Ekaterina II of Russia (21 April 1729 — 6 November 1796), called Catherine the Great, was the Romanov Tsarina of Russia from June 28, 1762 until her death in 1796. Born in Stettin, Pomerania, to petty German nobility, Catherine the Great married the Romanov crown prince Peter, grandson of Peter the Great, in 1745. By the time Peter was crowned Peter III of Russia in 1762, Catherine had been influenced by French Enlightenment thinkers like Montesquieu, Diderot, and Voltaire.
Unhappy in her marriage and alienated from the Russian court, she quickly allied with the Enlightened political groups in Russia that opposed her husband’s accession. Catherine the Great and her lover, Grigori Orlov, deposed Peter only months after he took the throne. Catherine was promptly crowned Tsarina and shortly thereafter Peter was murdered by her loyalists.
Initially it appeared that Catherine would bring the Enlightenment to
Russia. She quickly drafted a liberal set of laws that freed the serfs,
indentured peasants comprising roughly 49% of the total population of
Russia. Within two years, however, she disbanded the commission that was
established to enact it. Such sudden progressive reforms may have been premature; in the 1760s, Russia’s population was entrenched in an class system that had developed over several centuries. Only 2% of the population could read.
Catherine the Great expanded Russia over 200,000 square miles (518,000 sq. km) through wars and annexation. She acquired Crimea, won two wars against the Ottoman Empire, and secured shipping access to the Black Sea. She also procured about a third of Poland’s land and people by negotiations with Austria and Prussia.
Catherine was an avid writer, librettist, and generous patron of the arts and education. She assembled an impressive art collection, built the first
Russian school for girls in 1769, and encouraged book publishing. She also built plazas, monuments. and an art academy to Westernize Russia’s image.
In 1774, Catherine put down a Cossack rebellion lead by Emilian Pugachev, a
soldier who had instituted a parallel government founded on granting freedom
to the serfs. Pugachev’s defeat signaled a sweeping change in Catherine’s domestic policy. She created new district divisions and decentralized control to regional administrations. The Tsarina accorded nobles new privileges that gave them absolute power over their serfs.
When Catherine the Great died of a stroke in 1796, her son, Paul assumed the throne. Paul I of Russia ruled for only four years until he was murdered by soldiers and his first son, Alexander, claimed the throne.