited hemophilia, strengthened this conviction.

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