Founded | 1905 Moscow, Russian Empire |
---|---|
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Focus | Public and political |
Location |
|
Area served |
Russian Empire Russian Federation |
Members | 15,000+ (2022) |
Key people |
Mihail Hutorov, The Supreme Consul Roman Kiselev |
Russian Monarchist Party was a Russian monarchist right-wing nationalist organisation, founded in February 1905 in Moscow. In 1907 it changed name to Russian Monarchist Union.
The party was founded by Vladimir A. Gringmut ( ru), reactionary editor of the periodical Moscow News (Moskovskiye vedomosti), in February. [1]
It advocated the reestablishment of a powerful autocratic rule, martial law, and suppression of Jews, who they claimed were mainly the instigators of the revolutionary disorders. [1] It also stood for local self-government, public education, freedom of the press, improvement of workers and peasants conditions, and had following internal enemies: constitutional democrats, socialists, revolutionaries, anarchists and the aforementioned Jews, the Bundists. [2]
Founded | 1905 Moscow, Russian Empire |
---|---|
Type | Non-governmental organization |
Focus | Public and political |
Location |
|
Area served |
Russian Empire Russian Federation |
Members | 15,000+ (2022) |
Key people |
Mihail Hutorov, The Supreme Consul Roman Kiselev |
Russian Monarchist Party was a Russian monarchist right-wing nationalist organisation, founded in February 1905 in Moscow. In 1907 it changed name to Russian Monarchist Union.
The party was founded by Vladimir A. Gringmut ( ru), reactionary editor of the periodical Moscow News (Moskovskiye vedomosti), in February. [1]
It advocated the reestablishment of a powerful autocratic rule, martial law, and suppression of Jews, who they claimed were mainly the instigators of the revolutionary disorders. [1] It also stood for local self-government, public education, freedom of the press, improvement of workers and peasants conditions, and had following internal enemies: constitutional democrats, socialists, revolutionaries, anarchists and the aforementioned Jews, the Bundists. [2]