Russia (117,562), next to the British empire the most extensive
empire in the world, embracing one-sixth of the land-surface of the
globe, including one-half of Europe, all Northern and a part of Central
Asia; on the N. it fronts the Arctic Ocean from Sweden to the NE.
extremity of Asia; its southern limit forms an irregular line from the
NW. corner of the Black Sea to the Sea of Japan, skirting Turkey, Persia,
Afghanistan, East Turkestan, and the Chinese empire; Behring Sea, Sea of
Okhotsk, and the Sea of Japan wash its eastern shores; Sweden, the
Baltic, Germany, and Austria lie contiguous to it in West Europe. This
solid, compact mass is thinly peopled (13 to the sq. m. over all) by some
40 different-speaking races, including, besides the dominant Russians
(themselves split into three branches), Poles, Finns, Esthonians,
Servians, Bulgarians, Lithuanians, Kurds, Persians, Turco-Tartars,
Mongols, &c. Three-fourths of the land-surface, with one-fourth of the
population, lies in Asia, and is treated under Siberia, Turkestan,
Caucasia, &c. Russia in Europe, embracing
Finland and
Poland (
q. v.), is divided from Asia by the Ural Mountains and
River and Caspian Sea; forms an irregular, somewhat elongated, square
plain sloping down to the low and dreary coast-lands of the Baltic (W.),
White Sea (N.), and Black Sea (S.); is seamed by river valleys and
diversified by marshes, vast lakes (
e. g. Ladoga, Onega, Peipus, and
Ilmen), enormous forests, and in the N. and centre by tablelands, the
highest of which being the Valdai Hills (1100 ft.); the SE. plain is
called the
Steppes (
q. v.). The cold and warm winds which sweep
uninterrupted from N. and S. produce extremes of temperature; the
rainfall is small. Agriculture is the prevailing industry, engaging 90
per cent. of the people, although in all not more than 21 per
cent. of
the soil is cultivated; rye is the chief article of food for the
peasantry, who comprise four-fifths of the population. The rich plains,
known as the "black lands" from their deep, loamy soil, which stretch
from the Carpathians to the Urals, are the most productive corn-lands in
Europe, and rival in fertility the "yellow lands" of China, and like them
need no manure. Timber is an important industry in the NW., and maize and
the vine are cultivated in the extreme S.; minerals abound, and include
gold, iron (widely distributed), copper (chiefly in middle Urals), and
platinum; there are several large coal-fields and rich petroleum wells at
Baku. The fisheries, particularly those of the Caspian, are the most
productive in Europe. Immense numbers of horses and cattle are reared,
e. g. on the Steppes. Wolves, bears, and valuable fur-bearing animals
are plentiful in the N. and other parts; the reindeer is still found,
also the elk. Want of ports on the Mediterranean and Atlantic hamper
commerce, while the great ports in the Baltic are frozen up four or five
months in the year; the southern ports are growing in importance, and
wheat, timber, flax, and wool are largely exported. There is a vast
inland trade, facilitated by the great rivers (Volga, Don, Dnieper,
Dniester, Vistula, &c.) and by excellent railway and telegraphic
communication. Among its varied races there exists a wide variety of
religions—Christianity, Mohammedanism, Buddhism, Shamanism, &c.; but
although some 130 sects exist, the bulk of the Russians proper belong to
the Greek Church. Education is backward, more than 85 per cent. of the
people being illiterate; there are eight universities. Conscription is
enforced; the army is the largest in the world. Government is an absolute
monarchy, save in
Finland (
q. v.); the ultimate legislative and
executive power is in the hands of the czar, but there is a State Council
of 60 members nominated by the czar. In the 50 departments a good deal of
local self-government is enjoyed through the village communes and their
public assemblies, but the imperial power as represented by the police
and military is felt in all parts, while governors of departments have
wide and ill-defined powers which admit of abuse. The great builders of
the empire, the beginnings of which are to be sought in the 9th century,
have been Ivan the Great, who in the 15th century drove out the Mongols
and established his capital as Moscow; Ivan the Terrible, the first of
the czars, who in the 16th century pushed into Asia and down to the Black
Sea; and Peter the Great (
q. v.). Its restless energies are
still unabated, and inspire a persistently aggressive policy in the Far
East. Within recent years its literature has become popular in Europe
through the powerful writings of Pushkin, Turgenief, and Tolstoi.