- Akinoff, Minister of Justice,
242
- Aladin, M., and peasant deputies,
315
- Alexander III., system of Russification,
270
- Alexandrovsky ironworks,
40;
- government ways of industry,
41
- Aliens Act,
227
- Anarchists, message from,
56;
- no paper in Russia,
73;
- use of word by Government,
299
- Anikin, member of Duma,
339
- Annensky, President of Economic Society’s Club,
318
- Army, increased pay,
175;
- part in national tragedy,
303
- Assassination of, Sipiaguine,
2;
- Bobrikoff,
6;
- Plehve,
6;
- Grand Duke Sergius,
13;
- Sakharoff,
77;
- Voiloshnikoff,
178;
- Jeoltanowski,
314
- Baku, race feuds at,
16;
- journey to, stopped by strike,
129–130
- Baltic Provinces, Home Rule for,
74;
- revolt in,
78;
- shooting, hanging and flogging in,
263–281;
- Governor-General accused of mildness,
265;
- revolutionary reprisals,
279–280
- Barashoff, chairman at Salt Town meeting,
52
- Bauman, funeral of,
97
- Bielenstein, Pastor, sufferings of,
274–275
- Bireleff, Minister of Marine,
242
- “Black Hundred,”
21,
33;
- incited to murder,
121;
- plunder Kieff,
208–209
- “Bloody Sunday,”
11,
12;
- honour to victims of,
52;
- anniversary of,
228–232
- Bobrikoff assassinated,
6
- Bombardment, of private houses,
139,
140,
159,
162,
164,
176;
- of factories,
184–189
- Buliguine, Minister of Interior,
14
- “Bund,” Jewish,
225,
284;
- methods and aims of,
298
- Carlyle, on Russia,
54;
- on Livonia,
267
- Caucasus, Home Rule for the,
74;
- fighting in the,
78,
129
- Clementz, Professor,
244
- Congress, of Peasants at Moscow,
49;
- of Constitutional Democrats in St. Petersburg,
313
- Constitutional Democrats,
224;
- programme in Odessa,
225;
- meetings of, in St. Petersburg,
244–247;
- policy of,
245;
- leaders of,
246–247;
- elections of,
311–312;
- meeting broken up,
317–318
- Cossacks, taunted in streets,
35;
- brutal methods of,
38–40,
102,
134–135;
- protect Heavenly Powers,
125;
- employed with Semenoffsky Guards,
186;
- connive at plunder,
208–209;
- terror of,
277;
- to guard Winter Palace,
319
- Council of Empire,
313,
321,
329–332
- Cross (Kresty) Prison,
238;
- demonstrations from,
327
- Courland, revolt in,
78
- Davidoff, murder of,
228
- Democrats, (see Constitutional),
311;
- National,
293,
295;
- Progressive,
296
- Diedulin, General, Chief of Police,
243
- Dubasoff, Admiral, as butcher,
72;
- Governor-General of Moscow,
122;
- special prayers for,
124;
- speech to patriots,
127;
- fires on Red Cross,
15;
- decrees business to be resumed,
180;
- orders boys and girls to be flogged,
194–195;
- attempted assassination of,
313
- Duma, promised for January, 1906,
15–16;
- Zemstvo’s attitude towards,
16;
- Constitutionalists’ attitude towards,
245;
- preparations for,
224;
- reactionary designs on,
245–246;
- Poland under,
287;
- represented in,
294;
- how elected,
303,
306;
- date fixed,
310,
313;
- elections for,
310,
311,
312;
- candidates imprisoned,
311;
- Durnovo’s attitude towards,
313;
- Government’s precautions about,
316,
317–319;
- opening of,
320;
- first week of,
332–340
- Durnovo, assistant Minister of Interior,
21,
57;
- petition to,
103;
- confirmed Minister of Interior,
242;
- mean tactics of,
313;
- resigns, and is rewarded,
313;
- in Council of Empire,
318
- England, quoted in support of tyranny,
285
- English, manufacturers,
142,
182;
- hide in cellars,
178;
- under fire,
182–189;
- Consulates attacked by troops,
209–210;
- opinion on Russian revolution,
239
- Ermoleff, police officer murders Dr. Vorobieff,
187
- Esthonia, revolt in,
78;
- prisoners shot in,
238
- Fiedler, leader of revolutionists,
138;
- house bombarded,
139;
- death of,
140
- Finance,
306;
- Budget of 1906...,
309;
- fresh loans and increased taxation,
312
- Finland, liberties restored,
21;
- Home Rule for,
74;
- crossing Gulf of,
248–249;
- concessions to,
286;
- troops sent into, and withdrawn,
311
- Flogging, abolished nominally,
6;
- “as before,”
34,
41,
243;
- of peasants,
91;
- of boys,
193;
- of young men and girls,
194–195;
- in Livonia,
263–264,
278–279
- Free Economic Society, hall in St. Petersburg,
25,
79,
315,
317–318
- Fundamental laws, altered to frustrate Duma,
314–315;
- criticized,
315;
- resolution against,
316;
- effect of,
319
- Gapon, Father, founds Russian Workmen’s Union,
9–10;
- appeals to Tsar,
11–12;
- fails to attend meeting,
51–53;
- amnesty demanded for,
55;
- in hiding,
57;
- described,
57–58;
- escape of,
59;
- reported dead,
313
- Georgians, reported independence of,
129
- German landowners,
270–274;
- pastors,
274–276
- Germany, dislike of,
295
- Goethe, on the birth of a new age,
327
- Golitzin,
331
- Goremykin, new Premier,
313,
315,
331.
- See Ministers.
- Gorky, Maxim, edits New Life,
65–66;
- explains revolution,
115–116;
- his play, The Children of the Sun, performed,
116,
117;
- his heroes,
118;
- sombreness of,
269
- Government, tactics of,
138,
167,
168,
301–306;
- methods of business and of warfare,
231;
- methods of justice,
233–234;
- position of,
301-302;
- loans to,
306,
310,
312
- Gramen, shot for making bombs,
300
- Ignatieff,
331
- “Intelligence,” The, definition of party,
9;
- despised by Socialists,
297
- Isvolsky, Minister at Danish Court, recalled,
315
- Ivan the Cruel,
126
- Japan, War with,
2,
3,
4;
- peace with,
18;
- effect of war on Poland,
288–289
- Jeoltanowski, General, assassinated
314
- Jews, massacre of,
3;
- newspapers of,
68;
- “Black Hundred,” to murder,
121;
- arrested at Kieff,
210;
- laws against,
225–227;
- “Bund,”
225,
284,
298;
- in Warsaw,
294;
- classed as Anarchists,
299
- Jewesses, courage of,
300
- Journalists, beaten by soldiers,
188;
- shot in batches,
238;
- reactionary chorus of,
304,
306
- Kaufman, Minister of Education,
315
- Kempski, Edmund, tortured,
311
- Khroustoloff, president of Strike Committee,
27,
28;
- arrested,
77;
- in prison,
237
- Kieff, journey to,
203;
- description of,
203–208;
- Jews arrested at,
210;
- revolutionists shot,
210;
- prison fever,
210–211;
- meeting at,
211;
- wealth of,
211
- Kishineff, massacre of Jews at,
3
- Kokovtsoff, negotiates loans,
202,
312
- Königsberg, case,
5
- “Koulak,” a village usurer,
87
- Kremlin, floating in blood,
72;
- by moonlight,
119
- Krasnaya (Red Square), prayer meeting in,
123
- Krivoy Rog, trade with Siberia,
289
- Kronstadt, visit to,
249;
- Father John of,
249–255;
- mutiny at,
303
- Kropotkin, Prince, writer on Russian struggle for freedom,
2;
- quoted by Tolstoy,
93;
- quoted,
103
- “Kursistki,”
257
- Lavra, at Kieff,
204
- Letts, revolt of,
78;
- butchery of,
262–281;
- language, music, and literature of,
267;
- homes of,
268–269;
- Russification of,
270;
- drive out landowners,
270–273;
- strange union with Germans,
273–274;
- hiding from Cossacks,
277;
- sentenced by telephone,
278
- Livonia, revolt in,
78;
- “Bloody Assize” in,
262–280
- Lodz, trade of,
288
- Manifestoes (Imperial), promising revision of laws,
7,
8;
- appealing to people,
13;
- promising Duma,
15;
- announcing peace with Japan,
18;
- promising personal freedom and constitution (Manifesto of Oct. 30th),
19,
20,
120;
- restoring ancient liberties of Finland,
21;
- withdrawing promised reforms,
22;
- reducing peasants’ payments for land,
22;
- peasants’ opinion of,
90;
- making strikes a capital offence,
103;
- promising army reforms,
201;
- reorganizing old Council and limiting the power of Duma,
310;
- worthlessness of,
243
- Manifestoes (Revolutionary), on Government finance,
78;
- accepting Government’s challenge,
80;
- of strike committee to St. Petersburg citizens,
229
- Manifesto of Oct. 30th violated,
310,
315,
316
- Manioukoff, Rector of Moscow University,
108
- Martial law, in Poland,
22;
- in Moscow,
153–154;
- at Kieff,
203;
- in St. Petersburg,
317
- “Marseillaise,” Russian,
30,
35
- Massacres, at Kishineff,
3;
- before Winter Palace,
12;
- in streets of Warsaw,
13,
299–300;
- at Toula,
81;
- at Odessa,
216–220;
- in Livonia,
262–281
- “Maxim,” socialist leader,
272
- Meetings, to discuss eight hours’ day,
28;
- to protest against capital punishment,
31;
- of Poles to demand overthrow of absolutism,
35;
- at Salt Town,
50–57;
- interest in,
62–63;
- collections at,
104;
- of National Democrats in Warsaw,
293–294;
- of Economical Society, dispersed by police,
315,
317–318
- Miliukoff, historian of freedom,
2;
- editor of Zhisn (Life),
111;
- leader of Constitutionalists,
246–247;
- great speech by,
315
- Min, Colonel, as slaughterman,
183–186
- Ministers, Committee of,
241–242
- Ministers (New),
313,
315
- Minsky, poet and editor,
66
- Mirski, Prince Sviatopolk, Minister of Interior and reformer,
6
- Mischenko expected with 7000 Cossacks,
175
- Molva (The Russ),
68;
- publishes horrors,
311;
- appeals to France, and is suppressed,
312
- Moscow, centre of revolution,
80;
- description of,
104,
107;
- strikes in,
101–104;
- Trade Unions in,
105–107;
- University closed,
108;
- Tsar’s portrait removed at meet-in,
109;
- “liberty tempered by assassination” in,
118,
122;
- terror in,
121;
- fortified,
122;
- prayer meeting in Red Square,
123;
- stampede of patriots in,
128;
- revolutionary days in,
129–197;
- light and water cut off,
132;
- attempt to win over troops,
134;
- shops closed,
135;
- garrison distrusted,
136;
- bombardment of houses,
139–140;
- English factories near,
142–143;
- barricades and street-fighting,
145–168,
174;
- girls shot down,
149,
150;
- Zemstvo organizes ambulance,
150;
- aid to the wounded,
152,
175;
- Sharpshooters in bell-tower,
153,
161;
- “a minor state of siege,”
154;
- Christmas Eve rumours,
155;
- explosion in gun-shop,
156;
- victims, old and young,
160;
- officer deprived of sword,
169;
- new barricades,
174;
- panic,
175;
- official estimate of killed and wounded in,
176;
- execution in street of,
177;
- after bombardment,
179;
- estimate of damage in,
181;
- struggle for freedom in Presna district,
182–189;
- horrors of suppression,
188–195,
240;
- Christmas celebration in,
195–197;
- lesson of,
203;
- prisoners shot in batches,
238;
- bank robbed,
311
- Mutiny, at Toula,
2;
- Odessa,
14,
302;
- Baku,
16;
- Kronstadt,
22,
302;
- Sevastopol,
49,
302,
310;
- Kieff,
211
- Neidhart, Governor-General in Odessa,
216
- Nemeschaeff, Minister of Communications,
241
- Newspapers, revolutionary,
64–69,
311,
312;
- reactionary,
69–70;
- satiric,
71–73;
- artistic merit of,
71;
- wholesale suppression of,
80,
215,
311;
- Russian News joins Progressive party,
104,
111;
- unpopularity of Moscow News,
106
- “Noblemen’s Assembly,” State Council in,
330
- Obolensky, Procurator of Holy Synod,
242
- Odessa, rejoices at Manifesto of Oct. 30th,
215;
- and buries freedom,
216;
- massacres Jews,
216–220;
- country near,
217;
- Jewish obstinacy and misery,
220–221;
- docks burned in,
222;
- poverty in,
223;
- political parties in,
224;
- Jewish “Bund” at,
225;
- restrictions on Jews,
226;
- electors intimidated,
311
- Orloff, General, represses Baltic Provinces,
264–265,
276
- Parties of Reform and Revolution,
73–77;
- in Odessa,
224;
- in Poland,
293–294
- Peasants, congress of,
49;
- descriptions of,
33;
- hardships of,
87;
- home of,
88;
- charity of,
90;
- camping in railway-station,
131;
- of Little Russia,
212–214;
- in Baltic provinces,
262–281;
- in Poland,
289–291;
- deputies in St. Petersburg,
315;
- Parliamentary Party of,
316;
- in Winter Palace,
321–322;
- in Duma,
337–339
- Petersburg, St., general strike in,
228;
- prepared for massacre,
229;
- manifesto to citizens of,
229;
- wholesale arrests in,
233,
238;
- fortress-prison in,
237;
- Kresty (Cross) prison in,
238,
326;
- Constitutional Democrats in,
244,
315,
318;
- revolutionary concert in,
255;
- Poles in,
282;
- opening of Duma in,
319
- Peterhof, Tsar and family at,
316
- Petrunkevitch, leader of Zemstvoists,
246;
- speech in Duma,
327
- Plehve, Minister of Interior,
3;
- assassination of,
6;
- his policy towards workers,
43
- Pleske, Minister of Finance,
3
- Pobiedonostzeff, resignation of,
21;
- keeper of Russia’s Orthodoxy,
242,
331
- Poland, demands Home Rule,
74,
295;
- position under Duma,
287;
- trade losses in,
288;
- strikes in,
289;
- price of land, rents, wages, population and education in,
290–291;
- Jews in,
294;
- Russian garrison in,
292;
- Political Parties in,
292–300;
- prejudices against Germany in,
295
- Poles, dissensions among,
75,
282;
- disliked by Little Russians,
206–207;
- high official’s opinion of,
283–287;
- peasant life among,
288–290;
- cruelty of,
291;
- “learning to vote,”
294;
- number in Duma,
294
- Police, activity of,
33,
34;
- danger from,
82;
- house of secret,
54;
- in disguise,
167–168;
- execution of chief of secret,
177–178;
- Diedulin, chief of,
243;
- break up meetings of Constitutionalists,
315,
318
- Politicals, treatment of,
233–243;
- wholesale massacre of,
240;
- in exile,
243;
- in Warsaw,
299–300;
- rescue of,
312;
- amnesty demanded for,
325–327,
339
- Potemkin, lover of Catherine II.,
327
- Potemkin, mutiny on board the,
221
- Poverty, in St. Petersburg,
37–48;
- in Little Russia,
212–214;
- in Odessa,
223
- Presna or Presnensky, manufacturing district,
182;
- revolution in,
183;
- bombardment of and slaughter in,
183–190;
- estimates of killed and wounded in,
190–191;
- methods of execution in,
191–193
- Press, brief freedom of,
64–74.
- See Newspapers.
- Prison, life of “political” in,
235;
- fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul,
237;
- Kresty (Cross),
238;
- greetings to deputies from,
326;
- estimate of numbers in,
238
- Punch, cartoon blacked out,
34
- Redigers, Minister of War,
242
- Revolutionists, hesitation among,
136–137;
- bombarded,
139–140;
- arrested and shot,
141;
- numbers estimated,
141–142;
- plan of action in Moscow,
145–147,
163;
- loot gun-shop,
156–157;
- private ambulance of,
158;
- sledge-drivers refuse aid to,
159;
- deprive officer of sword,
169;
- confiscate photographs,
171;
- passive bravery of,
172;
- last stand of,
174;
- call for volunteers,
175;
- girl leader of,
183;
- tear up railway-line,
183;
- slaughter of in Presnensky district,
183–194;
- women among,
199,
308;
- “dress rehearsal” of,
198;
- union among,
199,
308;
- propaganda in army of,
200,
298–299;
- need of money among,
201;
- shot at Kieff,
210;
- concert given for,
255–261;
- butchered in Baltic provinces,
262–281;
- persistence of,
308
- Riga, revolt in,
78
- Riots, in Moscow,
2,
112;
- of students,
7;
- in Poland,
13,
14;
- in Kieff, Warsaw, and Odessa,
21
- Roditcheff, member of Duma,
339
- Rostoff regiment, mutiny in,
101;
- proves its loyalty,
186
- Russians, intelligence of,
69;
- home-life of nobility,
85–86;
- peasant life of,
87;
- democratic qualities of,
256–267;
- poverty among,
212–214;
- misery of,
307;
- persistence of,
308
- Sakharoff, Minister of War, assassinated,
77
- “Salt Town,” meetings at,
50,
51
- Sassoulitch, Vera, as journalist,
67;
- last “political” tried by jury,
233
- Saratoff, peasant member for,
339
- Schlüsselberg, description of road to,
37,
230;
- prison turned into mint,
239–240
- Schmidt, Lieutenant, leader of Sevastopol mutiny,
49;
- sentenced to be hanged,
310;
- shot,
311;
- body dug up and thrown into sea,
312
- Schwanebach, Imperial Comptroller,
315
- Semenoffsky Guards, employed in massacres with Cossacks,
186;
- distinguished by their zeal,
194;
- chosen to guard Winter Palace,
316
- Sergius, Grand Duke, assassinated,
13;
- place of his death,
124
- Sharpshooters in bell-tower of Strastnoi Convent,
153,
161
- Shipoff, Minister of Finance,
241,
309
- Siberia, still used for exiles,
243;
- Polish trade with,
288,
289
- Sieczka, Vincentz, tortured,
311
- Sipiaguine, Minister of Interior, assassinated,
2
- Skallon, Governor-General in Warsaw, tries to seduce revolutionists,
300
- Sobolevski, editor of Russian News,
111
- Social Democrats, minimum programme of,
3;
- unbending attitude of,
4,
59;
- organ of,
65;
- strength of,
73;
- young girls among,
76;
- compared with Government,
231;
- in Poland,
296–298
- Social Revolutionists,
74;
- member shoots Sakharoff,
77
- Soldiers, return from war with Japan,
97–100,
307;
- how treated as reservists,
99–101;
- refuse to kill work-people,
2;
- mutiny,
101;
- propaganda among,
200,
298–299
- Sollogub, Governor-General in Baltic provinces, reproached for mildness,
265
- Soskice, David, translator and lecturer,
246
- Spies, at teachers’ conference,
53;
- post and telegraph clerk protest against,
53–54;
- use of,
138
- Spiridinova, Marie, tortured, outraged, avenged,
311
- Stcheglovitoff, Minister of Justice,
315
- Stepniak, supporter of Russian freedom,
2,
48
- Stishinsky, Minister of Agriculture,
315
- Stolypin, Minister of Interior,
315
- Strastnoi bell-tower, sharpshooters placed in,
153,
161
- Strikes, on railways,
18;
- throughout Russia,
19;
- in sympathy with Poland,
22;
- failure of second general strike,
23;
- result in factory villages,
38;
- under Russian laws,
43;
- as agents of abstinence,
47;
- of post and telegraph service,
49,
60,
61,
81,
114;
- in St. Petersburgh and Moscow,
101,
103,
132,
314;
- fund seized by Government,
104;
- on railway,
130;
- meeting at Aquarium, dispersed by troops and police,
136–138;
- effect on trade,
289;
- power of,
302;
- in Poland, Kieff, Moscow, and St. Petersburg,
314
- Strikes (Central Committee of), distrusts Imperial manifestoes,
20–21;
- calls for military organization,
24;
- meets in Hall of Free Economics,
25–36;
- orders withdrawal of money from savings-banks,
77;
- President of, arrested,
78;
- members of, arrested,
80;
- new Council and Executive appointed,
80;
- manifesto to citizens,
229
- Strikers, attack mail-cart,
101;
- dispersed,
102;
- demands of,
112;
- condemned by Novoe Vremya,
114;
- meet in Moscow Aquarium,
136;
- passive resistance of,
229–230
- Struve, editor of Emancipation,
246
- Sumsky Dragoons, brutality of,
193
- Suvorin, editor of Novoe Vremya, his son among revolutionists,
68
- Sytin Printing Works destroyed by Government,
181
- Taurida Palace, given up to Duma,
327;
- guarded,
332
- Times, Tolstoy’s protest in,
4;
- statistics quoted from,
240;
- financial figures quoted from,
309–310
- Tolstoy, Demitri, Minister of Education,
241
- Tolstoy, Leo, protests against war with Japan,
4;
- position among revolutionists of,
56;
- visit to,
91–96
- Torture of prisoners,
192–195,
311
- Toula, mutiny at,
2;
- typical town,
81
- Trepoff, first Governor-General of St. Petersburg,
13;
- assistant Minister of Interior and Chief of Police,
14;
- dismissal demanded,
21;
- resigns,
22;
- regretted,
33;
- caricatured,
72;
- connected with Odessa massacres,
233;
- Master of Ceremonies,
319–320
- Trepoff (the Elder), attempted assassination of,
233
- Troubetzkoy, Prince Sergius, President of Moscow Zemstvo, inspires reform,
7,
246–248;
- sudden death of,
17;
- regretted,
110
- Tsar, flees to Tsarkoe Selo,
13;
- promises reforms,
15,
19,
21,
22;
- withdraws promises,
22,
80,
103,
120,
121,
215;
- as forester,
213;
- builds palace for ex-mistress,
238;
- pleasant myths about,
243;
- meditates new Peace Conference,
308;
- issues Ukase on Fundamental Laws,
314;
- leaves Tsarskoe Selo for Peterhof,
316;
- enters St. Petersburg by river,
319;
- sprinkled with holy water,
323;
- reads address in Winter Palace,
325;
- flees back to Peterhof,
329
- Vistula, dead bodies in,
300
- “Vladimir’s Day,” or “Bloody Sunday,”
12,
319
- Voiloshnikoff, chief of secret police, “executed,”
177–178
- Vorobieff, Dr., murder of,
187
- War, return of soldiers from,
97–100,
131;
- effect on Poland,
288–289
- Warsaw, trade of,
288;
- political parties in,
293–299;
- prisoners in,
299–300;
- Governor-General’s offer to revolutionary Jewesses,
300
- Winter Palace, massacre before,
11,
12;
- how guarded,
319;
- brilliant assembly in,
321–327
- Witte, President of Committee of Ministers,
3,
241;
- deputation to,
18;
- replies,
19;
- distrusted by Liberals,
22;
- fatherly appeal to workers,
22;
- caricatured,
72;
- leaders of finance petition to,
103;
- character discussed,
110;
- whining of,
202,
241;
- afraid of Constitutional Democrats,
244;
- his affectation of liberalism,
308;
- resigns,
313;
- his removal makes Duma possible,
318;
- in Council of Empire,
331
- Workmen, demand universal sufferage,
18,
19;
- dress of,
26;
- patience of,
28;
- first council of delegates,
37;
- homes of,
38–48;
- locked out,
40;
- hours of labour,
42;
- wages,
44;
- standard of food and work,
45,
114;
- amusements of,
47;
- connection with land,
48;
- shot down,
81;
- equality of their women,
26;
- their unions in Moscow,
105;
- “living in,”
113;
- wages increased,
114;
- quarters in order,
232;
- growing importance of,
288;
- in Poland,
289;
- their candidates for Duma imprisoned,
311;
- only fifteen in Duma,
337
- Zemstvos, recommend reforms,
2;
- send petition of Rights,
7
- Zemstvoists, meet in secret,
6;
- discuss promised Duma,
16;
- draw up programme of political aims,
16–17;
- debate Witte’s character, and vanish,
110
- Zilliacus, writer on struggle for Russian freedom,
2