Catherine the Great: Russia's Most Powerful Empress — Fexingo History

Catherine the Great's Secret Police: The Shestakov Report

6 min · 6. juni 2026
episode Catherine the Great's Secret Police: The Shestakov Report cover

Description

In 1763, Catherine the Great received a secret report from Colonel Mikhail Shestakov detailing the brutal treatment of state peasants in the Ural mining districts. This episode uncovers the little-known story of how Catherine's enlightened ideals collided with the harsh realities of serfdom and industrial exploitation. We explore Shestakov's investigation, the peasants' desperate petitions, and Catherine's conflicted response — a reformer who could not afford to alienate the nobility. The episode also touches on the role of the Berg College, the Demidov family's ironworks, and the limits of Imperial justice. A revealing look at the dark side of Catherine's Russia. #CatherineTheGreat #MikhailShestakov #StatePeasants #UralMines #BergCollege #Demidov #Serfdom #ImperialRussia #Enlightenment #ShestakovReport #1763 #Ekaterinburg #RussiaHistory #18thCentury #FexingoHistory #HistoryPodcast #EasternEurope #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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170 episodes

episode Catherine the Great's Medical Crusade: Smallpox Inoculation artwork

Catherine the Great's Medical Crusade: Smallpox Inoculation

In 1768, Catherine the Great made a dramatic gamble to modernize Russia: she voluntarily underwent smallpox inoculation, risking her life to set an example for her empire. This episode explores the little-known story of her collaboration with British physician Thomas Dimsdale, the science of variolation versus vaccination, and the fierce opposition from the Russian Orthodox Church and conservative nobles. We trace how Catherine's personal courage and Enlightenment ideals converged in a public health campaign that saved thousands of lives, even as it revealed the limits of reform in an autocratic state. The discussion covers the Tsarskoe Selo inoculation, the secret journey of Dr. Dimsdale, the role of Count Grigory Orlov, and the establishment of the first smallpox hospitals in St. Petersburg and Moscow. We also touch on the broader context of 18th-century medical knowledge, the global exchange of ideas between Europe and Russia, and the surprising fact that Catherine inoculated her son Paul and grandson Alexander. This episode offers a vivid look at how one empress used her own body as a political instrument to fight a disease that killed millions. #CatherineTheGreat #SmallpoxInoculation #ThomasDimsdale #Variolation #Enlightenment #RussianEmpire #18thCenturyMedicine #HistoryOfMedicine #TsarskoeSelo #GrigoryOrlov #EmpressOfRussia #PublicHealth #RussianOrthodoxChurch #PaulIRussia #AlexanderIRussia #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 20267 min
episode Catherine the Great's Jewish Subjects: A Surprising Alliance artwork

Catherine the Great's Jewish Subjects: A Surprising Alliance

In 1769, as Catherine the Great's armies pushed into Ottoman territory, a small community of Jewish merchants in the newly conquered town of Mogilev caught her eye. What followed was a complex relationship that would reshape the lives of millions. This episode explores Catherine's Jewish policies through the lens of the lesser-known Jewish merchants and financiers who helped build her empire. We look at the 1769 Jewish delegation that petitioned the empress, the 1780 decree allowing Jewish settlement in Novorossiya, and the extraordinary story of Joshua Zeitlin, a rabbi and financier who became Potemkin's trusted agent. We also examine the limits of Catherine's tolerance — the Pale of Settlement, the 1794 double-taxation decree, and the enduring tension between Enlightenment ideals and imperial control. Featuring the white synagogue of Mogilev, the Chufut-Kale fortress, and the Jewish agricultural colonies of Kherson province. #CatherineTheGreat #JewishHistory #Novorossiya #Potemkin #PaleOfSettlement #Mogilev #JoshuaZeitlin #ChufutKale #Kherson #WhiteSynagogue #EmpireBuilding #18thCentury #Russia #Enlightenment #JewishMerchants #OttomanEmpire #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juli 202616 min
episode Catherine the Great Derzhavin Poet Laureate artwork

Catherine the Great Derzhavin Poet Laureate

In episode 168, Lucas and Luna explore the life and work of Gavrila Derzhavin, Russia's greatest poet of the 18th century and a key figure in Catherine the Great's cultural legacy. Derzhavin served as a soldier, governor, and eventually Catherine's personal secretary, all while crafting odes that blended classical forms with Russian vernacular. His poem "Felitsa" (1782) openly praised Catherine while gently criticizing her court, earning him the Empress's favor and a place at her side. The conversation delves into Derzhavin's masterpiece "The Monument" (1795), his role in the Russian Enlightenment, and his complex relationship with power—how he could flatter and critique in the same breath. Lucas also discusses Derzhavin's later years, his opposition to Paul I, and his influence on Alexander Pushkin. Terms like ode, Felitsa, Gavrila Romanovich Derzhavin, The Monument, and Russian Enlightenment are explored in context. #CatherineTheGreat #GavrilaDerzhavin #Felitsa #RussianPoetry #RussianEnlightenment #18thCentury #Derzhavin #TheMonument #StPetersburg #RussianLiterature #Pushkin #Ode #Empress #CourtCulture #History #FexingoHistory #EasternEurope #PoetLaureate Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Catherine the Great and the Russian Enlightenment's Limits artwork

Catherine the Great and the Russian Enlightenment's Limits

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the contradictions of Catherine the Great's Enlightenment project through the lens of her censorship policies. They examine the 1790 suppression of Alexander Radishchev's "Journey from St. Petersburg to Moscow," a scathing critique of serfdom and autocracy that earned him exile to Siberia. The conversation covers Radishchev's influences from the French Enlightenment, his arrest by Stepan Sheshkovsky, Catherine's marginalia on the text, and the broader context of revolutionary panic after 1789. They also discuss Nikolay Novikov, the Moscow publisher and freemason whose satirical journals were shut down and who was imprisoned without trial. The episode reveals how Catherine's own Nakaz and correspondence with Voltaire and Diderot created expectations she could not fulfill, as the French Revolution hardened her stance. Lucas and Luna reflect on what these episodes tell us about the limits of top-down reform and the fate of dissent in an absolutist state. #CatherineTheGreat #RussianEnlightenment #AlexanderRadishchev #NikolayNovikov #JourneyFromStPetersburgToMoscow #Censorship #RadishchevExile #Siberia #StepanSheshkovsky #RussianHistory #18thCentury #Serfdom #FreedomOfSpeech #Nakaz #Diderot #Voltaire #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Catherine the Great's Nakaz and the Enlightenment Dream in Russia artwork

Catherine the Great's Nakaz and the Enlightenment Dream in Russia

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Catherine the Great's ambitious Nakaz, or 'Instruction' — a political treatise meant to reform Russia's legal code and government along Enlightenment lines. Drawing heavily on the ideas of Montesquieu, Beccaria, and other Western thinkers, Catherine crafted a document that called for equality before the law, due process, and limits on torture and serfdom. Yet the Nakaz also reveals the contradictions of her reign: while it proclaimed lofty ideals, it never abolished serfdom, and the Legislative Commission she convened to implement it was quickly dissolved. Lucas unpacks the making of the Nakaz, its radical passages on capital punishment, the fierce debates it provoked among nobles and clergy, and its ultimate legacy as a blueprint for reform that never fully materialized. Along the way, they also touch on Catherine's correspondence with Voltaire and Diderot, and the role of the Nakaz in shaping Russia's self-image as a European power. No prior knowledge needed — just a curiosity about one of history's most fascinating rulers. #CatherineTheGreat #RussianEmpire #Enlightenment #Nakaz #Montesquieu #Beccaria #Voltaire #Diderot #LegislativeCommission #LegalReform #Serfdom #DebateOnTorture #CapitalPunishment #Despotism #18thCentury #HistoryPodcast #FexingoHistory #EuropeanHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17. juli 20268 min