The demographic consequences of the evolution of Russian society : B.C. - 1914 A.D
Abstract
This thesis attempts an investigation of the demographic
consequences of the changing Russian society over the period
beginning with the first signs of Homo Sapiens on Russian
territory to the end of the Imperial period in 1914. The aim
is to discern trends in the growth and structure of the
population, as well as accounting for the specific changes
in the context of economic, social, political and environmental
factors.
The study covers the period up to the reign of Peter
the Great in the second chapter, concentrating thereafter on
the Imperial era, particularly the late nineteenth century.
The population of St Petersburg provides an interesting case
study of a major city in Imperial Russia.
The major findings of the study are that Russia, more
than any other country, seems to have been afflicted by a
continuous cycle of harvest failure, famine, disease, epidemic,
which together with constant internal struggles and wars,
prevented population growth of a respectable level until the
eighteenth century. The massive size of the country in the
latter centuries of the study acted unfavourably on the
development of the country, and therefore a hurdle to impovement
in the quality of life. Russia appears to resemble the
countries of today's developing world rather than the countries
of Western Europe, with which it is commonly compared.
This thesis does not employ any complex demographic
techniques, nor any of the fashionable models of the moment.
However, it does hope to present a framework for future studies
of Russian historical demography and to glimpse a picture of
the patterns of growth and composition of population over time.
It is emphasised that the thesis takes neither a Marxist nor
Imperialist line.
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