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Pyotr Stolypin

Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin (Russian: Пётр Аркадьевич Столыпин, IPA: [pʲɵtr ɐrˈkadʲjɪvʲɪtɕ stɐˈlɨpʲɪn]; 14 April [O.S. 2 April] 1862 – 18 September [O.S. 5 September] 1911) was a Russian statesman who served as the third prime minister and the interior minister of the Russian Empire from 1906 until his assassination in 1911. Known as the greatest reformer of Russian society and economy, his reforms caused unprecedented growth of the Russian state, which was halted by his assassination.

In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming customs, the patronymic is Arkadyevich and the family name is Stolypin.

Pyotr Stolypin

Pyotr Arkadyevich Stolypin

(1862-04-14)14 April 1862
Dresden, Kingdom of Saxony, German Confederation

18 September 1911(1911-09-18) (aged 49)
Kiev, Kiev Governorate, Southwestern Krai, Russian Empire

Olga Borisovna von Neidhardt

Born in Dresden, in the Kingdom of Saxony, to a prominent Russian aristocratic family, Stolypin became involved in government from his early 20s. His successes in public service led to rapid promotions, culminating in his appointment as interior minister under prime minister Ivan Goremykin in April 1906. In July, Goremykin resigned and was succeeded as prime minister by Stolypin.


As prime minister, Stolypin initiated major agrarian reforms, known as the Stolypin reform, that granted the right of private land ownership to the peasantry. His tenure was also marked by increased revolutionary unrest, to which he responded with a new system of martial law that allowed for the arrest, speedy trial, and execution of accused offenders. After numerous previous assassination attempts, Stolypin was fatally shot in September 1911 by revolutionary Dmitrii Bogrov in Kiev.


Stolypin was a monarchist and hoped to strengthen the throne by modernizing the rural Russian economy. Modernity and efficiency, rather than democracy, were his goals. He argued that the land question could only be resolved and revolution averted when the peasant commune was abolished and a stable landowning class of peasants, the kulaks, would have a stake in the status quo. His successes and failures have been the subject of heated controversy among scholars, who agree he was one of the last major statesmen of Imperial Russia with cogent and forceful public reform policies.[1]

Screen portrayals[edit]

Stolypin is portrayed by Eric Porter in the opening scenes of the 1971 British film Nicholas and Alexandra, fictitiously taking part in the Romanov dynasty tercentenary celebrations of 1913 before being assassinated later in the film, two years after his actual assassination.

Coup of June 1907

Stolypin reform

Ascher, Abraham (2001). P. A. Stolypin: The Search for Stability in Late Imperial Russia. Stanford University Press.  0-8047-3977-3.

ISBN

Conroy, M.S. (1976), Peter Arkadʹevich Stolypin: Practical Politics in Late Tsarist Russia, Westview Press, (Boulder), 1976.  0-8915-8143-X

ISBN

Fuhrmann, Joseph T. (2013). Rasputin, the untold story (illustrated ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 314.  978-1-118-17276-6.

ISBN

Kotsonis, Yanni (2011). "The problem of the individual in the Stolypin reforms". Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. 12 (1): 25–52. :10.1353/kri.2011.a411659. S2CID 153249001.

doi

Lieven, Dominic, ed. The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689–1917 (2015)

Macey, David (2004). "Reflections on peasant adaptation in rural Russia at the beginning of the twentieth century: the Stolypin agrarian reforms". Journal of Peasant Studies. 31 (3–4): 400–426. :10.1080/0306615042000262634. S2CID 154275204.

doi

McDonald, David MacLaren (1992). United Government and Foreign Policy in Russia, 1900–1914. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.  978-0674922396.

ISBN

Pallot, Judith. Land reform in Russia, 1906–1917: peasant responses to Stolypin's project of rural transformation (1999). Archived 5 July 2019 at the Wayback Machine

online

Pares, Bernard. A History of Russia (1926) pp 495–506.

Online

Pares, Bernard. The Fall of the Russian Monarchy (1939) pp 94–143.

Online

Shelokhaev, Valentin V. (2016). "The Stolypin Variant of Russian Modernization". Russian Social Science Review. 57 (5): 350–377. :10.1080/10611428.2016.1229962. S2CID 141548699.

doi

Quotations related to Pyotr Stolypin at Wikiquote

Media related to Pyotr Stolypin at Wikimedia Commons

Stolypin and the Russian Agrarian Miracle

(in Russian)

The ancestors of Pyotr Stolypin

in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Newspaper clippings about Pyotr Stolypin

Stolypin: Reformist ahead of his time