Russian Military Life
during the reign of Nicholas I

(1826-1852)

 

 

This section will feature pictures, history, stories, and other facets of military life in the Imperial Russian Army and Navy during the reign of Nicholas I.

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Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality

 

 

Conscription and Service (2)

The primary means of raising an army during the reign of Nicholas I was by means of the draft.  Approximately 80,000 men were required to be drafted into the Imperial army each year to maintain it at an acceptable strength (3).  This system had been common since before the Napoleonic wars, but was especially necessary in Russia, a land with relatively low population density and very long borders.  The vast majority of the conscripts raised for the Imperial army came from the serfs who lived in the villages across Russia.  These serfs filled out the bulk of the lower ranks of the army, unlike the officer class which was comprised primarily of aristocratic young men.

Conscription of the serfs was for a period of twenty five years which was effectively a lifetime during the 1800's. This was accomplished by the Recruitment Committee sending out draft notices to districts, who then sent them out to village communes.  Typically village elders would decide who was to go. (3)  Masters of serfs could also decide, as could courts - who would often send petty criminals into the army.

Most serfs viewed the idea of being drafted with feelings of dread and sorrow.  This also proved a burden on peasant families faced financial ruin if the only able-bodied male was sent into the army as it left no one to work the fields.  Many villages would hold mock funerals for the young men who were selected for conscription, for few would ever return home again.  This was noted in an 1825 report by M. M. Speransky who wrote that "every family ruined by conscription increased the number of orphans, promoted impoverishment, and harmed agriculture and industry" (2).

These unfortunate men were then marched away (under armed escort) to nearby cities where they would be further processed for the army.

Qualifications

By the time of Nicholas I, the primary factors that determined if a young man would be conscripted was age and height.  These changed from year to year, and as military needs increased the standards would lower, only to return to peacetime norms when the crisis had passed.  These can be seen in the table at right.

 

Year Age Height
1826 19-35 5' 3"
1827-1829 18-35 5' 1"
1831* 20-35 4' 11½"
1836 19-35 5' 3"
1844 21-35 5' 2½ inches

*Selected laws also allowed acceptance of those missing up to two front teeth, those blind in one eye, or those missing part of left index finger.

This system had its detractors.  In 1841 the Recruitment Committee stated that the required height of five feet and three inches unfairly placed the burden on ethnic groups who were taller - often Russian and Beylorussian.  Minorities who tended to be shorter - Chuvash, Cheremis, Tatar, Votiak, and Zyrians - could avoid conscription simply on basis of height.  In 1843 the Recruitment Committee was not satisfied with these changes and complained that up to 34% of the conscripts would be rejected simply due to their height.

To alleviate this problem several local districts were able to lower the height requirements.  In 1841 the standards in Arkhangel'sk and Vologda were reduced to allow men five feet and 3/8ths inches to be subjected to the level.  People of Cheremis ancestry in Perm could be conscripted if they were 4 feet and 11 inches tall if they were craftsmen or miners.

Evading Conscription

Not surprisingly, many attempted to evade conscription by means of physical disqualification.  Among those of acceptable height and age many attempted to injure themselves so that they would not be selected.  This was termed 'self mutilation' by the Tsarist authorities.  It most commonly involved cutting off a portion of the pointer finger on the right hand - which made it difficult to pull a trigger.  Another common malady was claiming that one had a disease.  This proved so common that it a fifteen year long study by the medical board of the Pskov province revealed that peasants of conscription age suffered mange at a rate ten times higher than women of the area.  To alleviate this problem the Ministry of the Interior declared in 1828 that it would draft recruits with mange.

By 1831 new regulations were adopted to ensure that potential recruits did not deliberately injure themselves to avoid conscription.  Injuries not reported and investigated were assumed to be due to the fact that the serf was attempting to avoid being drafted.  This brought punishments of between twenty five and fifty lashes - and assignment to the army anyway.

Still, attempts at avoiding military service continued.  Recruiting station officials of the 1830's often reported finding beeswax, lard, and other substances in the ears of potential recruits who attempted to claim hearing disabilities.  It was said that in 1847 that "to avoid conscription, Tatars damage fingers and auditory organs... they also feign hernias and spread wounds over their bodies" (2).  The army typically reacted to such tactics by simply lowering the acceptance standards and drafting the men all the same.

The Uneven Social Burden of Conscription

There were attempts as early as 1811 to lighten the burden on the Russian serfs and extend the levy to other peoples of the empire.  It should be noted that this was less to ensure social equality and more to allow for larger numbers of soldiers to be raised in times of war.  By the early years of Nicholas I there had been some movement in that direction.  An 1827 statute required Jews to send recruits to the army each year in place of the monetary payments that they had sent previously.  The government explained that "the recruitment obligation, for the relief of our subjects, should be equal for all social categories" (2).  This was not completely true.  Exemptions continued for nobles, merchants, and clergy.  Additional exemptions could be granted to serfs whose master owned less than twenty able bodied men to work his factory or fields.  Non-Russian border populations (Georgians, Bessarabians, Lithuanians, and many Muslim groups) were often expected to make a monetary payment in place of sending conscripts.  This was because it was very easy for members of these groups to desert to avoid service, while others viewed their loyalty to the Tsar as suspect.

By the early 1850's the War Ministry looked into the process of ending exemptions from conscription, but this was opposed by many provincial governors who did not want to deal with the social pressures that would result from enforcing this policy.

 

 

Imperial Army Life (3)

By the 1850's the average soldiers was paid 2 rubles and 85 kopeks a year in three allotments.  They were also given 90 kopeks for equipment.  Sergeant-majors were paid 3 rubles a year.

There were many deductions taken out of these payments for such matters as the company barber, boot maker, tailor, and regimental priest.  There was also additional money deducted for the company artel and a long term savings which would go to any soldier lucky enough to retire.

 

Military Regulation of 1850

Field manuals are an essential part of military service, and Tsarist Russia was no different.  Here we have a copy of the 1850 edition of Military Orders.  These were a compilation of policies and procedures that included the 1 January 1847 and 1 January 1849 regulations.

The book itself is quite large and even then it is only the eighth book in the series.  It is 28 cm long, 18 cm wide, and 4.5 cm thick.  Its cover is a heavier grade paper than the interior, its binding seems to consist of sets of pages bound together, then stacked and glued to the spine.  An interesting feature of this book is that some of the pages have not been cut along their upper margin.  This is likely due to the rather crude finishing techniques employed in Russia at the time.  The total number of pages is 896 and the regulations cover a number of policies dealing with how military actions are to be conducted.  Several sections deal with how to conduct the fight against Caucasian separatists (something that would continue to be a problem even into modern times).

This book was printed in St. Petersburg in 1850.

The interior of the 1850 Military Regulation Manual

The Front Cover

A View of the Spine of the Manual

 

 

Earlier Period Military Life

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Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality

Later Period Military Life

 

Bibliography

(2) Wirtschafter, Elise K., From Serf to Russian Soldier, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1990. Print.
(3) Thomas, Robert H.G. and Richard Scollins, The Russian Army of the Crimean War 1854-1856, London: Osprey Publishing, 1991. Print.