Catherine the Great and The Russian Enlightenment

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In 1762, Catherine the Great was crowned Czarina of Russia. Catherine received Russia from Peter the Great in a transitional state. Although the stubborn country was gravitating towards its old culture, her leaders were pulling her into the new modern Europe, a region undergoing a historical shift known as The Enlightenment. Through Catherine’s journals, we can learn a lot about her methods of ruling Russia. She wrote that her rule by which to govern was “Do good not evil out of love for humanity.” Throughout her reign, Catherine had many accomplishments and was renowned by Enlightenment personalities such as Diderot and Voltaire. Although Catherine The Great did not initiate the Enlightenment in Russia, or complete the process, she played an essential role in helping her resistant country shift from their long-established traditions by implementing reforms that westernized Russia.
The Age of Enlightenment was a European movement in the late 17th and 18th Centuries that highlighted the importance of reason, as well as a rejection of tradition. The Enlightenment originated in Western Europe in the late 17th Century through the works of philosophers and scientists. Such figures discussed the importance of critical intellect and rational inquiry while rejecting religion and superstition . In Russia, The Enlightenment also included a desire for modernization of Russian traditions. In addition to promoting westernization, the movement was especially concerned with the release of serfs. This, along with liberalism, was a very attractive crusade that many Russians leaders concurred. The Russian people, however, often resisted their leader’s attempts .
Catherine implemented those values into her reign with various methods. She was know...

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...ine the Great ordered the complete confiscation of Voltaire books that opposed religion and authority. Similarly, in 1793- Catherine ordered governors to forbid publication of books “likely to corrupt morals” and opens Office of Censorship to censor books with bad values. Catherine the Great’s shift of opinion and opposition of censorship on Russia proves that she had the ability to be the leader Russia needed and go beyond her values and protect the country from civil war.

Works Cited

Massie, Robert K.. Catherine the Great: portrait of a woman. New York: Random House, 2011.
Kann, Andrew. "Was There a Russian Enlightenment?." Podcast lecture, University of Oxford Conference from University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, November 10, 2012.
Whitelaw, Nancy. Catherine the Great and the Enlightenment in Russia. Greensboro, N.C.: Morgan Reynolds Pub., 2005.

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