The Russian Revolution: How the Tsars Lost Everything — Fexingo History

The Russian Famine of 1891: Drought, Disease, and the Seeds of Revolution

7 min · 13 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Russian Famine of 1891: Drought, Disease, and the Seeds of Revolution

Descripción

Long before the Bolsheviks seized power, a devastating famine swept across the Volga region and central Russia in 1891–92, killing an estimated 400,000 people and exposing the fragility of the tsarist state. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the causes of the famine — from poor harvests and government inaction to the infamous 'verst tax' and the reluctance of local zemstvos to report shortages. They discuss the role of Count Sergei Witte, who argued against grain export bans for economic reasons, and the writer Vladimir Korolenko, whose investigative reports galvanized public opinion. The conversation also touches on the charitable relief efforts of Leo Tolstoy and the young Vladimir Lenin, whose brother had been executed in 1887. The famine revealed deep structural problems: peasant impoverishment, inefficient agriculture, and a government paralyzed by bureaucracy. For many, it became a turning point — the first crack in the Romanovs' legitimacy, long before Bloody Sunday or the bread riots of 1917. This episode offers a focused look at a humanitarian catastrophe that sowed the seeds of revolution. #RussianFamine1891 #VladimirKorolenko #CountSergeiWitte #LeoRostov #Zemstvo #VolgaRegion #BreadRiots #TsaristRussia #PeasantLife #VerstTax #FamineRelief #Lenin #Tolstoy #RussianHistory #19thCentury #HumanitarianCrisis #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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