Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-sxzjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T07:19:45.167Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Honored Citizens and the Creation of a Middle Class in Imperial Russia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 July 2017

Abstract

In 1832, an imperial manifesto established a new social estate (soslovie) of “honored citizens.” The new status was granted to successful merchants, professionals, and artists, and gave them permanent (and sometimes inherited) privilege. Honored citizens have been largely forgotten or discounted, both by literary authors of the nineteenth century and by historians. They were, however, a conscious effort on the part of the imperial state to create a middle class in the context of an estate-based social structure, an effort that followed several decades of previous experimentation and discussion. Thousands of subjects of the Russian Empire took on the new status, to the point that by 1897 honored citizens outnumbered merchants. They understood themselves as having an honorable place in the social structure, and were understood as a sign of the status of Russian towns. Honored citizen status gave a certain amount of stability to the new middle class, although not every honored citizen prospered. As a social estate, honored citizens were unique, for they were not unified in opportunity, and because they did not have a collective association—they were individuals in the law. They were, as a result, present and important but paradoxical: while defined by estate law, they were closer to individual subjects or even citizens than almost anyone else in imperial society. In addition, their lack of a collective voice muted their radical potential, masking them from contemporary and historical view.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Chekhov, Anton Pavlovich, “Ober-Verkhi,” in Polnoe sobranie sochinenii i pisem, 30 vols. (Moscow, 1974–83), 2: 106Google Scholar.

2. McReynolds, Louise, The News Under Russia's Old Regime: The Development of a Mass-Circulation Press (Princeton, 1991), 100CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Engel, Barbara Alpern, Breaking the Ties that Bound: The Politics of Marital Strife in Late Imperial Russia (Ithaca, 2011), 4CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tarsis, Irina, “Laws and Lithographs: Seeing Imperial Russia Through Illustrations of Civil Uniforms in Polnoe sobranie zakonov Rossiiskoi Imperii ,” Slavic & East European Information Resources 11, no. 2/3 (2010): 156–83CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

3. Kocka, Jürgen, “The Middle Classes in Europe,” Journal of Modern History 67, no. 4 (December 1995): 783806 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, here 783. On meanings of grazhdanstvo, see Kupriianov, Aleksandr, Kul΄tura gorodskogo samoupravleniia russkoi provintsii, 1780–1860-e gody (Moscow, 2009), 126–29Google Scholar and Lohr, Eric, Russian Citizenship: From Empire to Soviet Union (Cambridge, Mass., 2012), 34 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

4. Historians of nineteenth-century Germany have also looked to a perceived weakness in German middle class structures to explain Germany history. See Sperber, Jonathan, “ Bürger, Bürgertum, Bürgerlichkeit, Bürgerliche Gesellschaft: Studies of the German (Upper) Middle Class and Its Sociocultural World,” Journal of Modern History 69, no. 2 (June 1997): 273 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5. Osterhammel, Jürgen, The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century, trans. Camiller, Patrick (Princeton, 2014), 761Google Scholar. The literature on European and global middle classes is enormous. Summary volumes include Blackbourn, David and Evans, Richard J., eds., The German Bourgeoisie: Essays on the Social History of the German Middle Class from the Late Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century (London, 1991)Google Scholar; Kocka, Jürgen and Mitchell, Allen, eds., Bourgeois Society in Nineteenth-Century Europe (Oxford, 1993)Google Scholar; López, Ricardo and Weinstein, Barbara, eds., The Making of the Middle Class: Toward a Transnational History of the Middle Class (Durham, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6. Wirtschafter, Elise Kimerling, Social Identity in Imperial Russia (DeKalb, 1997), 7275 Google Scholar or Jones, Robert E., Provincial Development in Russia: Catherine II and Jakob Sievers (New Brunswick, 1984), 20Google Scholar.

7. Dolgorukov, Petr, O peremene obraza pravleniia v Rossii (Leipzig, 1862), 22Google Scholar.

8. On the “missing” or “insignificant” middle class, see Pipes, Richard, Russia under the Old Regime, 2nd ed. (London, 1995 [1974]), 191220 Google Scholar; Florinsky, Michael T., Russia: A History and an Interpretation, 2 vols. (New York, 1955), 2:720Google Scholar; Pilbeam, Pamela M., The Middle Classes in Europe, 1789–1914: France, Germany, Italy and Russia (London, 1990)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; also Owen, Thomas C., Capitalism and Politics in Russia: A Social History of the Moscow Merchants, 1855–1905 (Cambridge, Eng., 1981)Google Scholar.

9. Bill, Valentine T., The Forgotten Class: The Russian Bourgeoisie from the Earliest Beginnings to 1900 (New York, 1959)Google Scholar; Rieber, Alfred, Merchants and Entrepreneurs in Imperial Russia (Chapel Hill, 1982)Google Scholar; Owen, Capitalism and Politics; Ruckman, Jo Ann, The Moscow Business Elite: A Social and Cultural Portrait of Two Generations, 1840–1905 (DeKalb, 1984)Google Scholar; Clowes, Edith W., Kassow, Samuel D. and West, James L., eds., Between Tsar and People: Educated Society and the Quest for Public Identity in Late Imperial Russia (Princeton, 1991)Google Scholar; Ransel, David L., A Russian Merchant's Tale: The Life and Adventures of Ivan Alekseevich Tolchënov, Based on His Diary (Bloomington, 2009)Google Scholar; Wirtschafter, Elise Kimerling, Structures of Society: Imperial Russia's “People of Various Ranks” (DeKalb, 1994)Google Scholar; Balzer, Harley D., ed., Russia's Missing Middle Class: The Professions in Russian History (Armonk, 1996)Google Scholar; Antonova, Katherine Pickering, An Ordinary Marriage: The World of a Gentry Family in Provincial Russia (New York, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

10. Rieber, Merchants and Entrepreneurs, 416.

11. Kelly, Catriona, Refining Russia: Advice Literature, Polite Culture, and Gender from Catherine to Yeltsin (Oxford, 2001)Google Scholar; McReynolds, Louise, Russia at Play: Leisure Activities at the End of the Tsarist Era (Ithaca, 2003)Google Scholar; Smith, Alison K., “Eating out in Imperial Russia: Class, Nationality, and Dining before the Great Reforms,” Slavic Review 65, no. 4 (Winter 2006): 757–60CrossRefGoogle Scholar; West, Sally, I Shop in Moscow: Advertising and the Creation of Consumer Culture in Late Tsarist Russia (DeKalb, 2011)Google Scholar; Martin, Alexander M., Enlightened Metropolis: Constructing Imperial Moscow, 1762–1855 (Oxford, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12. Stuart, Mary, “‘The Ennobling Illusion’: The Public Library Movement in Late Imperial Russia,” Slavonic and East European Review 76, no. 3 (July 1998): 401–40Google Scholar; Frame, Murray, School for Citizens: Theatre and Civil Society in Imperial Russia (New Haven, 2006)Google Scholar; Bradley, Joseph, Voluntary Associations in Tsarist Russia: Science, Patriotism, and Civil Society (Cambridge, Mass., 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Ely, Christopher, “The Question of Civil Society in Late Imperial Russia,” in Gleason, Abbott, ed., A Companion to Russian History, 225–42 (Chichester, 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Sargeant, Lynn M., Harmony and Discord: Music and the Transformation of Russian Cultural Life (New York, 2011)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

13. Bradley, Joseph, “Subjects into Citizens: Societies, Civil Society, and Autocracy,” American Historical Review 107, no. 4 (October 2002): 10941123 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, here 1105.

14. Florinsky, Russia, 786. A variation sees honored citizenship as an effort “to guarantee a degree of economic security for a few leading commercial and industrial figures in each Russian city” or as a “dream of a middle class.” In both these visions, the guarantee or the dream remained unfulfilled. See Owen, Capitalism and Politics, 5–6 and Pintner, Walter, Economic Policy under Nicholas I (Ithaca, 1967), 6466 Google Scholar.

15. Kliuchevskii, V. O., Istoriia soslovii v Rossii (Moscow, 1913), 11, 3334 Google Scholar; Mironov, Boris, Sotsial΄naia istoriia Rossii perioda imperii, XVIII-nachalo XX v.: genezis lichnosti, demokraticheskoi sem΄i, grazhdanskogo obshchestva i pravovogo gosudarstva, 2 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1999)Google Scholar and Ivanova, N. A. and Zheltova, V. P., Soslovno-klassovaia struktura Rossii v kontse XIX-nachale XX veka (Moscow, 2004)Google Scholar.

16. Ruckman, The Moscow Business Elite, 32–33; Rikman, V. Iu., “Pochetnoe grazhdanstvo i ego geneologiia,” Problemy otechestvennoi istorii i kul΄tury perioda feodalizma: Chteniia pamiati V. B. Kobrina, 154–56 (Moscow, 1992)Google Scholar; Ivanova, N. A. and Zheltova, V. P., Soslovnoe obshchestvo Rossiiskoi imperii, XVIII-nachalo XX veka (Moscow, 2009), 399401 Google Scholar.

17. To check this statement, I used text search on all the works by these authors online at http://az.lib.ru. Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin's Khreptiugin, who appears in several short stories, is a first guild merchant and hereditary honored citizen. Another appears briefly in Nikolai Leskov's Nekuda. A drunken honored citizen named Olukhov is mentioned in Aleksei Pisemskii's Meshchane. Aleksandr Ostrovskii fills his plays with merchants, but only a few are also honored citizens.

18. Chekhov, A. P., “Strakh,” in Polnoe sobranie sochinenii i pisem, 30 vols. (Moscow, 1977), 8:127–38Google Scholar, here 138.

19. He is part of the “problem of the merchant in Russian literature” identified in Holmgren, Beth, Rewriting Capitalism: Literature and the Market in Late Tsarist Russia and the Kingdom of Poland (Pittsburgh, 1998), 1753 Google Scholar. See also Levandovskaia, Aleksandra A. & Levandovskii, Andrei A., “The ‘Dark Kingdom’: The Merchant Entrepreneur and His Literary Images,” Russian Studies in History 47, no. 1 (Summer 2008): 7295 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, who also identify some of these honored citizens as exemplars of literary merchants (including the one major “good” merchant character they describe, the title character of Petr Boborykin's Vasilii Terkin, 89), and, for a corrective, Bernstein, Lina, “Russian Eighteenth-Century Merchant Portraits in Words and in Oil,” Slavic and East European Journal 49, no. 3 (Fall 2005): 407–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20. Dostoevskii, Fedor, The Idiot, trans. McDuff, David (London, 2004), 11, 719Google Scholar; Dostoevskii, Fedor, The Idiot, trans. Garnett, Constance (New York, 1958), 8Google Scholar.

21. Chekhov, Anton, The Party and Other Stories, trans. Garnett, Constance (New York, 1917), 83Google Scholar; The Oxford Chekhov, trans. Ronald Hingley, 9 vols. (London, 1971), 6:180.

22. Darnton, Robert, The Great Cat Massacre And Other Episodes in French Cultural History (New York, 1984), 110–11Google Scholar.

23. Martin, Enlightened Metropolis, 24–35. On Catherine's plans, see also Wirtschafter, Social Identity, 73; Lavrinovich, Maiia, “Sozdanie sotsial΄nykh osnov imperii v XVIII veke: zakonodatel΄nye praktiki v otnoshenii gorodskogo naseleniia Rossii i ikh zapadnoevropeiskie istochniki,” Ab Imperio, no. 3 (2002): 117–36Google Scholar.

24. Hittle, J. Michael, The Service City: State and Townsmen in Russia, 1600–1800 (Cambridge, Mass., 1979)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Anisimov, Evgenii V., The Reforms of Peter the Great: Progress through Coercion in Russia, trans. Alexander, John T. (Armonk, 1993), 199200 Google Scholar.

25. Polnoe sobranie zakonov Rossiiskoi imperii, (hereafter PSZ), vol. 20, no. 14275 (March 17, 1775).

26. Sbornik Imperatorskogo russkogo istoricheskogo obshchestva, 148 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1867–1916) (hereafter SIRIO), 4:152.

27. M. M. Shcherbatov, “Razmyshleniia o ushcherbe torgovli, proiskhodiashchem vykhozhdeniem velikogo chisla kuptsov v dvoriane i v ofitsery,” Chteniia v imperatorskom obshchestve istorii i drevnostei rossiiskikh pri Moskovskom universitete 1 (January-March 1860): Section II, 135–40, here 136. See also Ransel, A Russian Merchant's Tale, 103–4.

28. PSZ, vol. 22, no. 16188 (April 21, 1785), 132–36.

29. Ransel, A Russian Merchant's Tale, 39–41, 45, drawing on Kollmann, Nancy Shields, By Honor Bound: State and Society in Early Modern Russia (Ithaca, 1999)Google Scholar, and Kamenskii, A. B., Povsednevnost΄ russkikh gorodskikh obyvatelei: istoricheskie anekdoty iz provintsial΄noi zhizni XVIII veka (Moscow, 2006)Google Scholar.

30. Schrader, Abby M., Languages of the Lash: Corporal Punishment and Identity in Imperial Russia (DeKalb, 2002)Google Scholar.

31. PSZ, vol. 29, no. 22418 (January 1, 1807), §15, §17.

32. PSZ, vol. 29, no. 22418 (January 1, 1807), §19.

33. Mullov, P. A., Istoricheskoe obozrenie pravitel΄stvennykh mer po ustroistvu gorodskogo obshchestvennogo upravleniia (St. Petersburg, 1864), 114Google Scholar; Gradovskii, A., O gosudarstvennom ustroistve, vol. 1, Nachala russkogo gosudarstvennogo prava, (St. Petersburg, 1875), 241Google Scholar.

34. Rossiiskii gosudarstvennii istoricheskii arkhiv (RGIA), fond (f.) 18, opis΄ (op.) 4, delo (d.) 275, list (ll.) 1–2ob (1823) (O kuptsakh 3i gil΄dii pokazannykh v zvanii imenitykh grazhdan).

35. Ibid., ll. 12–15 (1823).

36. Riasanovsky, Nicholas V., Nicholas I and Official Nationality in Russia, 1825–1855 (Berkeley, 1959), 190–91Google Scholar.

37. SIRIO, vol. 74, 193.

38. SIRIO, vol. 74, 160, 164, 194, 197; vol. 90, 365.

39. SIRIO, vol. 74, 159, 164, 485.

40. SIRIO, vol. 74, 159.

41. SIRIO, vol. 74, 160.

42. SIRIO, vol. 74, 163–64, 169–70.

43. SIRIO, vol. 74, 176, 182.

44. Polnoe sobranie zakonov, ser. II (hereafter PSZ II), vol. 7, no. 5284 (April 10, 1832).

45. Ibid., §§ 2–4.

46. Ibid., § 12.

47. RGIA, f. 1343, op. 39, d. 1464, ll. 9ob–10 (O pochetnom grazhdanstve Voznesenskogo posada pervoi gil΄dii kuptsa Evsigneia Durdenevskogo, 1866).

48. PSZ II, vol. 7, no. 5284 (April 10, 1832), §§ 5–6.

49. Specifically, they could not have had status revoked for loss of funds, nor been brought into legal conflicts. Ibid., §§ 7–9.

50. Ibid., § 15, and on the regularity of other access, §§ 12–14.

51. Ibid., §§ 5, 10.

52. Ibid., §§ 16, 18.

53. Ibid., § 18.

54. Mullov, Istoricheskoe obozrenie, 120.

55. Ziablovskii, Evdokim Filipovich, Rossiiskaia statistika, 2nd ed., 2 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1842), 1:52Google Scholar; Gradovskii, O gosudarstvennom ustroistve, 295–96.

56. RGIA, f. 1343, op. 39, which covers petitions for hereditary honored citizenship, 1832–1890, includes 6053 files, some duplicates, some including more than one petition (or 5821 unique names of petitioners). Op. 40, covering petitions for hereditary honored citizenship from 1890–1917, includes 6061 individual files. Op. 41 covers petitions for personal honored citizenship from 1833 to 1917, and includes 415 files. Op. 47 covers 1897–1917, does not indicate whether petitions are for honorary or personal honored citizenship, and includes a further 1109 files. Not all of these petitions were successful; the application of Konstantin Efimov Durdenevskii was rejected because he had not submitted the proper fees. RGIA, f. 1343, op. 39, d. 1465, “O pochetnom grazhdanstve Voznesenskogo posada pervoi gil΄dii kuptsa Konstantina Efimova Durdenevskogo.” In addition, according to Panov, Fedor Nikolaevich, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo (St. Petersburg, 1889), 96Google Scholar, those who sought personal status based on their father's service applied not to the Senate but “to those government organizations, where their fathers served, or from provincial administrations.”

57. Materialy dlia istorii Moskovskogo kupechestva, 9 vols. (Moscow, 1889), 8:287–98. Based on comparison with the Senate files held at RGIA, by 1850 the descendants of some of the initial petitioners had split into several households each listed separately in the Moscow records. So, Vasilii Sergeev Zubov and Trifon Sergeev Zubov each headed separate households (294), and appear to be the two sons of Sergei Zubov, who took on honored citizen status in 1834 (RGIA, f. 1343, op. 39, d. 1749).

58. “Pervaia vseobshchaia perepis΄ naseleniia Rossiiskoi Imperii 1897 g. Raspredelenie naseleniia po sosloviiam i sostoianiiam,” Demoskop Weekly, at http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/rus_sos_97.php (last accessed February 22, 2017). On the erosion of merchant status at the end of the nineteenth century, caused in part by laws that allowed more people business opportunities without the need to take on merchant status, see Brower, Daniel R., The Russian City between Tradition and Modernity, 1850–1900 (Berkeley, 1990), 5456 Google Scholar.

59. Rubakin, Nikolai Aleksandrovich, Rossiia v tsifrakh: Strana. narod. sosloviia. klassy (St. Petersburg, 1912), 53Google Scholar.

60. Numbers do not add to 100 due to rounding.

61. There were in addition 1.9 percent honored citizens, usually personal, apparently reaffirming or changing the nature of their status; 1.1 percent meshchane; .7 percent “residents” of primarily non-Russian towns; .3 percent inorodtsy (non-Russians with their own soslovie identity); .2 percent peasants; .2 percent other (artisans and foreigners accepting Russian citizenship).

62. PSZ II, vol. 10, no. 8419 (September 20, 1835); vol. 11, no. 9097 (April 24, 1836), § 8; vol. 14, no. 11971 (January 27, 1839); vol. 23, no. 22257 (May 10, 1848); vol. 26, no. 25269 (June 5, 1851); vol. 37, no. 38439 (July 3, 1862), § 28; Polnoe sobranie zakonov, ser. III (hereafter PSZ III), vol. 23, no. 22819 (Aril 21, 1903).

63. PSZ II vol. 14, no. 11934 (January 15, 1839). Later laws include vol. 19, no. 18290 (October 10, 1844) (service to the Russian-American Company for at least ten years); vol. 19, no. 1848 (November 28) (various kinds of chancellery work); vol. 20, no. 19085 (June 11, 1845) (military and state service); vol. 20, nos. 19227–28 (July 22, 1845) (merchants who received the Order of St. Vladimir or St. Anna); vol. 24, no. 23022 (February 16, 1849) (doctors, pharmacists, and veterinarians); vol. 34, no. 34480 (May 11, 1859), § 8 (senior surveyors of the Ministry of State Domains); PSZ III, vol. 14, no. 10387 (February 28, 1894) (musicians certified by the Conservatory of the Imperial Russian Musical Society).

64. Sargeant, Lynne, “A New Class of People: The Conservatoire and Musical Professionalization in Russia, 1861–1917,” Music & Letters 85, no. 1 (February 2004): 4161 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, here 44–46.

65. This echoes other arguments over the role of honor in late-imperial urban society, as in Rieber, Merchants and Entrepreneurs, 85–86; Thurston, Robert W., Liberal City, Conservative State: Moscow and Russia's Urban Crisis, 1906–1914 (New York, 1987), 24Google Scholar; or the story of Ivan Slonov described in Bradley, Joseph, Muzhik and Muscovite: Urbanization in Late Imperial Russia (Berkeley, 1985), 173Google Scholar.

66. Rogovin, Lev Mironovich, Pochetnoe grazhdanstvo: Zakony i raz΄΄iasneniia Senata i ministerstv o prichislenii k sosloviiu pochetnykh grazhdan (St. Petersburg, 1914), vGoogle Scholar.

67. Likhachev, Dmitrii S., Reflections on the Russian Soul: A Memoir, trans. Adams, Bernard (Budapest, 2000), 1Google Scholar.

68. Rieber argues that this was, in fact, “the most reliable road to honorary citizenship,” in Merchants and Entrepreneurs, 124.

69. For examples, see Iakov, Slovo preosviashchennogo Iakova, Episkopa Saratovskogo i Tsaritsynskogo, proiznesennoe pri pogrebenii Saratovskogo Kuptsa, pochetnogo grazhdanina Ivan Andreevicha Kanina, skonchavshegosia 12 Noiabria 1836 goda (St. Petersburg, 1842); Pokrovskii, Peter Evdokimovich, Slovo pri pogrebenii pochetnoi grazhdanki, Verkhoturskoi 1-i gil΄dii kupecheskoi zheny, Aleksandry Andreevny Bronnikovoi, urozhdennoi Temerinoi, govorennoe Paraskevievskoi Tserkvi, chto v Okhotnom riadu, protoiereem Petrom Pokrovskim Iiulia 6 dnia 1847 goda (Moscow, 1847)Google Scholar; Mikhailovskii, Mikhail, Rech΄, govorennaia pri pogrebenii glavnogo proizvoditelia rabot na S. Peterburgo-Moskovskoi zheleznoi doroge, Valdaiskogo 1 gil΄dii kuptsa i pochetnogo grazhdanina Ivana Gerasimovicha Sharvina, Valdaiskogo Troitskogo Sobora Sviashchennikom Mikhailom Mikhailovskim, 19 Noiabria 1845 goda ([St. Petersburg], 1849)Google Scholar.

70. Kostrov, Timofei, Nadgrobnoe slovo, skazannoe pri pogrebenii pochetnogo grazhdanina, borovitskogo kuptsa Nikity Ivanovicha Salamanova, 1847 goda dekabria 4 dnia sviashchennikom magistrom Timofeem Kostrovym (St. Petersburg, 1848), 6Google Scholar.

71. Baranov, Ivan Fedorovich was noted for all of these characteristics. See Nekotorye cherty iz zhizni Aleksandrovskogo 1 gil΄dii kuptsa i pochetnogo grazhdanina Ivana Fedorovicha Baranova (Moscow, 1849)Google Scholar.

72. RGIA, f. 1287, op. 38, d. 350, ll. 1–1ob (O nepravil΄nom vozvedenii Nizhegorodskim gorodskim deputatskim sobraniem raznykh lits v mestnoe pochetnoe grazhdanstvo). The report came on plain paper from one P. Mel΄nikov, addressed to the head of the Economic Department of the MVD by name, not by title.

73. Ibid., ll. 9ob-10.

74. Ol΄ga Zakharova, “Pochetnyi grazhdanin g. Ivanovo-Voznesenska,” Gosudarstvennyi arkhiv Ivanovskoi oblasti, posted September 8, 2010 at www.ivarh.ru/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=386 (last accessed March 21, 2017).

75. PSZ III, vol. 29, no. 32759 (December 4, 1909); no. 32816 (December 20, 1909); vol. 31, no. 35672 (July 23, 1911).

76. RGIA, f. 1287, op. 38, d. 350, ll. 15–16ob.

77. PSZ III, vol. 22, nol. 21764 (June 24, 1902).

78. Ostrovskii, A. N., “Pravda khorosho, a schast΄e luchshe,” in Polnoe sobranie sochinenii v dvenadtsati tomakh, 12 vols. (Moscow, 1975), 4:279Google Scholar.

79. PSZ II, vol. 8, no. 6107 (April 12, 1833), § 2. Other laws, though, emphasized heredity, including the very next law listed in the Polnoe sobranie zakonov, which stated that although merchants possessing honored citizenship could exclude sons from their families for disrespect, they could not revoke their sons’ now hereditary honored-citizen status. PSZ II, vol. 8, no. 6108 (April 12, 1833).

80. PSZ II, vol. 24, no. 23239 (May 11, 1849); vol. 26, no. 24862 (January 22, 1851).

81. On tutors, PSZ II, vol. 9, no. 7240 (July 1, 1834); on entry into the Institute of Mining Engineers, PSZ II, vol. 9, no. 7298 (July 25, 1834); on entry into the Institute of the Transportation Corps, PSZ II vol. 11, no. 9739 (November 27, 1836); on becoming surveyors, PSZ II, vol. 18, no. 17048 (July 20, 1843).

82. PSZ II, vol. 11, no. 9231 (May 27, 1836); vol. 14, no. 12768 (October 16, 1839); vol. 46, no. 49460 (April 10, 1871).

83. PSZ II, vol. 33, no. 33907 (December 15, 1858).

84. The apparent solution was to force them into the military if they did not choose alternative ways of making a living and/or serving the state. PSZ II, vol. 28, no. 27123 (April 2, 1853).

85. For example, Pavel, Vasili, and Petr Fedorov Afans΄ev; only Pavel still held merchant status. Materialy, 8:288, 290, 291.

86. The household was headed by his widow, Natal΄ia Frantseva; the entry has enough detail to make it certain that it is the household of Nikolai Polevoi. Materialy, 8:296.

87. SIRIO, vol. 74, 486.

88. Smith, Alison K., For the Common Good and Their Own Well-Being: Social Estates in Imperial Russia (New York, 2014), 1436 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

89. PSZ II, vol. 26, no. 25481 (August 8, 1851). There were, however, certain regions (including Siberia) where access to state service was more open.

90. PSZ II, vol. 35, no. 35469 (February 22, 1860); see also vol. 30, no. 29855 (November 25, 1855).

91. PSZ II, vol. 30, no. 29425 (June 14, 1855); vol. 31, no. 30942 (September 7, 1856); vol. 33, no. 33001 (April 15, 1858); no. 33528 (September 14, 1858). vol. 34, no. 34565 (June 5, 1859); vol. 35, no. 36140 (September 10, 1860); vol. 37, no. 38659 (September 10, 1837). Another law noted that those sons were allowed to continue their service if they so desired. PSZ II, vol. 37, no. 38392 (June 22, 1862).

92. PSZ II, vol. 39, no. 40512 (January 20, 1864).

93. On this, see particularly Panov, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 93, 97, who notes that the status itself did not give rights to trade or service, but those of merchant origin could join merchant guilds, and those of service origin could enter the civil service. See also Ianovskii, A., Brokgauz, in F. A. and Efron, I. A., eds., “Grazhdanstvo pochetnoe,” Entsiklopedicheskii slovar΄, 86 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1890–1907), 9A: 523–24Google Scholar.

94. Zakony o sostoianiiakh, vol. 9, Svod zakonov rossiiskoi imperii, poveleniem gosudaria imperatora Nikolaia Pavlovicha sostavlennyi (St. Petersburg, 1833), § 2.

95. See, for example, Ziablovskii, Rossiiskaia statistika, 47–66 or Korkunov, Nikolai Mikhailovich, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo: Posobie k lektsiam, 2 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1909), 1:303Google Scholar.

96. Mullov, Istoricheskoe obozrenie, 116; Obzor tsarstvovaniia gosudaria imperatora Aleksandra II i ego reform. 1855–1871 (St. Petersburg, 1871), 240; Alekseev, A. S., Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 2nd student edition (Moscow, 1892), 247Google Scholar.

97. Sudebnye ustavy 20 noiabria 1864 goda, s izlozheniem rassuzhdenii, na koikh oni osnovany, izdannye gosudarstvennoi kantseliariei, 2nd expanded ed., part 4, “Ustav o nakazaniiakh, nalagaemykh mirovymi sud΄iami” (St. Petersburg, 1867), 167–68; Sbornik uzakonenii i rasporiazhenii, izdannykh s 20 noiabria 1864 g. po 1 ianvaria 1868 g., v dopolnenie i raz΄΄iasnenie sudebnykh ustavov (St. Petersburg, 1868), 44, 51–52; Nol΄de, Emmanuil Iul΄evich, Svod zamechanii na proekt obshchei chasti ulozheniia o nakazaniiakh, vyrabotannyi redaktsionnoi kommisiei, 5 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1884), 2:671Google Scholar, 674, 693, 700, 707.

98. D[iugamel΄], Karl Osipovich, Opyt gosudarstvennogo prava Rossiiskoi imperii (St. Petersburg, 1833), 171Google Scholar.

99. S—O, A., “Gorodskoe ustroistvo,” Delo 7, nos. 5, 9, 10 (1873): 301–35Google Scholar, 163–87, 51–75; here 179–80.

100. Smith, For the Common Good, 6.

101. According to A. S. Alekseev, the honored citizenry “alone did not have a corporate organization”: Alekseev, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 247. N. M. Korkunov claimed that the only comparable groups were personal nobles, priests, and the so-called “working people,” who had essentially the status of meshchane but without membership in a meshchanin society. See Korkunov, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 1:279.

102. Blumenbakh, Evgenii Gustavovich, Grazhdanskoe sostoianie (soslovie) v Rossii, a v chastnosti v Pribaltiiskikh guberniiakh, ego prava i obiazannosti (Riga, 1899), 13Google Scholar.

103. Gartung, N., Istoriia ugolovnogo sudoproizvodstva i sudoustroistva Frantsii, Anglii, Germanii i Rossii (St. Petersburg, 1868), 188Google Scholar.

104. Kliuchevskii, V. O., “Istoriia Soslovii v Rossii,” in Sochineniia: V deviati tomakh, 9 vols. (Moscow, 1989), 6:233–34Google Scholar; Korkunov, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 1:274; Confino, Michael, “The Soslovie (Estate) Paradigm: Reflections on Some Open Questions,” Cahiers du monde russe 49, no. 4 (October–December 2008): 681700 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, here 683–84; and a discussion in Ivanova and Zheltova, Soslovnoe obshchestvo, 722–23.

105. Panov, Russkoe gosudarstvennoe pravo, 93.

106. Maikov, P. M., “O pochetnom grazhdanstve,” Iuridicheskaia letopis΄ 3, no. 6 (June 1892): 527–54Google Scholar, here 527–528, 536.

107. S—v, V. N., “Russkie zhurnaly za pervuiu polovinu 1892 goda,” Iuridicheskii vestnik 24, no. 11 (1892): 448–69Google Scholar, here 458.

108. For contemporary descriptions of the status that makes this very point, see Blumenbakh, Grazhdanskoe sostoianie, 16–17 and Rogovin, Pochetnoe grazhdanstvo, v.

109. Chernukha, Valentina Grigor΄evna, Pasport v Rossii, 1719–1917 gg (St. Petersburg, 2007), 161–65Google Scholar.