The Russian revolution began with his death and the deaths of his wife and 6 children . He did not abolish serfdom. The whole point of the revolution was to overthrow the Czar and replace him with a government that controlled all aspects of living for the Russian people.
After the Czar Alexander II's emancipation edict, all the personal serfdom was abolished.
Catherine the Great attempted reforms to benefit her people, but her actions were flawed in some important ways. The authority and power of the nobility increased at the expense of the serfs, and the condition of ordinary people deteriorated.
lenin
Japan's enlightened government.
Czar Alexander II abolished serfdom in 1861.
Czar Alexander II. He abolished serfdom in 1861
Tsar Alexander II issued the "Emancipation Edict" which abolished the institution of serfdom.
Spain abolished serfdom in 1837
Czar Alexander II freed the serfs in his empire in 1742. While they were freed, they were still very poor and still worked in terrible conditions.
After the Czar Alexander II's emancipation edict, all the personal serfdom was abolished.
Joseph II abolished selfdom
Catherine the Great attempted reforms to benefit her people, but her actions were flawed in some important ways. The authority and power of the nobility increased at the expense of the serfs, and the condition of ordinary people deteriorated.
lenin
Joseph II
Abolition of serfdom
He abolished serfdom on all royal lands in Prussia, all the lands that he owned, but not throughout the country.
Abolition of serfdom