-
1
-
-
0003884788
-
-
New York
-
Among the writers who discuss the new economic realities and orientation are E. J. Hobsbawm, The Age of Revolution, 1789-1848 (New York, 1962), 118-25;
-
(1962)
The Age of Revolution, 1789-1848
, pp. 118-125
-
-
Hobsbawm, E.J.1
-
4
-
-
0007195458
-
The Exigencies of War and the Politics of Taxation in the Netherlands, 1795-1810
-
J. M. Winter, ed., Cambridge, Eng.
-
as does Simon Schama, "The Exigencies of War and the Politics of Taxation in the Netherlands, 1795-1810," in J. M. Winter, ed., War and Economic Development (Cambridge, Eng., 1975), 103-38.
-
(1975)
War and Economic Development
, pp. 103-138
-
-
Schama, S.1
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11
-
-
52849118444
-
-
St. Petersburg
-
The major biographical sources on Mordvinov are: V. S. Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov (St. Petersburg, 1873);
-
(1873)
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
-
-
Ikonnikov, V.S.1
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14
-
-
52849118954
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Vospominanie o Grafe Nikolae Semenoviche Mordvinove, chitannoe v obshchem sobranii Vol'nago Ekonomicheskago Obshchestva
-
and S. Usov, "Vospominanie o Grafe Nikolae Semenoviche Mordvinove, chitannoe v obshchem sobranii Vol'nago Ekonomicheskago Obshchestva," Trudy Imperatorskago Vol'nago Ekonomicheskago Obshchestva, pt. 1 (1845), 109-18.
-
(1845)
Trudy Imperatorskago Vol'nago Ekonomicheskago Obshchestva
, Issue.1 PART
, pp. 109-118
-
-
Usov, S.1
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15
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-
52849084176
-
-
St. Petersburg
-
Mordvinov's writings fill more than nine of the ten volumes of V. A. Bil'basov, Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh (St. Petersburg, 1901-1903).
-
(1901)
Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh
-
-
Bil'Basov, V.A.1
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17
-
-
52849085314
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-
Leningrad
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His closest connection to one of the Decembrists was his patronage of the young poet K. F. Ryleev, whose 1823 poem "Grazhdanskoe muzhestvo" celebrates Mordvinov. The poem appears in K. F. Ryleev, Polnoe sobranie stikhotvorenii (Leningrad, 1971), 91-93. After their arrest, several of the Decembrists testified that they had hoped to include both Mordvinov and Mikhail Speranskii in their provisional government. Apparently Mordvinov was unaware of this, and though Nicholas I viewed Mordvinov with suspicion for some months, as a state councillor, he was appointed as one of the Decembrists' judges. Alone among these judges, Mordvinov opposed the death penalty for those convicted, because of his principled opposition to the death penalty. This decision more than any other secured Mordvinov's subsequently high reputation among Soviet commentators.
-
(1971)
Polnoe Sobranie Stikhotvorenii
, pp. 91-93
-
-
Ryleev, K.F.1
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18
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-
52849130686
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-
Moscow-Leningrad
-
References to Mordvinov are scattered through many volumes of Vosstanie dekabristov: Materialy (Moscow-Leningrad, 1925-69), for example, 10:209-12; 12:174-76; 14:56, 64; and throughout vol. 17.
-
(1925)
Vosstanie Dekabristov: Materialy
-
-
Mordvinov1
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19
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52849120138
-
-
Mordvinov's grandson began the process of collecting his papers, producing a thirteen-volume folio edition of them in the 1860s and 1870s. Ikonnikov based his 1878 biography on this collection. In the 1860s and 1870s Mordvinov's papers began to appear periodically in Chteniia v Imperatorskom Obshchestve Istorii i drevnostei Rossii and Russkaia starina. See Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov, viii-x.
-
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
, vol.8-10
-
-
Ikonnikov1
-
20
-
-
52849114776
-
-
trans. A. and C. Levin, from 3d ed.
-
In the context of late nineteenth-century tariff debates, interest in Mordvinov revived. See, for example, Mikhail Tugan-Baranovskii, The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century, trans. A. and C. Levin, from 3d ed. (1907; Homewood, Ill., 1970), 218-20;
-
(1907)
The Russian Factory in the Nineteenth Century
, pp. 218-220
-
-
Tugan-Baranovskii, M.1
-
28
-
-
52849113073
-
-
note
-
Archivists at Rossiiskii gosudarstvennyi istoricheskii arkhiv (RGIA) were eager to supply the personal papers of Mordvinov in the summer of 1998; likewise, Academy of Sciences historian M. Sh. Fainshtein, an authority on A. S. Shishkov, enthusiastically supplied additional citations, adding that Mordvinov was one of his "heroes."
-
-
-
-
29
-
-
52849083273
-
Industrialization of Russia
-
Princeton
-
William Blackwell summarizes Mordvinov's economic ideas in the framework of 1960s modernization theory, characterizing Mordvinov as the author of a comprehensive plan for the "industrialization of Russia" in his The Beginnings of Russian Industrialization, 1800-1860 (Princeton, 1968), 132-38.
-
(1968)
The Beginnings of Russian Industrialization, 1800-1860
, pp. 132-138
-
-
Mordvinov1
-
32
-
-
52849096103
-
Admiral Nikolai S. Mordvinov: Russia's Forgotten Liberal
-
January
-
Basil Dmytryshyn, in "Admiral Nikolai S. Mordvinov: Russia's Forgotten Liberal," Russian Review 30 (January 1971): 54-63, incorrectly labels Mordvinov a member of Alexander I's Unofficial Committee, a mistake later scholars have repeated. Kingston-Mann's In Search of the True West may initiate renewed interest in Mordvinov, although he is misidentified therein as "A. A. Mordvinov." Her assessment is misleading at times. Most problematic is her effort to cast Mordvinov as the originator of the notorious military colonies usually associated with Alexander I and A. A. Arakcheev. See Kingston-Mann, In Search of the True West, 70n33. Repczuk remains the only complete and reliable guide to Mordvinov's political and economic views in English. Repczuk, "Nicholas Mordvinov."
-
(1971)
Russian Review
, vol.30
, pp. 54-63
-
-
Dmytryshyn, B.1
-
34
-
-
52849127799
-
-
note
-
Mordvinov was an unabashed anglophile and once opined that the four greatest geniuses who had ever lived were Francis Bacon, Sir Isaac Newton, Adam Smith, and Jeremy Bentham. The last became his idol. Judging from correspondence in Mordvinov's archival papers, Bentham returned the admiration. There are three letters from Bentham to Mordvinov in RGIA, f. 994, op. 2, d. 928 (Bentham-Mordvinov correspondence), ll. 3-6, dated 1819-1830.
-
-
-
-
35
-
-
52849124015
-
-
note
-
Mordvinov was educated in the palace of Catherine the Great as a companion to Tsarevich Paul. By the end of Paul's reign, he held thousands of serfs. He began his career serving in the British navy at Catherine's request in the 1770s. He married an English-woman in 1784, and English became the language of his home. Although his naval career was far from brilliant, he reached the rank of admiral and even served briefly as Russia's first naval minister. The rest of his government service was in various civil posts, to which Tsars Alexander I and Nicholas I repeatedly assigned him, and from which they frequently fired him. The job that best matched his talents was his position as chairman of the Department of Economy of the State Council, which he held twice, for a total of four years. He was a leading stockholder in the Russian-American Company and a member of the Society of Lovers of the Russian Word, founded by his best friend Admiral A. S. Shishkov.
-
-
-
-
36
-
-
52849119257
-
Of Estates, Charters and Constitutions
-
David Griffiths and George E. Munro, trans. and eds., Bakersfield, Calif.
-
Analysis of Russia's social structure and of the mechanics of its brand of absolutism is one of the strong points of Russian historiography. It is not possible to list all of the useful studies pertaining to these subjects, but a fine starting point is the introductory essay by David Griffiths, "Of Estates, Charters and Constitutions," in David Griffiths and George E. Munro, trans. and eds., Catherine II's Charters of 1785 to the Nobility and the Towns (Bakersfield, Calif., 1991), xvii-lxix.
-
(1991)
Catherine II's Charters of 1785 to the Nobility and the Towns
-
-
Griffiths, D.1
-
43
-
-
52849136762
-
-
Although many Russian writers were preoccupied with the general question of improving agriculture in this period, scholars disagree about whether or not they were physiocrats. One figure about whom such disagreement reigns is Catherine's friend, D. A. Golitsyn. See Anikin, Russian Thinkers, 53,
-
Russian Thinkers
, pp. 53
-
-
Anikin1
-
44
-
-
52849134060
-
Dmitrii Alekseevich Golitsyn
-
and I. S. Bak, "Dmitrii Alekseevich Golitsyn," Istoricheskiezapiski A. N. SSSR, 1948, no. 26:258-72. V. V. Sviatlovskii maintained that, with the possible exception of Golitsyn, there were no Russian physiocrats.
-
(1948)
Istoricheskiezapiski A. N. SSSR
, Issue.26
, pp. 258-272
-
-
Bak, I.S.1
-
48
-
-
84963111128
-
-
Cambridge, Eng.
-
The most thorough examination of all aspects of populationism in Russia can be found in Roger Bartlett, Human Capital: The Settlement of Foreigners in Russia, 1762-1804 (Cambridge, Eng., 1979); he recognizes that there were many compelling reasons for Catherine to seek the settlement of empty lands, but "her overriding, or underlying, concern throughout was economic" (32). Populationism as an economic idea was closely linked to mercantilism and was not unique to Russia; it was developed particularly by Prussian and Austrian cameralists. Populationism would be largely discredited everywhere by the end of the eighteenth century.
-
(1979)
Human Capital: The Settlement of Foreigners in Russia, 1762-1804
-
-
Bartlett, R.1
-
49
-
-
52849124612
-
Finance and Credit in the Eighteenth-Century Russian Economy
-
See George E. Munro, "Finance and Credit in the Eighteenth-Century Russian Economy," Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 45, no. 4 (1997): 552-60.
-
(1997)
Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas
, vol.45
, Issue.4
, pp. 552-560
-
-
Munro, G.E.1
-
50
-
-
0003587014
-
-
Brewer makes a good case for English uniqueness in The Sinews of Power, 4-21, drawing contrasts with France and Spain that could usefully be applied to Russia. In demonstrating that even before the remarkable rise of English state power the Dutch had triumphed through a policy of "bellicose commercialism" (11), Brewer points to a posibility he does not develop: could it be that smallness, in and of itself, contributed significantly to the early financial and commercial superiority of certain precocious states?
-
The Sinews of Power
, pp. 4-21
-
-
-
52
-
-
52849105886
-
Pis'mo Konferents-Sekretaria D. V. Volkova o russkoi torgovle
-
Moscow
-
Since the 1750s, ideas that would today be considered hallmarks of economic liberalism had circulated rather widely in various departments of the Russian government among such stalwarts of Empress Elizabeth's government as P. I. Shuvalov and I. G. Chernyshev. One case in point was the lengthy discussion regarding ending restrictions on grain exports. Chief among advocates of opening the Russian grain trade was D. V. Volkov, who dispatched a lengthy justification to Elizabeth at the end of 1760, in which he declared that he had not been influenced by "foreign novelties." See "Pis'mo Konferents-Sekretaria D. V. Volkova o russkoi torgovle," Arkhiv Kniazia Vorontsova (Moscow, 1880), 24:117-26,
-
(1880)
Arkhiv Kniazia Vorontsova
, vol.24
, pp. 117-126
-
-
-
54
-
-
52849137915
-
-
Moscow
-
These two were S. E. Desnitskii and I. A. Tret'iakov. Desnitskii went on to become an important writer on judicial matters; Tret'iakov did not enjoy an illustrious career but did deliver an inaugural address at Moscow University in 1772 based on his lecture notes from Glasgow. Entitled "Rassuzhdenie o prichinakh izobiliia i medlitel'nogo obogashcheniia gosudarstv, kak u drevnikh, tak i u nyneshnikh narodov" this speech is partially anthologized in Izbrannye proizvedeniia russkikh myslitelei vtoroi poloviny XVIII v. (Moscow, 1952), 353-60.
-
(1952)
Izbrannye Proizvedeniia Russkikh Myslitelei Vtoroi Poloviny XVIII v
, pp. 353-360
-
-
-
55
-
-
52849121608
-
Adam Smith and His Russian Admirers of the Eighteenth Century
-
William R. Scott, New York
-
For more on the journey of Desnitskii and Tret'iakov, see Michael P. Alekseev, "Adam Smith and His Russian Admirers of the Eighteenth Century," in William R. Scott, Adam Smith as Student and Professor (New York, 1965), 424-31;
-
(1965)
Adam Smith as Student and Professor
, pp. 424-431
-
-
Alekseev, M.P.1
-
57
-
-
52849085901
-
Proposal for the Establishment of Legislative, Judicial, and Executive Power in the Russian Empire
-
Paul Dukes, ed., Newtonville, Mass.
-
See S. E. Desnitskii, "Proposal for the Establishment of Legislative, Judicial, and Executive Power in the Russian Empire," in Paul Dukes, ed., Russia under Catherine the Great: Documents on Government and Society (Newtonville, Mass., 1977), 1:48-67,
-
(1977)
Russia under Catherine the Great: Documents on Government and Society
, vol.1
, pp. 48-67
-
-
Desnitskii, S.E.1
-
58
-
-
84925889058
-
S. E. Desnitsky, Adam Smith, and the Nakaz of Catherine II
-
Oxford
-
and A. H. Brown, "S. E. Desnitsky, Adam Smith, and the Nakaz of Catherine II," Oxford Slavonic Papers (Oxford, 1974), 7:42-60; Desnitskii's work may have influenced the second supplement to the Nakaz, produced in the second half of 1768.
-
(1974)
Oxford Slavonic Papers
, vol.7
, pp. 42-60
-
-
Brown, A.H.1
-
60
-
-
52849122519
-
-
St. Petersburg
-
Smith's opus appeared in a Russian translation by Nikolai Politkovskii as Issledovanie svoistva i prichin bogatstva narodov, which appeared in a four-part edition published in St. Petersburg between 1802 and 1806. See A. N. Pypin, Istoricheskie ocherki: Obshchestvennoe dvizhenie v Rossii pri Aleksandre I (St. Petersburg, 1900), 110-11.
-
(1900)
Istoricheskie Ocherki: Obshchestvennoe Dvizhenie v Rossii Pri Aleksandre I
, pp. 110-111
-
-
Pypin, A.N.1
-
61
-
-
84975988082
-
'Less Abused Than I Had Reason to Expect': The Reception of the Wealth of Nations in Britain, 1776-1790
-
British reception of Smith is described in Richard F. Teichgraeber, "'Less Abused Than I Had Reason to Expect': The Reception of The Wealth of Nations in Britain, 1776-1790," The Historical Journal 30, no. 2 (1987): 337-66, who argues that Smith's ideas had virtually no impact on public policy there until the 1790s.
-
(1987)
The Historical Journal
, vol.30
, Issue.2
, pp. 337-366
-
-
Teichgraeber, R.F.1
-
62
-
-
52849138891
-
Dilemmas of Development: Baron Heinrich Friedrich Storch (1766-1835) on the Growth of Imperial Russia
-
On Storch, see Roderick E. McGrew, "Dilemmas of Development: Baron Heinrich Friedrich Storch (1766-1835) on the Growth of Imperial Russia," Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 24, no. 1 (1976): 31-71.
-
(1976)
Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas
, vol.24
, Issue.1
, pp. 31-71
-
-
McGrew, R.E.1
-
64
-
-
52849113812
-
-
and Blanqui, History of Political Economy, 485-88. Storch and Mordvinov opposed each other on many questions, most famously, the tariff.
-
History of Political Economy
, pp. 485-488
-
-
Blanqui1
-
65
-
-
33744742754
-
-
St. Petersburg
-
Say's Treatise on Political Economy came out in 1803 and Storch began publicizing Smith's economic views in the Memoires .of the Imperial Academy of Sciences in 1806. Storch's magnum opus appeared in 1815: Cours d'économie politique, ou exposition des principes qui déterminent la prospérité des nations, 6 vols. (St. Petersburg, 1815). This was one of the primary expositions of Smith produced anywhere, and it appeared in a German edition in Berlin in 1819 and another French edition annotated by Say, sometimes critically, in 1823. It appeared in Russian, apparently, only in a partial edition of 1881. On the differences between Say and Storch,
-
(1815)
Cours d'Économie Politique, Ou Exposition des Principes Qui Déterminent la Prospérité des Nations
, vol.6
-
-
-
67
-
-
5644241837
-
-
London
-
Mordvinov's proposal had been advanced by Novosil'tsev, a member of the tsar's "Unofficial Committee," who had just returned from five years of study in Britain. Mordvinov was not a member of the Unofficial Committee, but Alexander sometimes ordered its members to consult with him. On the question of granting property rights, see Janet M. Hartley, Alexander I (London, 1994), 46-47. Mordvinov had recommended extending the right to purchase both populated and unpopulated land, but in this form the proposal met too much resistance.
-
(1994)
Alexander I
, pp. 46-47
-
-
Hartley, J.M.1
-
70
-
-
52849093186
-
-
Mordvinov's complex position on serfdom developed throughout his life. Repczuk sees a shift in his thought, from virulent anti-serfdom writings early in Alexander's reign, to a passionate defense of landlord prerogatives later on, but she concludes that "the serf question" was irrelevant to his primary interests, which were manufacturing, state finance, and banking. For citations to relevant works, see Repczuk, "Nicholas Mordvinov," 209-12.
-
Nicholas Mordvinov
, pp. 209-212
-
-
Repczuk1
-
71
-
-
0003962847
-
-
London, [1844]
-
Friedrich List, The National System of Political Economy (London, 1885 [1844]). There is no evidence that Mordvinov was familiar with List's work, which was published the year before Mordvinov's death. But outside Britain, almost all early nineteenth-century advocates of economic development instinctively moved toward protectionism. A case in point is U.S. Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton, described by one commentator as "the link between Smith and List."
-
(1885)
The National System of Political Economy
-
-
-
72
-
-
0040973769
-
Adam Smith, Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich List: The Economic Foundations of Military Power
-
E. M. Earle, ed., Princeton
-
See Edward Mead Earle, "Adam Smith, Alexander Hamilton, Friedrich List: The Economic Foundations of Military Power,"in E. M. Earle, ed., Makers of Modern Strategy: Military thought from Machiavelli to Hitler (Princeton, 1971), 129.
-
(1971)
Makers of Modern Strategy: Military Thought from Machiavelli to Hitler
, pp. 129
-
-
Earle, E.M.1
-
74
-
-
1842817895
-
-
Based on figures in Kahan, The Plow, the Hammer and the Knout, 346, the budget expenditures rose 56 percent during Catherine's first Turkish war (1768-1773) and 27 percent during the second (1787-1791).
-
The Plow, the Hammer and the Knout
, pp. 346
-
-
Kahan1
-
76
-
-
52849118444
-
-
Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov, 79. After being removed from his position as naval minister in 1802 after just three months, Mordvinov retired. From 1802 to 1810 he lived mostly in Moscow. Mordvinov was among the famous anglophiles who were forced into the background during the Tilsit era of rapprochement with Napoleonic France. This meant that Mordvinov could not return to state service until the tide began to turn back toward England in 1810. For an insightful discussion of court politics in the period of the Napoleonic wars,
-
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
, pp. 79
-
-
Ikonnikov1
-
78
-
-
52849091908
-
-
RGIA
-
Speranskii referred to the economic department both as otdel gosudarstvennoi ekonomii and as otdel publichnoi ekonomii. See "Founding Principles for the State Council," RGIA, f. 1148, op. 1 (1810), d. 1 (proposed manifestos concerning the new financial measures), torn 2, ll. 33-34. The other departments were: Laws, Military Affairs, and Civic and Religious Affairs.
-
Founding Principles for the State Council
-
-
-
82
-
-
52849122226
-
-
Korf, Zhizn' Grafa Speranskogo, 191-92. Ludwig Heinrich von Jakob (Liudvig Kondrat'evich Iakob), a professor at Khar'kov University, later claimed to have been the author of the Financial Plan.
-
Zhizn' Grafa Speranskogo
, pp. 191-192
-
-
Korf1
-
83
-
-
50949083082
-
L. H. von Jakob und die Russische Finanzkrise am Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts
-
See Georg Sacke, "L. H. von Jakob und die Russische Finanzkrise am Anfang des 19. Jahrhunderts," Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 3 (1938): 602-19. Others have credited Balugianskii with playing a primary role. Balugianskii, a Hungarian educated in the Habsburg empire, was the most notable of the three foreigners brought by Novosil'tsev in 1803.
-
(1938)
Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas
, vol.3
, pp. 602-619
-
-
Sacke, G.1
-
85
-
-
52849122226
-
-
Korf, Zhizn' Grafa Speranskogo, 192-93. V. P. Kochubei was state chancellor for internal affairs and B. B. Kampengauzen (Kampenhausen) was comptroller general. Raeff concludes that, "their combined efforts resulted in an able and interesting report which provided the theoretical framework for Speranskii's own Financial Plan in 1810."
-
Zhizn' Grafa Speranskogo
, pp. 192-193
-
-
Korf1
-
87
-
-
52849106491
-
-
Mordvinov's daughter recollects that her father's invitation from the tsar came at the end of Alexander's late 1809 visit to Moscow and that the family moved to St. Petersburg in the spring of 1810. See Mordvinova, Vospominanii, 46-49.
-
Vospominanii
, pp. 46-49
-
-
Mordvinova1
-
88
-
-
52849085448
-
Plan finansov M. M. Speranskogo (1809 g.)
-
St. Petersburg
-
Korf tells us that the original plan ran to several hundred pages in length and contained 238 articles and that, contrary to his usual practice, Speranskii did not print copies even for each member of the council. It was finally published as "Plan finansov M. M. Speranskogo (1809 g.)," Sbornik IRIO 45 (St. Petersburg, 1885): 1-73.
-
(1885)
Sbornik IRIO
, vol.45
, pp. 1-73
-
-
-
89
-
-
52849129587
-
-
ed. S. N. Valk Moscow-Leningrad
-
An earlier draft of the plan has since been published in M. M. Speranskii, Prodtly i zapiski, ed. S. N. Valk (Moscow-Leningrad, 1961).
-
(1961)
Prodtly i Zapiski
-
-
Speranskii, M.M.1
-
90
-
-
52849118444
-
-
Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov, 88. Within a few months Kochubei and Potocki left the department (ibid., 94). Raeff lists the members of this department as: Mordvinov, Speranskii, Kampenhausen, Kochubei, Potocki, Balugianskii, Sablukov, and Tutolmin, but he does not specify when they were members.
-
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
, pp. 88
-
-
Ikonnikov1
-
92
-
-
52849134758
-
-
2 February RGIA, f. 1152, op. 1, d. 1 (the Financial Plan of 1810), l. 58
-
Vysochaishii manifest o ustroistve gosudarstvennykh dokhodov na 1810-i g., 2 February 1810, RGIA, f. 1152, op. 1, d. 1 (the Financial Plan of 1810), l. 58.
-
(1810)
Vysochaishii Manifest o Ustroistve Gosudarstvennykh Dokhodov Na 1810-i g
-
-
-
94
-
-
3643048859
-
-
London
-
See Ian Blanchard, Russia's "Age of Silver": Precious Metal Production and Economic Growth in the Eighteenth Century (London, 1989). He argues that the merging of Baltic and Muscovite coinages in 1802-03 helped prevent the complete collapse of the assignats' value on foreign exchanges and, combined with significant imports of silver at the same time, closed the gap between the external and internal values of the assignat (both of which deviated from their face value), "paving the way for the monetary reform of 1810" (204-6).
-
(1989)
Russia's "Age of Silver": Precious Metal Production and Economic Growth in the Eighteenth Century
-
-
Blanchard, I.1
-
95
-
-
52849120265
-
-
May RGIA, f. 1148, op. 1, d. 1, tom 2, ll. 125-51; RGIA, f. 994, op. 2, d. 899 (Rabota N. S. Mordvinova o chrezvychainykh raskhodakh v Anglii i Frantsii, 1810), ll. 1-23. The latter document is not found in his published papers
-
Department of Economy, "O monetnoi sisteme," May 1810, RGIA, f. 1148, op. 1, d. 1, tom 2, ll. 125-51; RGIA, f. 994, op. 2, d. 899 (Rabota N. S. Mordvinova o chrezvychainykh raskhodakh v Anglii i Frantsii, 1810), ll. 1-23. The latter document is not found in his published papers.
-
(1810)
O Monetnoi Sisteme
-
-
-
96
-
-
52849091150
-
-
RGIA, f. 994, op. 2, d. 899 (Rabota N. S. Mordvinova), l. 14
-
RGIA, f. 994, op. 2, d. 899 (Rabota N. S. Mordvinova), l. 14.
-
-
-
-
97
-
-
52849115228
-
-
Ibid., l. 3
-
Ibid., l. 3.
-
-
-
-
98
-
-
52849129905
-
-
Ibid., l. 10
-
Ibid., l. 10.
-
-
-
-
99
-
-
52849088311
-
-
Ibid., l. 12ob
-
Ibid., l. 12ob.
-
-
-
-
100
-
-
52849140587
-
-
Ibid., l. 3
-
Ibid., l. 3.
-
-
-
-
101
-
-
52849107230
-
-
Ibid., l. 15ob
-
Ibid., l. 15ob.
-
-
-
-
102
-
-
52849089209
-
-
Ibid., ll. 1ob.-2ob
-
Ibid., ll. 1ob.-2ob.
-
-
-
-
103
-
-
52849137060
-
-
Raeff, Michael Speransky, 91-92. Raeff considers this call for a new land tax "the very core of [Speranskii's] proposal for a new system of taxing the country's agricultural wealth. It marks a new departure in the fiscal and economic thinking of the Russian government. From that time it will be included in all reform plans and projects."The land tax is also the fundamental idea in Mordvinov's 1810 study.
-
Michael Speransky
, pp. 91-92
-
-
Raeff1
-
104
-
-
52849118444
-
-
His writings on banking in the 1810-1813 period are described in Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov, 96-97; they include a report read to the Department of Economy in late 1811 regarding the issuance of bank notes backed by 1 million rubles in gold and silver. On private banks,
-
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
, pp. 96-97
-
-
Ikonnikov1
-
105
-
-
84991990136
-
Razsuzhdenie o mogushchikh posledovat' pol'zakh ot uchrezhdeniia chastnykh po guberniiam bankov
-
Bil'basov
-
see the 1813 "Razsuzhdenie o mogushchikh posledovat' pol'zakh ot uchrezhdeniia chastnykh po guberniiam bankov," in Bil'basov, Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh, 5:236-88. This important article also drew heavily on his 1810 study of banking in England and France.
-
Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh
, vol.5
, pp. 236-288
-
-
-
106
-
-
0040639371
-
-
Oxford
-
The monetary sections of the Financial Plan are reminiscent of the sophisticated ideas found in Richard Cantillon's Essai sur la Nature du Commerce en Général, published in 1755, though it is not clear that Mordvinov or Speranskii were familiar with this work. See Terence Hutchison, Before Adam Smith: The Emergence of Political Economy, 1662-1776 (Oxford, 1988), 163-78,
-
(1988)
Before Adam Smith: The Emergence of Political Economy, 1662-1776
, pp. 163-178
-
-
Hutchison, T.1
-
108
-
-
52849093186
-
-
Repczuk, "Nicholas Mordvinov," 232. Repczuk makes it clear that these details of the plan's implementation, at least, belong to Mordvinov.
-
Nicholas Mordvinov
, pp. 232
-
-
Repczuk1
-
110
-
-
52849112908
-
-
27 May RGIA
-
Vysochaishii manifest o sostave zaimov, 27 May 1810, RGIA, f. 1152, op. 1. d. 1, ll. 170-72. The other two manifestos were on the monetary system (20 June 1810) and on government expenditures (29 August 1810). A thorough description of this legislation, including a verbatim reprint of important parts of it,
-
(1810)
Vysochaishii Manifest o Sostave Zaimov
-
-
-
111
-
-
52849138890
-
-
appears in Bliokh, Finansy, 1:94-103.
-
Finansy
, vol.1
, pp. 94-103
-
-
Bliokh1
-
116
-
-
52849137060
-
-
Raeff, Michael Speransky, 104. The tax amounted to 50 kopeks per revision soul;
-
Michael Speransky
, pp. 104
-
-
Raeff1
-
117
-
-
52849088490
-
-
see Bliokh, Finansy, 1:96,
-
Finansy
, vol.1
, pp. 96
-
-
Bliokh1
-
118
-
-
52849118444
-
-
and Ikonnikov, Graf N. S. Mordvinov, 91. Although the 1811 tax on nobles' income was a small step in the direction of the kind of fundamental tax reform Mordvinov had extolled in his unpublished 1810 study, it was Speranskii who was held accountable for it. This move, along with the monetary reform's effects on luxury imports, accounted for most of the noble opposition to Speranskii. In an 1813 letter to the tsar, Speranskii comments on the "grumbling" that accompanied the 1810-1811 tax increases.
-
Graf N. S. Mordvinov
, pp. 91
-
-
Ikonnikov1
-
119
-
-
52849084309
-
-
See Bliokh, Finansy, 1:132.
-
Finansy
, vol.1
, pp. 132
-
-
Bliokh1
-
121
-
-
52849127032
-
Mery dlia uluchsheniia finansov
-
10 September Bil'basov
-
N. S. Mordvinov (Vsepoddanneishii Doklad Departamenta Gosudarstvennoi Ekonomii), "Mery dlia uluchsheniia finansov," 10 September 1810, in Bil'basov, Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh, 4:21-31.
-
(1810)
Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh
, vol.4
, pp. 21-31
-
-
Mordvinov, N.S.1
-
125
-
-
52849097986
-
-
Pintner, Russian Economic Policy, 185-86. The government now tried to prevent a further slide in their value by requiring all taxes to be paid in assignats and by declaring them legal tender for all transactions, at their current, not their nominal, value. Gur'ev resumed efforts to withdraw assignats from circulation in 1816, but despite a sizable reduction in their number between 1816 and 1823, their value continued to fall, if more slowly than previously.
-
Russian Economic Policy
, pp. 185-186
-
-
Pintner1
-
127
-
-
52849119948
-
Nekotoryia soobrazheniia po predmetu manufaktur v Rossii i o tarife
-
first appeared 30 December
-
Mordvinov's essay, "Nekotoryia soobrazheniia po predmetu manufaktur v Rossii i o tarife," first appeared in Zhurnal Departamenta Gosudarstvennoi Ekonomii 14, no. 66 (30 December 1815): 282, 297-303, 345-88, though he was not a member of the department at that point;
-
(1815)
Zhurnal Departamenta Gosudarstvennoi Ekonomii
, vol.14
, Issue.66
, pp. 282
-
-
Mordvinov1
-
129
-
-
52849128794
-
Nekotoryia soobrazheniia po predmetu manufaktur v Rossii i o tarife
-
Bil'basov
-
Mordvinov, "Nekotoryia soobrazheniia po predmetu manufaktur v Rossii i o tarife," in Bil'basov, Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh, 5:83-85.
-
Arkhiv Grafov Mordvinovykh
, vol.5
, pp. 83-85
-
-
Mordvinov1
-
138
-
-
3643048859
-
-
See Blanchard, Russia's "Age of Silver," 208-9. The very complex monetary situation in the empire between 1818 and 1837 stemmed from the fact that there was not one prevailing exchange rate between the assignats and the silver rubles, but rather various exchange rates throughout the country ("popular rates") depending on the relative scarcity between the two currencies. Moreover, there was a perpetual disparity between the internal and external exchange rates of the paper money.
-
Russia's "Age of Silver,"
, pp. 208-209
-
-
Blanchard1
-
139
-
-
52849097986
-
-
Pintner, Russian Economic Policy, 202-7. It was Witte who produced a currency foreigners could really believe in when he forced the country onto a gold standard in the 1890s. The question of whether Russia is simply too large to be unified either by a single currency regime or by "the market" is a very important one, but not one likely to be addressed by either the "reformers" or the "communists" in Russia at the present time.
-
Russian Economic Policy
, pp. 202-207
-
-
Pintner1
-
140
-
-
84974509597
-
Banking under the Tsars and Soviets
-
Though Mordvinov was one of their earliest advocates, there were no private banks in Russia until after 1857. See George Garvy, "Banking under the Tsars and Soviets," Journal of Economic History 32, no. 4 (1972): 869-93.
-
(1972)
Journal of Economic History
, vol.32
, Issue.4
, pp. 869-893
-
-
Garvy, G.1
|