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Nikolay Milyutin

 
Art Encyclopedia: Nikolay (Aleksandrovich) Milyutin

(b St Petersburg, 21 Dec 1889; d Moscow, 1942). Russian politician, patron, urban planner and theorist. He was the son of a St Petersburg fishmonger who lacked the means to give him a full-time higher education. Working as a carpenter, he entered part-time architectural classes in the Volnyyi (open) Polytechnic, St Petersburg, where in 1908 he joined the Russian Social Democratic Party. By the February Revolution of 1917 he had been elected to the Petrograd Workers Soviet and commanded a Red Guard platoon; and in the October Revolution he took part in the storming of the Winter Palace. In the post-Revolutionary years he was a close colleague of Lenin, occupying a series of high-ranking positions, including commissariats for various aspects of labour affairs, People's Commissar for Social Welfare (1922-4) and from 1924 to 1929 People's Commissar of Finance for the Russian Republic (Rus. Narkomfin). Throughout the 1920s he was also a member of the Bolshevik Party Central Committee.

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Nikolay Alekseyevich Milyutin (1818—1872) was a Russian statesman remembered as the chief architect of the great liberal reforms undertaken during Alexander II's reign, including the emancipation of the serfs and the establishment of zemstvo.

Nikolay Milyutin was the nephew of Count Pavel Kiselev, the most brilliant Russian reformer of Nicholas I's reactionary reign. His brothers were Vladimir Milyutin (1826-55), a social philosopher and journalist, and Dmitry Milyutin (1816-1912), one of the great military leaders of the 19th-century Russia.

Nikolay graduated from the Moscow University and joined the Ministry of the Interior in 1835. A man of liberal views who sympathized with the Slavophile cause, young Milyutin helped reform the municipal administration in St Petersburg, Moscow, and Odessa in the 1840s.

As an Assistant Minister of Interior since 1859, he succeeded in defending his vision of ambitious liberal reforms against attacks by conservatives and disconcerted nobility. The Emancipation Manifesto of 1861 was largely drafted by him.

During the January Uprising he was dispatched to Poland in order to implement his reforms there. He devised an effective program of Russification, which involved the emancipation of the peasantry at the expense of the nationalist landowners and the expulsion of Roman Catholic priests from schools.

Milyutin resigned his office in 1866 after having suffered a stroke and spent the rest of his life in seclusion.


 
 
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