俄罗斯 List of Authors
PushkinYi MingQiuteqiefuMikhail Yuryevich Lermontov
AnnenskiBalmontSuoluoguboDimitrij Sergeevic Mereskovskij
An BelyLuoheweici KajaHe Liebo MelnikovKuzmin
伊戈尔谢维里亚 NingVladimir MayakovskyAlexander BlokCult Bo
GippiusIvan Bunin弗索洛维约夫马沃洛 application
KhodasevichPoplavskiGumilyovAnna Akhmatova
Marina TsvetaevaOsip MandelstamBoris PasternakSergei Yesenin
Vladimir NabokovWeiyayiwan Ivanov安德列沃兹涅 Xing SkiPyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
尤里加夫里科夫Yuri Emelianov罗伊麦德维 JeffValery Kim Do Leshkov
Mikhail KhorobritBoris MihajlovicDanielYuri
Ivan I (the Money bag)Simeon (the Proud)Ivan II (the Fair)Dimitri I (of the Don)
Vasily IVasily II (the Blind)Ivan III of Russia (the Great)Vasily III
Ivan IV (the Terrible)Fyodor I IvanovichBoris GodunovFeodor II
False Dmitriy IVasili IVMikhail I Fyodorovich RomanovAlexis I
Feodor IIIIvan V Alekseyevich RomanovPeter ICatherine I
Catherine II
俄罗斯 俄罗斯帝国  (April 21, 1729 ADNovember 6, 1796 AD)
凯萨琳二世
StartEnd
Reign1762 AD1796 AD

  Catherine II (Russian: Екатерина II Великая, Yekaterina II Velikaya), also known as Catherine the Great, born 2 May [O.S. 21 April] 1729. She was Empress of Russia from 9 July [O.S. 28 June] 1762 until 17 November [O.S. 6 November] 1796. Under her direct auspices the Russian Empire expanded, improved its administration, and continued to modernize along Western European lines. Catherine's rule re-vitalized Russia, which grew ever stronger and became recognized as one of the great powers of Europe. Her successes in complex foreign policy and her sometimes brutal reprisals in the wake of rebellion (most notably Pugachev's Rebellion) complemented her hectic private life. She frequently occasioned scandal—given her propensity for lascivious relationships which often resulted in gossip flourishing within more than one European court.
  
  Catherine took power after a conspiracy deposed her husband, Peter III (1728–1762), and her reign saw the high point in the influence of the Russian nobility. Peter III, under pressure from the nobility, had already increased the authority of the great landed proprietors over their muzhiks and serfs. In spite of the duties imposed on the nobles by the first prominent "modernizer" of Russia, Tsar Peter I (1672–1725), and despite Catherine's friendships with the western European thinkers of the Enlightenment (in particular Denis Diderot, Voltaire and Montesquieu) Catherine found it impractical to improve the lot of her poorest subjects, who continued to suffer (for example) military conscription. The distinctions between peasant rights on votchina and pomestie estates virtually disappeared in law as well as in practice during her reign.
  
  In 1785 Catherine conferred on the nobility the Charter to the Nobility, increasing further the power of the landed oligarchs. Nobles in each district elected a Marshal of the Nobility who spoke on their behalf to the monarch on issues of concern to them—mainly economic ones.
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(1762 AD1796 AD)
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