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In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we explore a little‑known but revealing corner of Russian history: the military press during the reign of Alexander II. After the humiliating defeat in the Crimean War,...
The Tsar's Generals and the Press – Russian Military Journalism in the Reform Era is an episode from Explaining History by Nick Shepley. In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we explore a little‑known but revealing corner of Ru...
This episode belongs to Explaining History.
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Published May 5, 2026, 31:05 long, audio available.
In this episode of the Explaining History Podcast, we explore a little‑known but revealing corner of Russian history: the military press during the reign of Alexander II. After the humiliating defeat in the Crimean War, it was clear that Russia's army – and the autocracy that sustained it – needed fundamental change. Alexander II, who came to power as the war dragged on, embarked on a series of "Great Reforms", most famously the emancipation of the serfs in 1861. But reform was always a balancing act between modernisation and the preservation of autocratic power. Nowhere were these tensions sharper than in the military press. Historian E. Willis Brooks, in an essay from the collection *Reforming the Tsar's Army*, examines how War Minister D. A. Milyutin used newspapers and journals to communicate new ideas to officers and conscripts – while struggling to control the very voices he had unleashed. Publications like *Ruski Invalid* (The Russian Veteran) and *Voyeny Sbornik* (Military Review) were meant to be loyal instruments of state policy. But as they sought readers and relevance, their editors – some of them former utopian socialists – began to clash with government censors and even the Tsar's ministers. The result was a chaotic, semi‑autonomous press that both advanced reform and exposed its contradictions. We look at the founding of new military journals, the explosion in readership, and the uneasy partnership between Milyutin and his old radical acquaintance Colonel Pisarevskii, who was given the extraordinary task of running a government newspaper as a capitalist enterprise. Their struggle over "official" and "unofficial" opinions reveals the limits of censorship – even in an autocracy. Topics covered: - The Crimean War and Russia's military humiliation - Alexander II's Great Reforms - War Minister D. A. Milyutin - The military press: *Ruski Invalid*, *Voyeny Sbornik* - Censorship and the "epoch of sensorial terror" - The experiment of semi‑commercial government journalism - Pisarevskii, utopian socialism, and the dangers of editorial independence - How state‑led reform struggles with public communication If you enjoy the podcast, please consider supporting us – we are migrating from Patreon to Substack. Details in the show notes. Explaining History helps you understand the 20th Century through critical conversations and expert interviews. We connect the past to the present. If you enjoy the show, please
You can listen to The Tsar's Generals and the Press – Russian Military Journalism in the Reform Era online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.
The Tsar's Generals and the Press – Russian Military Journalism in the Reform Era is an episode from Explaining History by Nick Shepley.
This episode is 31:05 long.
This episode was published on May 5, 2026.
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The Tsar's Generals and the Press – Russian Military Journalism in the Reform Era is from Explaining History by Nick Shepley.
Published May 5, 2026 and 31:05 long