Sergei Witte

From Nwe

Count Sergei Yulyevich Witte
Sergei Witte

Witte in the early 1880s


1st Prime Minister of Russia
Preceded by New Post
(Himself as Chairman of the
Committee of Ministers
)
Succeeded by Ivan Goremykin

Chairman of the Committee of Ministers
In office
1903 – 1905
Preceded by Ivan Nikolayevich Durnovo
Succeeded by Post abolished
(Himself as Prime Minister)

13th Finance Minister of Imperial Russia
In office
August 30, 1892 – August 16, 1903
Preceded by Ivan Vyshnegradsky
Succeeded by Eduard Pleske

14th Transport Minister of Imperial Russia
In office
February 1892 – August 1892
Preceded by Adolf Gibbenet
Succeeded by Apollon Krivoshein

Born June 29 1849(1849-06-29)
Tiflis, Caucasus Viceroyalty, Russian Empire (now Tbilisi, Georgia)
Died March 13 1915 (aged 65)
Petrograd, Russian Empire
Alma mater Novorossiysk University
Signature Sergei Witte's signature

Count Sergei Yulyevich Witte (Russian: Серге́й Ю́льевич Ви́тте, tr. Sergéy Yúl'yevich Vítte, Russian pronunciation: [sʲɪrˈɡʲej ˈjʉlʲjɪvʲɪtɕ ˈvʲitʲːɪ];[1] June 29 [O.S. June 17] 1849  – March 13 [O.S. February 28] 1915), also known as Sergius Witte, was a Russian statesman who served as the first prime minister of the Russian Empire, replacing the Tsar as head of the government. Neither a liberal nor a conservative, he attracted foreign capital to boost Russia's industrialization.

Witte served under the last two emperors of Russia, Alexander III (1881 - 1894) and Nicholas II (1894 - 1917). During the Russo-Turkish War (1877–78), he had risen to a position in which he controlled all the traffic passing to the front along the lines of the Odessa Railways. As finance minister from 1892 to 1903, Witte presided over extensive industrialization and achieved government monopoly control over an expanded system of railroad lines.

Following months of civil unrest and outbreaks of violence in what became known as the 1905 Russian Revolution, Witte created the framework for the October Manifesto and the accompanying government communication to establish constitutional government. However, he was not convinced it would solve Russia's problems with the Tsarist autocracy. On October 20, 1905 Witte was appointed as the first chairman of the Council of Ministers (effectively prime minister). Assisted by his Council, he designed Russia's first constitution. But within a few months Witte fell into disgrace as a reformer because of continuing Court opposition to these changes. He resigned on May 5 [O.S. April 22] 1906 before the First Duma assembled on May 10 [O.S. April 27] 1906.

Family and early life

Witte's father, Julius Christoph Heinrich Georg Witte, was from a Lutheran Baltic German family.[2] He converted to Russian Orthodoxy upon his marriage with Yekaterina Fadeyeva. His father was made a member of the knighthood in Pskov but moved as a civil servant to Saratov and Tiflis (present-day Tbilisi, Georgia). Sergei was raised on the estate of his mother's parents. His grandfather was Andrei Mikhailovich Fadeyev, a Governor of Saratov and Privy Councillor of the Caucasus. His grandmother was Princess Helene Dolgoruki. Sergei had two brothers (Alexander and Boris) and two sisters (Olga and Sophia).[3][4] Helena Blavatsky, noted mystic, was their first cousin. Witte studied at a Tiflis gymnasium, but he took more interest in music, fencing and riding than in academics. He finished Gymnasium I in Kishinev[5] and began studying Physico-Mathematical Sciences at the Novorossiysk University in Odessa in 1866. He graduated at the top of his class in 1870.[6] After completing his studies he devoted some time to journalism in close relations with the Slavophiles and Mikhail Katkov.

Witte had initially planned to pursue a career in academia with the intention of becoming a professor in theoretical mathematics. His relatives took a dim view of that career path, as it was considered unsuitable for a noble or aristocrat at the time. He was instead persuaded by Count Vladimir Pavlovich Machabelovy, Minister of Ways and Communication, to pursue a career in the Russian railroads. At the direction of the Count, Witte undertook six months of training in a variety of positions on the Odessa Railways to gain a practical understanding of Ukrainian railways operations. At the end of that period, he was appointed as chief of the traffic office.[7]

After a wreck on the Odessa Railways in late 1875 cost many lives, Witte was arrested and sentenced to four months in prison. However, while he was still contesting the case in court, Witte directed the Odessa Railways and achieved extraordinary efforts towards the transport of troops and war materials in the Russo-Turkish War, attracting the attention of Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich, who commuted his prison sentence to two weeks. Witte had devised a novel system of double-shift operations in his efforts to overcome delays on the railways.[8]

In 1879, Witte accepted a post in St. Petersburg, where he would meet his future wife. He moved to Kiev the following year. In 1883, he published a paper on "Principles of Railway Tariffs for Cargo Transportation" in which he also discussed social issues and the role of the monarchy. Witte gained popularity with those in the government. In 1886, he was appointed manager of the privately-held Southwestern Railways, based in Kiev, where he was noted for increasing its efficiency and profitability. Around then, he met Tsar Alexander III, but he conflicted with the Tsar's aides by warning of the danger in their practice of using two powerful freight locomotives to achieve high speeds for the royal train. His warnings were proven correct in the October 1888 Borki train disaster, after which Witte was appointed as Director of State Railways.[9]

Political career

Witte in the 1880s
Mathilda Witte, picture by Karl Bulla

Railways

Witte worked in railroad management for 20 years, beginning as a ticket clerk.[10] He caught the attention of Finance Minister Ivan Vyshnegradsky, who appointed him as Russian Director of Railway Affairs within the Finance Ministry, where he served from 1889 to 1891. During that period, he oversaw an ambitious program of railway construction. Previously less than one fourth of the small railway systems were under direct state control, but Witte set about expanding the rail lines and getting the railway service under control as a state monopoly. Witte also obtained the right to assign employees based on their performance or merit, rather than political patronage or familial connections. In 1889, he published a paper, "National Savings and Friedrich List," which cited the economic theories of Friedrich List and justified the need for a strong domestic industry, to be protected from foreign competition by customs barriers.

A new customs law for Russia was passed in 1891, spurring an increase in industrialization by the turn of the twentieth century. While Witte worked to achieve industrialization. He also fought for practical education. He said that railways operated by the state would be useless "unless it does its utmost for spreading technical education..."[11]

Tsar Alexander III appointed Witte in 1892 as acting Minister of Ways and Communications.[6] That gave him both control of the railroads in Russia and the authority to impose a reform on the tariffs charged. "Russian railroads gradually became perhaps the most economically operated railroads of the world."[12] Profits were high, with over 100 million gold rubles a year to the government. (The exact amount unknown because of accounting defects.)

In 1892 Witte became acquainted with Matilda Ivanovna (Isaakovna) Lisanevich in a theater.[3] Witte began to seek her favor, urging her to divorce her gambling husband and marry him. The marriage was a scandal not only because Matilda was a divorcee but also because she was a converted Jew. That cost Witte many of his connections with the upper nobility, but the Tsar protected him.

Minister of Finance

In August 1892, Witte was appointed to the post of Minister of Finance, which he held for the next eleven years. During his tenure he nearly doubled the revenues of the empire.[13] He greatly accelerated the construction of the Trans-Siberian Railway. He also emphasized creation of an educational system to train personnel for industry, in particular, the establishment of new "commercial" schools. He was known for appointing subordinates by their academic credentials or merit, rather than because of political patronage. In 1894, he concluded a 10-year commercial treaty with the German Empire on favorable terms for Russia. When Alexander III died, he told his son on his deathbed to listen well to Witte, his most capable minister.

In 1895, on a crusade against the evils of drunkenness, Witte established a state monopoly on alcohol, which became a major source of revenue for the Russian government. In 1896, he concluded the Li–Lobanov Treaty with Li Hongzhang of the Qing dynasty. One of the rights secured for Russia was the construction of the Chinese Eastern Railway across northeast China, which greatly shortened the route of the Trans-Siberian Railway to its projected eastern terminus at Vladivostok. However, following the Triple Intervention, Witte strongly opposed the Russian occupation of Liaodong Peninsula and the construction of the naval base at Port Arthur in the Russia–Qing Convention of 1898.

Currency and economic reform

In 1896, Witte undertook a major currency reform to place the Russian ruble on the gold standard. That resulted in increased investment activity and an increase in the inflow of foreign capital. Witte also enacted a law in 1897 limiting working hours in enterprises, and in 1898 reformed commercial and industrial taxes.[14] In 1899 the Petrograd Polytechnical Institute was founded on his initiative.

In summer 1898, he addressed a memorandum to the Tsar[15] calling for an agricultural conference on the reform of the peasant community. That resulted in three years of talks about laws to abolish collective responsibility and facilitate the resettlement of farmers onto lands on the outskirts of the Empire. Many of his ideas were later adopted by Pyotr Stolypin. In 1902 Witte's supporter, Dmitry Sipyagin, the Minister of Home Affairs, was assassinated. In an attempt to keep up the modernization of the Russian economy, Witte called and oversaw the Special Conference on the Needs of the Rural Industry. The conference was to provide recommendations for future reforms and compile the data to justify those reforms. By 1900 the growth in the manufacturing industry had been four times faster than in the preceding five-year period and six times faster than in the decade prior. External trade in industrial goods was equal to that of Belgium.[16] In 1904, the Union of Liberation was formed, which demanded economic and political reform.

Worsening relations with Japan in 1890s

Witte controlled East Asian policy in the 1890s. His goal was peaceful expansion of trade with Japan and China. Japan, with its greatly expanded and modernized military, easily defeated the antiquated Chinese forces in the First Sino-Japanese War (1894–95). Russia had to confront the choice of collaborating with Japan, with which it had fairly good relations, or acting as protector of China against Japan. Witte chose the latter, and in 1894, Russia, Germany, and France forced Japan to soften the peace terms that it had imposed on China. Japan was forced to cede the Liaodong Peninsula and Port Arthur back to China (both territories were located in south-eastern Manchuria, a Chinese province).

The new Russian role angered Tokyo, which decided Russia was the main enemy in its quest to control Manchuria, Korea and China. Witte underestimated Japan's growing economic and military power and ambition but exaggerated Russia's military prowess. Russia concluded an alliance with China (in 1896 by the Li–Lobanov Treaty), which led in 1898 to Russian occupation and administration (by its own personnel and police) of the entire Liaodong Peninsula. Russia also fortified the ice-free Port Arthur and completed the Russian-owned Chinese Eastern Railway, which was to cross northern Manchuria from west to east and link Siberia with Vladivostok. In 1899, the Boxer Rebellion broke out, and the Chinese attacked all foreigners. A large coalition of the major Western powers and Japan sent armed forces to relieve their diplomatic missions in Peking. The Russian government used that as an opportunity to bring a substantial army into Manchuria. As a consequence, by 1900 Manchuria was a fully-incorporated outpost of the Russian Empire, and Japan prepared to fight Russia.[17]

Loss of power

Witte, in a memorandum, tried to turn the reports of the zemstvo presidents into a condemnation of the Home Office.[18] In a political conflict on land reform, Vyacheslav von Plehve accused him of being part of a Jewish-Masonic conspiracy.[19] According to Vasily Gurko, Witte had dominated the irresolute Tsar, and his opponents decided that it was the moment to get rid of him.

Witte was appointed on August 16, 1903 (O.S.) as chairman of the Committee of Ministers, a position he held until October 1905.[6] While officially a promotion, the post had no real power. Witte's removal from the influential post of Minister of Finance was engineered under the pressure of the landed gentry and his political enemies within the government and at the court. Historians Nicholas V. Riasanovsky and Robert K. Massie say that Witte's opposition to Russian designs on Korea resulted in his resigning from the government in 1903.[20][21]

Diplomatic career

Negotiating the Treaty of Portsmouth (1905) — from left to right: the Russians at far side of table are Korostovetz, Nabokov, Witte, Rosen, Plancon; and the Japanese at near side of table are Adachi, Ochiai, Komura, Takahira, Satō. The large conference table is today preserved at the Museum Meiji Mura in Inuyama, Aichi Prefecture, Japan.

Bloody Sunday

Witte was brought back into the governmental decision-making process to help deal with growing civil unrest. Confronted with increasing opposition and, after consulting with Witte and Prince Sviatopolk-Mirsky, the Tsar issued a ukase (proclamation) on December 25, 1904 with vague promises of reform.[22] On January 8, 1905, Witte and Sviatopolk-Mirsky were approached by a delegation of intellectuals led by Maxim Gorky, who begged them to negotiate with demonstrators. The government's posting of warnings of 'resolute measures' against street gatherings led by Father Gapon did not avoid violent confrontation. They were unsuccessful at controlling Father Gapon.[23] After leaving his visiting cards with Witte and Mirsky, Gorky was arrested, along with the other members of the deputations.[24] On January 22 (O.S) a march led by Father Gapon to appeal to the Tsar was met with force by the Imperial Guard. They opened fire on the crowd, killing hundreds. This event, known as Bloody Sunday, triggered a series of strikes that became a full-blown political catastrophe.

After the Bloody Sunday riots of 1905, Witte supplied 500 rubles, the equivalent of 250 dollars, to Father Gapon in order for the leader of the demonstration to leave the country.[25] Witte recommended that the government issue a manifesto addressing the people's demands.[26] Schemes of reform would be elaborated by Goremykin and a committee consisting of elected representatives of the zemstva (local government organs) and municipal councils under the presidency of Witte. On March 3 the Tsar condemned the revolutionaries. The government issued a strongly worded prohibition of any further agitation in favor of a constitution.[27] With continuing social unrest, by spring a new political system was beginning to form in Russia. A petition campaign was conducted seeking a wide variety of proposed changes, such as ending the war with Japan, which lasted from February to July 1905. In June mutiny broke out on the Russian battleship Potemkin, which called into question the loyalty of the military to the regime.

End of Russo-Japanese War

The Tsar called upon Witte to negotiate an end to the Russo-Japanese War.[6] He was sent to the United States for the talks, as the Russian Emperor's plenipotentiary titled "his Secretary of State and President of the Committee of Ministers of the Emperor of Russia." Baron Roman Rosen, Master of the Imperial Court of Russia, joined him.[28] The peace talks were held in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.

Witte is credited for his negotiation skill on Russia's behalf during the Treaty of Portsmouth discussions. Russia lost little in the final settlement,[6] but the loss of the war with Japan is believed to have marked the beginning of the end of Imperial Russia. For his efforts, he was made a Count (Russian: граф ) following his service to the government in negotiations over the end of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905.[3][29]

Russian Revolution of 1905

After that diplomatic success, Witte wrote to the Tsar stressing the urgent need for political reforms at home. He was dissatisfied with proposals by Bulygin, the successor of Sviatopolk-Mirsky. An August 6 (O.S.) manifesto created a Duma as a legislative body, but with consultative powers only. Elections of its representatives would not be direct but be held in four stages. Qualifications for class and property would exclude much of the intelligentsia and all of the working classes from suffrage. The proposal was greeted by numerous protests and strikes across the country, which sparked the Russian Revolution of 1905.

During that period, imperial troops were sent out 2,000 times to suppress violence. Later in 1905 Witte was approached by the Tsar's advisers, in an effort to save the country from complete collapse. On October 9, 1905, he went to the Winter Palace for a meeting. Witte told Nicholas "with brutal frankness" "that the country was at the verge of a cataclysmic revolution," which "would sweep away a thousand years of history." He presented the Tsar with two choices: either appoint a military dictator, or agree to broad and major reforms.[30] Nicholas II had no choice but to take a number of steps toward a constitutional liberal system.[3] In a memorandum arguing for a manifesto, Witte outlined the reforms needed to appease the masses.

His suggestions included: creation of a legislative parliament (Imperial Duma) elected via a democratic franchise, granting of civil liberties, and establishing a cabinet government and a "constitutional order."[31] Those demands, which basically comprised the political program of the Liberation Movement, were an attempt to isolate the political Left by pacifying the liberals.[31] Witte emphasized that repression would be only a temporary solution to the problem and a risky one because he believed that the armed forces, whose loyalty was now in question, could collapse if they were to be used against the masses.[31] Most of the military advisers to the Tsar agreed with Witte, as did the Governor of Saint Petersburg, Alexander Trepov, who wielded considerable influence at Court. The Tsar finally agreed, but only after Nicholas II's cousin Grand Duke Nikolai threatened to shoot himself if he did not agree to Witte's demands. Nicholas had requested him to accept appointment as the dictator to put down the protests and restore autocratic order, but he refused.

Nicholas was embarrassed to have been forced by a former "railway clerk," a man who was a bureaucrat and "businessman," to relinquish his autocratic rule.[31][32][33] Witte later said that the Tsar's court were ready to use the Manifesto as a temporary concession, and later return to autocracy "when the revolutionary tide subsided."[33]

The Tsar accepted the draft, hurriedly outlined by Aleksei D. Obolensky.[34][35] It was known as the October Manifesto, which promised to grant civil liberties such as freedom of conscience, speech, and association; constitutional order, representative government, and the establishment of an Imperial Duma, along the lines of Witte's suggestions. But, as the Duma was only a consultative body, the Council of Ministers or the Tsar still had the right to block certain proposals. Many Russians felt that the reform did not go far enough,[19] and it did not achieve universal suffrage for men.

Assembling a Cabinet

Prince Alexey D. Obolensky

In October Witte was charged with the task of assembling the nation's first cabinet government. He offered the liberals several portfolios: Ministry of Agriculture to Ivan Shipov; Ministry of Trade and Industry to Alexander Guchkov; Ministry of Justice to Anatoly Koni and the Ministry of Education to Evgenii Troubetzkoy. Pavel Milyukov and Prince Georgy Lvov were also offered ministerial posts. However, none of those liberals agreed to join the government. The Kadets doubted that Witte could deliver on the promises made by the Tsar in October, knowing the Tsar's staunch opposition to reform.[36] Witte was forced to form his cabinet from "tsarist bureaucrats and appointees lacking public confidence."

Witte argued that the Tsarist regime could be saved from a revolution only by the transformation of Russia to a "modern industrial society," in which "personal and public initiatives" were encouraged by a rechtsstaat (state of laws) which guaranteed civil liberties.[37]

The Nationalities problem

In the two weeks following the October Manifesto, several pogroms took place against Jews, especially in St. Petersburg and Odessa. Harold Williams, noted journalist described the unrest. "In addition mass violence broke out in the days following the issuance of the October Manifesto. The major source of the unrest was unrelated to the October Manifesto. It took the form of attacks on the Jews by gangs in the cities. In general, the authorities ignored the attacks.[38] Witte ordered an official investigation. It was revealed that the police in the former city had organized, armed and given vodka to the antisemitic crowds, and even participated in the attacks. Witte demanded the prosecution of the chief of police in St. Petersburg], who was involved in the printing of antisemitic pamphlets, but the Tsar intervened to protect him.[39] Witte believed that antisemitism was "considered fashionable" among the elite.[40] In the aftermath of the Kishinev pogrom in 1903, Witte had said that if Jews "comprise about fifty percent of the membership in the revolutionary parties," it was "the fault of our government. The Jews are too oppressed."[41]

Witte later wrote in his Memoirs about the empire's ethnic minorities:

The dominating element of the Empire, the Russians, fall into three distinct ethnic branches: the Great, the Little, and the White Russians, and 35 per cent, of the population is non-Russian. It is impossible to rule such a country and ignore the national aspirations of its varied non-Russian national groups, which largely make up the population of the Great Empire. The policy of converting all Russian subjects into "true Russians" is not the ideal which will weld all the heterogeneous elements of the Empire into one body politic. It might be better for us Russians, I concede, if Russia were a nationally uniform country and not a heterogeneous Empire. To achieve that goal there is but one way, namely to give up our border provinces, for these will never put up with the policy of ruthless Russification. But that measure our ruler will, of course, never consider.[42]

On November 10, Russian Poland was placed under martial law.

Religious tolerance

Later in 1905, Father Gapon returned to Russia from exile and supported Witte's government.[43] On April 30, 1905 Witte had proposed the Law of Religious Toleration, followed by the edict of October 30, 1906, giving legal status to schismatics and sectarians of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC), the established state church.[44] Witte argued that ending discrimination against religious rivals of the Orthodox Church "would not harm the church, provided it embraced the reforms that would revive its religious life." Although the Church's "senior hierarchs" may for some time have played with the thought of self-government, Witte's demand that it would come at the cost of religious toleration "guaranteed to drive them back into the arms of reaction."[45] Witte had made that demand (self-government in exchange for religious toleration) in the hope of "wooing" the important commercial groups of the ethnic minorities of Jewish and Old Believer communities.[45]

Chairman of the Council of Ministers

After his skillful diplomacy Witte was appointed as Chairman of the Council of Ministers, the equivalent of Prime Minister. He formed Sergei Witte's Cabinet, from those not belonging to any party, since there were none. No longer was the Tsar the head of the government. "Immediately upon my nomination as President of the Imperial Council I made it clear that the Procurator of the Most Holy Synod Konstantin Pobedonostsev, could not remain in office, for he definitely represented the past."[46] He was replaced by Prince Alexey D. Obolensky. Trepov and Bulygin were dismissed and, after many discussions, Pyotr Nikolayevich Durnovo was appointed as Minister of Interior on January 1, 1906. His appointment is considered one of the greatest errors Witte made during his administration.

According to Harold Williams: "That government was almost paralyzed from the beginning. Witte acted immediately by urging the release of political prisoners and the lifting of censorship laws."[38] Alexander Guchkov and Dmitry Shipov refused to work with the reactionary Durnovo and to support the government. On October 26 (O.S.), the Tsar appointed Trepov as Master of the Palace without consulting Witte. Trepov had daily contact with the Emperor; his influence at court was paramount.

On November 8, the sailors in Kronstadt mutinied. The same month, the border provinces were clearly taking advantage of the weakening of Central Russia. Witte's position was weak. The Liberals remained obdurate and refused to sign on to his plan. The Peasants' Union asked the Russian people to refuse to make redemption payments[47] to the government and withdraw their deposits from banks that might be subject to government action.[48] He promised an eight-hour working day and tried to secure vital loans from France to keep the "regime" from bankruptcy.[8]

Witte sent his envoy to the Rothschild bank; they responded that

"they would willingly render full assistance to the loan, but that they would not be in a position to do so until the Russian Government had enacted legal measures tending to improve the conditions of the Jews in Russia. As I deemed it beneath our dignity to connect the solution of our Jewish question with the loan, I decided to give up my intention of securing the participation of the Rothschilds."[49]

On November 24 provisional regulations on the censorship of magazines and newspaper was released by Imperial decree.

Resignation

Witte's mansion on Kamennoostrovsky Prospekt in St Petersburg between 1903-1915

On December 16, 1905, Trotsky and the rest of the executive committee of the St. Petersburg Soviet were arrested.[19] The Minister of Agriculture Nikolai Kutler resigned in February 1906. Witte refused to appoint Alexander Krivoshein. In the next few weeks, changes and additions to the Russian Constitution of 1906 were made, so that the Emperor was confirmed as the dictator of foreign policies and the supreme commander of the army and navy. The ministers remained responsible solely to Nicholas II, not to the Duma. The "peasant question" or land reforms was a hot issue. The influence of the "Duma of Public Anger" had to be limited, according to Goremykin and Dmitri Trepov. The Bolsheviks boycotted the coming election. When Witte discovered that Nicholas never intended to honor his prior concessions, he resigned as Chairman of the Council of Ministers. The position and influence of General Trepov, Grand Duke Nicholas, the Black Hundreds, and overwhelming victories by the Kadets in the 1906 Russian legislative election, forced Witte to resign. He stepped down on the 14th and it was announced on April 22, 1906 (O.S.).

Witte confessed to Polovtsov in April 1906 that the success of the repressions in the wake of the Moscow uprising in 1905 had resulted in his losing all influence over the Tsar. Despite Witte's protests, Durnovo was allowed to "carry out a brutal and excessive, and often totally unjustified, series of repressive measures."[50]

Member of the State Council

Witte's grandson Lev Kyrillovich Naryshkin in a portrait by Valentin Serov

Witte failed to retain the confidence of the Emperor, but continued in Russian politics as a member of the State Council. He was never again appointed to an administrative role in the government. He was ostracized by the Russian establishment. In January 1907 a bomb was found planted in his home. The investigator Pavel Alexandrovich Alexandrov proved that the Okhrana, the tsarist secret police, were involved.[51][52] During the winter season, Witte lived in Biarritz and started writing his Memoirs.[53] He returned to St Petersburg in 1908.

Witte's strategy was to avoid the danger of wars.[54] During the July Crisis in 1914, Grigori Rasputin and Witte desperately urged the Tsar to avoid the conflict and warned that Europe faced calamity if Russia became involved. The advice went unheeded; the French ambassador Maurice Paléologue complained to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Sazonov.

Death

Witte's grave in Lazarev Cemetery, St. Petersburg

Witte died in February 1915 at his home in St. Petersburg; his quick death was attributed to meningitis or a brain tumor. His third-class funeral was held at the Alexander Nevsky Lavra. On the black granite slab, in addition to the usual dates of birth and death, another date was carved: October 17, 1905, the date he presented the Manifesto. Witte had no children, but he had adopted his wife's by her first marriage. According to Edvard Radzinsky, Witte asked in vain for the title of count to be given to his grandson, L.K. Naryshkin (1905-1963).

Legacy

Witte is widely considered to have been one of the key figures in Russian politics at the end of nineteenth and at the beginning of the twentieth century.[55] Orlando Figes has described Witte as the 'great reforming finance minister of the 1890s',[56] 'one of Nicholas's most enlightened ministers',[57] and as the architect of Russia's new parliamentary order in 1905.[58]

He was a controversial figure, who tried to reform Russia, but caught between the Tsar and aristocracy on one side, and the liberals and revolutionaries on the other, could not find enough support to succeed. Pavel Milyukov once confronted Witte to ask why he would not commit himself to a constitution; Witte replied that he could not "because the Tsar does not wish it."[59] Witte was worried that the Court was only using him, as emerged in talks with members of the Kadet Party.[59] According to Dmitry Filosofov, Witte was the only talented person in the government, but he brought many troubles to Russia. He destroyed the Autocracy not from the outside, as revolutionaries do, but from the inside.

Witte was himself a severe critic of the system he tried to reform. He described the regime's usual "incompetence and obstinacy" in response to the crisis of 1904–1905 as a "mixture of cowardice, blindness and stupidity."[60]

Witte's reputation was burnished in the West after his secret memoirs were published in translation in 1921. They had been completed in 1912 and kept in a bank in Bayonne, France. He had left orders that they could not be published during his lifetimes or his contemporaries'. The ambassador in France, Vasily Maklakov, received them from his widow. The original manuscript of his memoirs are now held in Columbia University Library's Bakhmeteff Archive of Russian and East European History and Culture.[61]

Honors

The Sergei Witte University of Moscow, with campuses in Ryazan, Krasnodar and Nizhny Novgorod is named in his honor (a private institution accredited by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education (Russia) in 1997). He served under two Tsars.[61]

Russian orders and decorations[62]

Notes

  1. F.L. Ageenko and M.V. Zarva, Slovar' udarenii (Moscow, RU: Russkii yazyk, 1984), 547.
  2. His ancestors can be traced back to mid seventeenth century, living Friedrichstadt, in the Courland Governorate having German first names.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "История России в портретах. В 2-х тт. Т.1. Сергей Витте, с.285-308" www.peoples.ru. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  4. "Sergei Yulyevich Count Witte" geni_family_tree. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  5. Kto-is-kto.ru, 540. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Sidney Harcave, Count Sergei Witte and the Twilight of Imperial Russia: A Biography (Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, 2004, ISBN 978-0765614223), 33.
  7. Harcave, 42.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Sergey Yulyevich, Count Witte - prime minister of Russia," Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  9. Sergei Witte, The Memoirs of Count Witte (translated by Abraham Yarmolinsky). New York, NY: Doubleday, 1921, 95. Retrieved November 25, 2022.
  10. Orlando Figes, A People's Tragedy: The Russian Revolution 1891–1924 (London, UK: The Bodley Head, 2014, ISBN 978-1847922915), 41.
  11. Peter Kropotkin, "The Present Crisis in Russia," The North American Review, 1901.
  12. A. A. Boublikoff, "A suggestion for railroad reform," in: E. C. Buehler, ed., "Government ownership of railroads," Annual Debater's Help Book Volume VI, (New York, NY: Noble and Noble, 1939, 309–318. Original in journal North American Review, vol. 237,  346+. , 313.
  13. Until 1905 matters pertaining to industry and commerce were within the province of the Ministry of Finance.
  14. B. V. Ananich & R. S. Ganelin, "Nicholas II," in D.J. Raleigh, The Emperors and Empresses of Russia. Rediscovering the Romanovs, (Oxfordshire, UK: Routledge, 1996, ISBN 978-1563247590), 378.
  15. Witte, 211–215.
  16. "Witte on economic tasks," trans. T. H. Von Laue Journal of Modern History 26(1) (1954): 60-74.
  17. B. V. Ananich, and S. A. Lebedev, "Sergei Witte and the Russo-Japanese War," International Journal of Korean History 7(1) (2005): 109-131. Retrieved November 16, 2022.
  18. Sir Adolphus William Ward, et. al., The Cambridge Modern History Volume 10 (Andesite Press, 2017, ISBN 978-1375613422).
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 "Sergei Witte" Spartacus Educational. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  20. Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, A History of Russia (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 1977, ISBN 978-0195074628), 446.
  21. Robert K. Massie, Nicholas and Alexandra (New York, NY: Ballantine Books, 1967, ISBN 0345438310), 90.
  22. Harold Williams, Shadow of Democracy: Dispatches From Russia: 1905 Revolution edited J. M. Gallanar, (1906; Lulu.com, 2012, ISBN 9781300363569) 11, 22.
  23. Figes, 175.
  24. Figes, 179.
  25. Sergei IUl'evich Witte, The memoirs of Count Witte trans. Avrahm Yarmolinsky. (Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday, 1921). Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  26. Williams, 77.
  27. Williams, 22-23.
  28. "Text of Treaty.; Signed by the Emperor of Japan and Czar of Russia," New York Times October 17, 1905. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  29. Massie, 97.
  30. Richard Wortman, Scenarios of Power, From Alexander II to the Abdication of Nicholas II (Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press, 1995, ISBN 9780691029474), 398. Retrieved November 26, 2022.
  31. 31.0 31.1 31.2 31.3 Figes, 191.
  32. Not even his abdication in 1917 was considered as big a humiliation than agreeing to the demands.
  33. 33.0 33.1 Figes, 192
  34. V. I. Gurko, Features And Figures Of The Past Government And Opinion In The Reign Of Nicholas II (Russell & Russell, 1936). Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  35. Witte, 241.
  36. Figes, 194–195.
  37. Figes, 41.
  38. 38.0 38.1 Williams, 166.
  39. Figes, 197.
  40. Figes, 242.
  41. Figes, 82.
  42. Witte, 265.
  43. Figes, 178 fn.
  44. Dmitry Pospielovsky, The Russian Church Under the Soviet Regime 1917-1982 Volume 1 (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir Seminary Press, 1984, ISBN 0881410152), 22.
  45. 45.0 45.1 Figes, 69.
  46. Witte
  47. As part of the Emancipation reform of 1861, the government reimbursed landowners 75% of the cost of the land transferred to the serfs. The serfs would pay the remaining 25% to the government in the form of redemption payments.
  48. Williams, 220.
  49. Witte, 293-294.
  50. Figes, 201
  51. «ПОКУШЕНИЕ НА МОЮ ЖИЗНЬ», «Воспоминания» С. Ю. Витте, т. II-ой, г. Книгоиздат «Слово», 1922. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  52. Юрий Штенгель, "Покушение на графа Витте" сканер копии — October 15, 2011. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  53. Pallasart Web Design, "Count Sergei Iulevich Witte Alexander Palace Time Machine. Retrieved November 17, 2022.
  54. Dominic Lieven, Towards the Flame: Empire, War and the End of Tsarist Russia (New York, NY: Penguin Books, 2015, ISBN 978-1846143816).
  55. Dominic Lieven (ed.), The Cambridge History of Russia: Volume 2, Imperial Russia, 1689-1917 (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0521815291), 56, 468.
  56. Figes, 41.
  57. Figes, 8.
  58. Figes, 217.
  59. 59.0 59.1 Figes, 195.
  60. Figes, 186.
  61. 61.0 61.1 Harcave, xiii.
  62. List of Civilian Ranks of the First Three Classes (Petrograd, RU: Senate Printing House, 1914).

References
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External links

All links retrieved January 26, 2023.


Political offices
Preceded by:
Adolf Gibbenet
Transport Minister
February 1892 – August 1892
Succeeded by: Apollon Krivoshein
Preceded by:
Ivan Vyshnegradsky
Finance Minister
1892–1903
Succeeded by: Eduard Pleske
Preceded by:
Ivan Durnovo
Chairman of the Committee of Ministers
1903–1905
Succeeded by: Himself
Preceded by:
Himself
Prime Minister of Russia
2 November 1905 – 5 May 1906
Succeeded by: Ivan Goremykin

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