Book Launch: The First Russian Revolution: The Decembrist Revolt of 1825
- Date: 13 May 2025, 15:15–17:00
- Location: IRES Library, Gamla torget 3, 3rd Floor
- Type: Lecture, Seminar
- Organiser: Institute for Russian and Eurasian Studies (IRES)
- Contact person: Mattias Vesterlund
IRES higher seminar
On 14 December 1825 a group of young Russian army officers led 3,000 troops to Senate Square in St Petersburg, aiming to force the Senate to adopt a liberal constitution and transform the Russian Empire. The Decembrist Revolt – as it came to be known – was suppressed, with a second uprising in the south meeting the same fate. Five leaders were executed, and many others exiled to Siberia.
Why did so many young noblemen risk their lives for regime change, what was their vision for an alternative society, and what were the consequences for participants and their families? This book highlights the often-neglected liberal tradition in Russian political thought and the experiences of Decembrist wives and fiancées, offering a fresh reinterpretation in the light of recent events in Russia.
Susanna Rabow-Edling is a political scientist by discipline but her training was in the subfield of political thought, where political science intersects with history and philosophy. She defended her doctoral dissertation at Stockholm University in 2001, had visiting fellowships at Cornell University and at Stanford University and became an Associate Professor at the Institute of Russian and Eurasian Studies (IRES), Uppsala University in 2012. Currently, she is Director of Research and Deputy Director at IRES. Rabow-Edling is the author of four books: Slavophile Thought and the Politics of Cultural Nationalism (State University of New York Press: Albany, NY, 2006); Married to the Empire. Three Governors’ Wives in Russian America 1829-1864 (Fairbanks, AK, 2015); Liberalism in Pre-Revolutionary Russia. State, Nation, Empire (Abingdon and New York, 2019); The First Russian Revolution: The Decembrist Revolt of 1825.