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Kursk province and the people of Kursk in the First World War. Mobilization campaigns in the Volga region during the First World War

Andreev Nikolay, Morozov Nikita, Nurtdinov Ildar

Presentation made by the Suvorovites of the Ulyanovsk SVU for a research work on the fate of Simbirsk during the First World War.

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Authors: Suvorov students 7.8 grades Leaders: Abrashina Lyudmila Mikhailovna, Pischaskin Vladimir Nikolaevich, teachers of computer science and ICT FGKOU UGSVU MO RF 2014 FGKOU Ulyanovsk Guards Suvorov military school Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation Competition " Forgotten War”, dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War Simbirsk during the First World War

Research objectives: To expand knowledge about the history of Simbirsk; Analyze the events of the First World War in Simbirsk; Show the activities of the rear city of Simbirsk during the war years; Tell about the hardships of the war that fell on the shoulders of the Simbirians; Determine and indicate the location of some military units and hospitals; Summarize and systematize the available material on the economic situation in Simbirsk, build tables and charts reflecting the rise in prices.

The purpose of the work: to show the life of the rear city at the beginning of the 20th century, to study some questions about military units and hospitals located and formed in the city with the determination of their location on the maps of Simbirsk (Ulyanovsk) during the First World War and modern. First World War became the most difficult test for the vast majority of Simbirians. Hypothesis:

Object of study: the city of Simbirsk during the First World War. Subject of study: the impact of the First World War on the socio-economic situation and moral state of the population of Simbirsk.

Research methods: analysis of literary sources, Internet resources; study of the materials of the book of the local historian Yefimov Yu.D. "Simbirsk during the First World War"; meeting with local historian Gauss Natalya Stepanovna; acquaintance and study of the materials of the Ulyanovsk Regional Museum of Local Lore. I.A. Goncharova.

Project work

The first month of the war The first months of the war passed in the city of Simbirsk calmly, without anti-war protests. The majority of the city's population had a patriotic attitude towards the war, as did the vast majority of the population of Russia.

For Faith, Tsar and Fatherland During the war years, quite a lot of military units were formed and located in Simbirsk.

For the Russian army Hospitals Refugees and prisoners of war Hunger, cold and hardship

For the Russian army The entire economic potential of the city was directed to the production of products for the army.

Hospitals Simbirians took an active part in the organization and maintenance of hospitals for military personnel. Location of hospitals on the map of Simbirsk

Refugees and prisoners of war Despite all the difficulties, the Simbirians provided assistance and support to those who found themselves in more difficult conditions

Hunger, cold and hardship Most of the Simbirians had a low standard of living. Need was felt everywhere, some of the townspeople lived from hand to mouth, some were starving. On the shoulders of the people fell not only the burden of militarization, the growth of military spending, but also the incalculable "tax in blood", the extermination of millions of people on the fronts of the war.

Despite the war Volga bridge Goncharovsky house Monument to Alexander II

Volzhsky bridge The city received a reliable year-round connection between the banks, new well-equipped stations and river moorings, dams that prevent the coast from being washed away.

Goncharovsky House On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the birth of I.A. Goncharov, it was decided to build a monument-building, which would house libraries, a museum and an art-industrial school. The monument-building was named the Goncharovsky House.

Monument to Alexander II Simultaneously with the construction of the Goncharovsky House in the city, the construction of a monument to Alexander II was underway. In 1913, the Jubilee Committee was formed to celebrate the 300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty. It was called " Simbirsk jubilee committee for the construction in the city of Simbirsk of a monument in Bose to the late emperor."

Despite all the difficulties, inconveniences, additional costs, construction was carried out in the city during the war years, the streets were improved, and there were opportunities to carry out what was planned.

CONCLUSIONS: the war, which brings death, suffering and numerous hardships, has become the most difficult test for the vast majority of Simbirians; The main problems of rear life were: lack of food and fuel; lack of premises due to the influx of refugees, wounded, deportees and prisoners; a sharp increase in the size of the garrison; an increase in diseases and a lack of medicines; food shortages were caused by the decline in the production of marketable grain due to the general mobilization of men and the diversion of draft animals; food shortages, in turn, led to higher prices. The rise in the price of food and essentials was also influenced by: the fall in the value of money; lack of workers; difficulties in the transportation of goods, raw materials and food due to congestion and disruption of railway traffic; reduction of factory activity; the panic of the population, seeking to purchase products "in reserve"; in the autumn of 1916 the city was on the verge of famine. There were not enough working hands, since the army was mainly replenished at the expense of the peasants.

Thank you for your attention!

Information resources Efimov YD Simbirsk during the First World War: 1914-1918. Samara - Ulyanovsk: Samara book publishing house; Publishing group "Artishok", 2006. Ulyanovsk - Simbirsk Encyclopedia: in 2 volumes / [Editorial Council: N.V. Alekseeva (prev.) and others; ed.-st. V.N. Egorov]. - Ulyanovsk: Simb. book, 2000-2004. Ulyanovsk - Simbirsk encyclopedia: interactive. ref. by Ulyan. region / ed. and comp. V.N. Egorov; editorial board: O.E. Borodin [and others]; developed A. V. Morzhavin [i dr.]. - Ulyanovsk, 2005. Simbirsk region. Brief historical outline - Saratov; Privolzhskoe book publishing house (Ulyanovsk branch), 1989. Manifesto on the beginning of the war with Germany // Simbirsk Gubernskiye Vedomosti. 1914. No. 53. Simbirsk of the late XIX - early XX century - URL: http://kvv.mv.ru/ simbirsk /p15.html House-monument of Goncharov - URL: http://kvv.mv.ru/simbirsk/page86 .html "Map of Ulyanovsk" - URL: http://ul-map.ru/maps.php - maps of Simbirsk, Ulyanovsk. Simbirsk on old maps - URL: http://ru-simbirsk.livejournal.com/ 1404481.html Simbirsk province - URL: http://simgb.narod.ru/revolution2.html - economic situation in the Simbirsk province.

"KURYANS AT THE FRONT..."

MILITARY CALLS AND MOBILIZATIONS
1914-1917 IN KURSK PROVINCE

Exodus Crimean War 1853-1856, lost by the Russian armed forces, which had a limited supply of recruits, forced to speed up the process of transition to universal conscription of the population, following the example of France and other Western European countries, including recruiting military power neighboring German Empire.

The introduction of all-class military service in Russia led to a reduction in the terms of service and, as a result, increased the number of those drafted into the troops, who underwent military training and were enlisted in the army reserve to create numerous trained reserves in case of war. The main advantage of this troop recruitment system was the ability to maintain a small peacetime regular army, which, in the event of hostilities, becomes massive due to the conscription of military-trained reserves from among men who have completed military service. As a result, our lag behind the advanced states on the issue under consideration was eliminated.

The system of general conscription of Russians, having served for more than a century, remains the basis for manning the army and navy of our state right up to the present day. In the conditions of modern military reform, there is a transition to a contract system for the professionalization of the armed forces, but a complete rejection of the existing military duty is not envisaged in the near future.

The conscription of young people for military service in 1914 on the territory of the Kursk province began on schedule - October 1. The call was subject to 35148 people. , incl. according to additional lists B - 4663 people. 14,045 people had benefits due to marital status. , or 40.0% of the total number of recruits. During the “examination and admission”, 4187 people, or 11.9% of the total number of those called up, were recognized as subject to deferment due to illness or lack of maturity. This is a very high figure, in previous wars it did not exceed 5.5%, which is explained by the large number of those who received repeated deferrals for recovery from those included in the additional B lists.

In 1914, 18,068 people, or 51.4% of the total number of conscripts, were accepted into service, for comparison, in the military year of 1877 - 30.2%, and in 1904 - 38.0%. An interesting fact is that the call of recruits in 1914 continued even after the official closure of the presences. Until January 1, 1915, another 448 people were additionally accepted for service, which, together with 17,620 people enrolled in active service in the October draft, made up the total number of those called up for military service. The number of those additionally called up included conscripts who returned after a detailed examination in medical institutions, as well as after re-examination by the Provincial conscription presence. In total, in Russia in 1914, 700,000 people were accepted. , the share of the Kursk province in this set was 2.6%.

Among the accepted recruits, 4826 people, or 26.7%, had benefits based on marital status. Such a high rate of those called up with benefits was not observed either in the Russian-Turkish or in the Russian-Japanese war. This was explained by the scale new war superior to all previous ones.

The mood of the conscripts was different. In the reports of the county military commanders, there is various information about the mood among the draftees. So, the Lgovsky military commander pointed out that, despite the closed wine shops, among the recruits, “immoderate use of wine, which they buy in clubbing in in large numbers and partly drunk on the streets of the city. The military chief asked for the governor's orders to actually stop the sale of alcohol in Lgov until all recruits were sent to the troops, fearing that the latter would drink the money they received in presence for the things they brought with them.

In Novooskolsky district the situation was different. According to the military commander, “Conscripts behave in an exemplary manner. There is complete order in the city, there were no cases of military service evasion.

On the whole, the drafting of recruits in 1914 followed a well-known pattern, only expanding the number of those drafted into the troops. The call was subject to 21-year-old men.

In 1915, in the Kursk province, as well as throughout Russia, there were three early calls for recruits. Information about the results of these appeals, carried out on the territory of the Kursk province, is extremely scarce.

The first enrollment ran from January 15 to February 15, 1915. Subject to the draft were 21-year-old men who were to be drafted in October. In total, 32,311 people were assigned to the military service. Of this number, 16,045 people, or 49.7%, were accepted for military service. 6863 people, or 21.2% of the total number of conscripts, were enrolled in the militia of the second category who were entitled to benefits for marital status of the 1st category. In Russia, this set gave 673,000 people. , incl. 16045 Kuryans, or 2.4%.

An interesting fact is that the recruits accepted into this call to the fleet, the turnout from home leave was delayed until October 1, 1915 "due to the difficulty for the Naval Department of accepting recruits to the fleet outside the time of the usual call." But in March 1915, these recruits were "converted" to the ground forces and sent to serve. Such an agreement was reached under an agreement between the Military and Naval Ministries, according to which it was supposed to call up the number of recruits necessary for the fleet in an early May call.

On May 15, 1915, the second early conscription began in 1916 for recruits born in 1897, i.e. 20 year olds. Recruits were released from it until the end of the war, occupying at the time of recruitment the positions of telegraph operators on all the railways of the empire, except for the Tashkent and Central Asian.

32,358 people were involved in this call for military service, of which 8,098 people, or 25.0%, used the privilege of the 1st category, and 15,590 people were enrolled in the troops. , or 48.2%. Among those accepted in Russia 632,000 people. , the share of the Kursk province was 2.5%.

In the early draft of 1917, which began on August 7, 1915, young people born in 1896 were subject to military service, i.e. 19 year olds. This call was carried out on a "mobilization basis", which made it possible to call on the banners of the largest number of recruits, not taking into account the right to benefits due to marital status. Out of 33505 people, 23246 people were enrolled in the service. , or 69.4%. Of the 932,000 people called up for service throughout Russia, the share of the Kursk province was 2.5%, as in other conscriptions during the First World War.

It should be noted that in the calls of recruits in 1914-1916. only conscripts who were entitled to a benefit for marital status of the 1st category were exempted from entering active military service. Following the early conscription in 1917 of conscripts born in 1896, which ignored the provision of benefits due to marital status, preparations were made for the 1916 conscription of young people born in 1897 in 1916. All those drafted into this recruitment, if fit, were enrolled in the troops, regardless of benefits due to marital status. So, conscripts who had the right to a privilege for marital status of the 1st category, in the sets of 1914-1916, were enrolled in the militia of the 2nd category, from which they were later recruited as militia warriors. Now, preferential 1st category, immediately upon being called up, were enrolled in the service as militias. In the event of the simultaneous call-up of two or more brothers for the service, their families, along with families deprived of a single breadwinner, were entitled to food allowance. In addition, the families of military personnel in need of heating were provided with assistance in this matter.

In order to conduct conscription more quickly in 1915, recruits were given the right to appear at collection points for the performance of military duty at the place of stay. This circumstance allowed conscripts working in factories and factories in other regions not to return home, which significantly saved the time of the call.

Refugees of the drafts of 1914-1917, who were in the inner provinces, were also subject to conscription, incl. and in Kursk. Refugees, when announcing the draft, had to immediately appear at the assembly points of local district military commanders at the place of stay. The presences made the necessary lists for them and carried out the determination of the age “by appearance”.

In 1914-1915. in Russia they retained their force of deferment for completing their education, and starting from 1916, the conscription of students into the active army was announced. In order to avoid conscription, many students made unauthorized transfers from one educational institution to another, which was strictly punished as evasion of military service.

Early holding military conscription demanded great tension from the institutions that compiled the draft lists. In total, according to available data for 1914-1915. in the Kursk province, 72,949 recruits were accepted for military service.

The main differences between peacetime and wartime conscriptions appeared in the First World War, during which it was necessary to change some articles of the Charter on military service. The first wartime conscription in 1914 was carried out on schedule and was distinguished by an increased recruitment rate, more than 50% were accepted for service, as well as the actual abolition of benefits for marital status of the 2nd and 3rd categories, which, starting from that moment , lost their power due to wartime.

The active army needed an increasing number of soldiers and in a short time to replenish the loss. Therefore, the appeals of 1915-1917. were carried out ahead of schedule. For this, the recruiting age bar was lowered.

In 1915, for the first time in Russia, there were three early calls for recruits. The conscription, which began on January 15, included 21-year-old conscripts who, in peacetime, should have been called up for military service only on October 1 of this year. Following this, on May 15 - 20-year-olds, and on August 7 - 19-year-old boys, whose turn was to come in 1916 and 1917. respectively. In 1916, the turn came to the 18-year-old youths of the 1918 draft. The age of recruits did not fall below 18;

Starting from August 7, 1915, the recruitment of recruits took place on a "mobilization basis" that did not take into account benefits based on marital status. Now, when called up, all able-bodied men

During the entire war, about 15,500,000 spares, militias and recruits were mobilized, distributed by age as follows: under 20 years old - 2,500,000 people, or 16.8%; 20-29 years old - 7,600,000 people, or 49.0%; 30-39 years old - 4,600,000 people, or 30.0%; 40 years and older - 800,000 people, or 5.0%.

According to the agricultural census of 1917, the percentage of those accepted into the army in Russia was: 11.2% of the entire population, 22.6% of all men and 47.4% of able-bodied men. In the Kursk province, this indicator exceeded the all-Russian one and was equal to: 12.6%, 25.1%, 53.3%, respectively. The percentage of able-bodied men called up in the Kursk province exceeded on average by 3% similar figures in other provinces of European Russia, for example, in Yekaterinoslav - 34.2%, in Petrograd - 39.7%, in Moscow it was 45.1%, and in neighboring Chernihiv - 50.6%. Thus, on average, this percentage was higher in the agricultural provinces, which makes it possible to conclude that the Russian peasantry bore the brunt of the war.

In the summer of 1914, by order of the Kursk provincial conscription presence, the district military presences held verification fees for the lower ranks of the reserve, the deadline for holding was set from June 1 to June 24. County presences within the allotted time themselves set the deadlines for appearance. For example, the Rylsk presence performed verification from June 2 to June 19. This verification made it possible a month before the start of the war to obtain accurate information about the availability of spares on the ground, which in turn accelerated the mobilization of spare lower ranks.

After the declaration of war on Serbia by Austria-Hungary on July 15, it was decided in Russia to mobilize. Emperor Nicholas II, despite the persuasion of the General Staff, for a long time did not want to carry out a general mobilization in Russia, believing that it would lead to war with Germany. Only after a long explanation that if a private mobilization were announced, it would interfere with the general mobilization in the future, the emperor gave his consent.

General mobilization was announced on July 18, 1914, during which all reserve lower ranks and part of the state militia of the 1st category were called up according to the 1910 mobilization schedule in force at that time. Prior to this, preparatory work had been carried out on the ground. So, from July 13, in the Kursk province, the “Regulations on the preparatory period for the war” were introduced and events were carried out according to the “Lists No. 1 and No. 2”, such as:

Bringing in full order materials in all institutions responsible for the mobilization of the army and navy;

Termination of the issuance of military passports and certificates for the right to travel abroad;

Additional equipment of assembly points at the offices of military commanders with everything necessary for mobilization;

Checking the readiness of collection points for work.

By order of the governor, for the period of mobilization, all drinking establishments were closed in places of conscription. Closed state and private liquor stores and establishments selling alcoholic beverages were ordered to be guarded by police guards. This order played a positive role in maintaining order at the collection points.

An interesting fact is that local mobilization began one day earlier, namely on July 17th. It so happened that private mobilization was first announced. According to the Highest order, the troops of Kyiv (it included the Kursk province), Odessa, Moscow, Kazan military districts, the Black Sea and Baltic fleets and Cossack units were subject to mobilization. On July 17, in addition to the above order, Kursk received a telegram from the commander of the Kyiv Military District, Adjutant General Ivanov, informing that July 17 is considered the first day of mobilization, reserve lower ranks are subject to conscription, militia units are not formed. This circumstance is explained by the indecision of the emperor in declaring a general mobilization, which nevertheless followed on July 18. In order to resolve this inconsistency in the conduct of mobilization, a telegram from Comrade Minister of the Interior Plehve was sent to the localities, in which it was reported that militia warriors of the 1st category were subject to conscription, and “the appearance of spares at collection points on the days of mobilization, starting from July 17, should continue without correcting call-up announcements.

Deferrals from conscription were used by officers and lower ranks of the outdoor police studying in higher educational institutions; reserve lower ranks, warriors of the state militia. On the eve of the mobilization, it was ordered to release all the lower ranks and warriors of the state militia who were serving in the prisons of the civil department, who were serving sentences for failing to appear at training and verification fees. After their release, they were immediately enrolled in military units by appointment.

Information about the number of called-up spares in the Kursk province varies greatly. So, according to the Survey of the Kursk province for 1914, 42394 lower ranks of the reserve were called up in the province, or 1.4% of the total number of reserve officers accepted in Russia in 1914. In turn, according to the data contained in the state archive of the Kursk region in profile fund No. 141 of the Kursk provincial presence for military service, there is information about the results of calling up spares in 12 counties out of 15. In 12 counties, this number amounted to 46,128 people. In our opinion, it is more worth trusting the information of the specialized fund, compiled according to the reports of the county conscription presences. This inconsistency in data can be explained as follows. In the Review of the Kursk province, the final figures on the number of those called up, and the number of reserve ranks appointed from the province, could be used. The compilers of the Review could simply be unaware of the real situation at the collection points. Governor N.P. Muratov reported on July 28, 1914 to the commander of the troops of the Kyiv military district, Adjutant General N.I. Ivanov that at many “province assembly points there are still spares who have not been accepted into the troops ... [them - D.S.] the number in some points reaches 700 people.”

For example, in Putivl, 680 spares who were not assigned to military units were accepted in excess of the set, and 800 people in Grayvoron. All these spares were sent to the troops. This is also evidenced by the fact that in Russia as a whole and in the Kursk province in particular there was not a single call for replacements in the future, because. this entire contingent, which was most valuable in the conditions of war, was completely exhausted during the period of general mobilization. In total, according to our calculations, 57,660 reserve ranks were accepted in the Kursk province. More detailed information on the number of recruits by uyezds of the province will be given below in Table No. 1 "Results of mobilizations in 1914 in the Kursk province."

The adopted Kursk lower ranks of the reserve were sent to units of various branches of the armed forces (infantry, artillery, cavalry, including the fleet).

Let us now consider the number of militia warriors of the 1st category, taken on mobilization on July 18 in the Kursk province. In this mobilization, 2 categories of militias of the 1st category were subject to conscription:

Warriors listed in the militia from the reserve before reaching the age of 43, i.e. who completed the military service of the terms of conscription in 1893-1896, and who by the beginning of the war were from 39 to 42 years old.

Warriors of the 1st category of conscriptions who did not serve in 1908-1913. between the ages of 22 and 27.

In the work of N.N. Golovin, we find information that is different from what we have identified in regional documentary sources. He claims that the reserve ones who had passed the army conscription service in 1892-1895 were called up, i.e. from 40 to 43 years old and did not serve the drafts of 1910-1913. Under the current legislation on military service, men were in the militia until they reached the age of 43, so 43-year-olds could not be drafted into the troops without changing the law. Thus, it turns out that the upper age limit set by N.N. Golovin for persons who have completed military service is not true. The difference in the ages of militia warriors who did not serve in the army can be explained as follows: in the Kursk province they could expand the age limits for conscription to receive the required number of militiamen appointed from the province.

According to the Survey of the Kursk province for 1914 in the Kursk province in 1914, 19,889 warriors were accepted into the troops, of which: 7,540 people. - 1st category and 12349 people. - 2nd category. The reliability of this information is highly questionable. Firstly, according to all the sources we have met, the conscription of the warriors of the state militia of the 2nd category in 1914 was not carried out in Russia, since there was no highest order for this. The first recruitment of warriors of the 2nd category took place only on September 5, 1915, after the approval by the State Duma of the law “On the procedure for conscription and appointment of warriors of the state militia of the 2nd category”, which amended the Charter on military service. Secondly, the numerical data given in the Review are completely different from those found by us in archival documents. According to the reports of the county military presences, in the province, only on general mobilization, 24907 warriors of the 1st category were accepted, among them were: 6848 people, or 27.5% of the troops passing through the ranks, and 18059 people, or 72.5% of those who did not serve , and in 1914, in addition to the general one, two more private mobilizations took place in the province.

S.S. Oldenburg, a contemporary of those events, wrote: “The mobilization was successful, sooner than expected; Not only were there no protests anywhere, there were no drunken outrages, which are not uncommon in such cases: by the Highest Command, the sale of alcoholic beverages was prohibited for the duration of the mobilization. This information is confirmed by local examples, in particular, the Kursk province. Thus, the Dmitrievsky district police officer informed the Governor of Kursk the following: “... for the entire time there were no drunken mobilizations, the entire population was imbued with the importance of the present moment, before sending the first echelon of spares, a parting prayer was served and spares with music were brought to the station, after At the end of the draft, a prayer service was also served near the cathedral for granting victory to Russian weapons, after which a patriotic demonstration took place with portraits of the Sovereign and national flags, the crowd sang “Save, Lord” and “God Save the Tsar” all the time, music met the demonstrators near the Zemstvo Council, my high spirits intensified... Having reached my apartment, the demonstrators gave me a standing ovation and then went to the Office of the military commander, where they demanded a military commander and gave him a standing ovation...”

The presence of the Rylsky uyezd on military service reported that the appearance of the reserve and militia in the uyezd “was carried out in an exemplary manner and in a timely manner. At the same time, it was observed that among the mass of people arriving in the city of Rylsk, there were absolutely no drunks.

The Novooskolsky district police officer reported that “the spares praised the emperor, many declare a desire to volunteer, the order is exemplary, not a single drunk.”

In the Kursk province, there were cases of capture of those who evaded conscription into the mobilization troops from other provinces. For example, on August 13, 1914, the Shchigrovskaya police detained and handed over to the district military commander the reserve Efim Denyukov, who came from the peasants of the village of Agarkova, Krasnenskaya volost, Maloarkhangelsky district, Oryol province.

In the course of general mobilization, a huge number of conscripted reserve and militiamen accumulated at assembly points, which created great inconvenience in placing them in philistine apartments and conducting an examination. In all counties, collection points were overcrowded, so, only in the Kursk district, 6732 people were called up. , and there were even more people who showed up for mobilization. The timely dispatch of those liable for military service to the troops was hampered by the simultaneous conduct of horse mobilization. So, in the village of Vinnikovo, the arriving team with spares was delayed for several days due to the absence of the local foreman and headman who were obliged to assist in the promotion of such teams. Carts were not prepared in the village to transport team members, because all the local peasants with their horses were in Kursk at the receiving horse site. In total, 82,567 reserve and militias were accepted for general mobilization in the Kursk province.

In 1914, two more private mobilizations of militias of the 1st category took place in the province: on September 20 and November 20. The mobilization, which began on September 20, affected only 3 counties out of 15. According to it, warriors of the militia of the 1st category were subject to conscription, who did not undergo military conscription service in 1911-1913. In total, 540 people were accepted according to it: in Kursk district - 200 people, in Putivl and Timsky - 170 people each.

On November 20, mobilization took place in 12 districts of the province. 2 categories of warriors of the 1st category were called up: those who did military service in 1893-1896, and those who did not serve in the army of conscription in 1908-1914. In total, 6,874 people were accepted through it, of which 183 people, or 2.7%, were in military service, and 6,691 people. , or 97.3% of those who did not pass the ranks of the troops. Such a low rate of those called up in the first category is explained by the complete exhaustion of this class of militia.

In total, in 1914, 89,981 people were mobilized in the Kursk province, or 2.04% of the total number of those called up in Russia that year.

In 1915, only the total number of those mobilized in the Kursk province is known. As a result of seven mobilizations of soldiers of the state militia of the 1st and 2nd category, 72,054 people were accepted, or 2.6% of the all-Russian indicator of mobilized militias in 1915, of which: 39,992 people - the 1st category and 32,062 people. - 2nd category.

In 1916, the Kursk province underwent 5 mobilizations of the militia, during which 53,699 people were called up, of which: 16,279 people. - 1 category and 37420 people. - 2nd. Table No. 1. The total number of mobilized in the Kursk province in 1914

Mobilizations of 1914
CountiesJuly 18September 2020 NovemberTotal
sparemilitiamilitiamilitia
Kursk5025 1707 200 1200 8132
Belgorod 4305 2006 - 550 6861
grayvoronsky5112 2459 - 1100 8671
Dmitrievsky 2205 642 - 276 3123
Korochansky4056 2510 - 453 7019
Lgovsky3844 1009 - 671 5524
Novooskolsky 3844 2085 - - 5929
Oboyansky 4859 1972 - 347 7178
Putivl 3790 1140 170 694 5794
Rylsky3245 1700 - 652 5597
Art. Oskolsky 3422 1840 - - 5262
Sudzhansky 3700 1952 - - 5652
Timsky 3510 1170 170 551 5401
Fatezhsky 3844 1244 - 380 5468
Shchigrovsky2899 1471 - - 4370
Total 57660 24907 540 6874 89981

During the war years, there were also examples of desertion. So, the warrior of the state militia of the 1st category of the 140th foot Kursk squad Andrey Alekseevich Shchetinin of the call of 1911, who came from the peasants of the village of Budishcha, Cherno-Oleshensky volost, Sudzhansky district, fled from the Kursk team of convalescents and hid in his native village for 5 months and 3 days . After his detention by the Sudzhansky district military commander, he was transferred to the military field court at the 679th foot Kursk squad. In the course of the consideration of the case, a sentence was pronounced: “the defendant warrior Andrey Alekseevich Shchetinin for escaping during the war in order to evade service in the army, by deprivation military rank and all the rights of the state to be exiled to hard labor for eight years ... "

During the first three years of the war in Russia, 16 conscriptions of state militia warriors were carried out: three in 1914, seven in 1915 and five in 1916. Subsequently, in Central Russia, until the end of the war, there were no more calls for warriors of the state militia. On January 10, 1917, the militia warriors of the 2nd category were mobilized only in the Caucasus, 30,000 people were accepted through it.

In connection with the decrease in mobilization resources, starting from 1916, the practice of re-examination of white-ticketers was introduced, i.e. persons liable for military service who, during conscription or mobilization, were recognized as “completely incapable of military service and received certificates of exemption forever from such ...”

On January 20, 1916, a circular was received in the Kursk province, informing that in connection with the highest approved on November 18, 1915 regulation of the Council of Ministers, it was decided:

For the duration of the war, to impose on the county conscription presence a verification examination of white-ticketers;

Verification examination to be carried out at the place of residence of white-ticket holders;

All those deemed fit for military service, with the exception of those who have legal deferrals from conscription after examination, are immediately accepted into the troops with enrollment in the militia of the 2nd category.

All white ticket holders who were late for re-examination were ordered to be sent to prison for a period of 3 weeks to 8 months.

Posting announcements about the beginning of the re-examination was carried out in the same way as for recruiting recruits. The summoning of white-ticketers to collection points began at a young age.

The re-examination took place at different times, so the troops received reinforcements at different times. So, in 1916, in the whole country, 100,000 white-ticketers were accepted into the troops, in 1917 - another 100,000 people.

According to documentary materials stored in the state archive of the Kursk region, in the period from March 1916 to January 14, 1917, 3 re-examinations were carried out in the province, as a result of which 7566 people were sent to the troops, and transferred to the militia of the 2nd category 4528 people. with the appointment of a delay in the cure of minor diseases. Thus, according to the results of the re-examination, only in the Kursk province, the mobilization contingent was expanded by 12,094 people.

After February Revolution 1917, the need to attract white-ticketers to the service remained. On April 10, the local government received an order from the Provisional Government “to resume at the end of the most acute period of spring rural work, depending on local climatic conditions, a verification examination of all white-ticketers who have not yet been subjected to such a ticket up to the age of 43. In the Kursk province, it took place mainly in the summer.

In connection with the re-examination, two representatives of public organizations with an advisory vote were introduced into the county conscription presences, namely two deputies from the local garrison. By order of the head of the Kharkov local brigade, all teachers of conscriptions fit for military service in 1906-1918. after re-examination they were sent to the service.

In the Kursk province, data on white-ticket workers accepted into service in 1917 are present in only 10 out of 15 counties, 3450 people were accepted in them.

In total, in the province, after the re-examination of white-ticket workers in 1917, 5175 people were accepted and sent to active military service in the troops. In addition, another 3758 people. was recognized as "not quite fit" and included in the number of militia warriors of the 2nd category.

Here are general data on the mobilization of reserve and militias from 1914 to 1917: Table No. 2. Mobilized in the Kursk province in 1914-1917.

1 See: GAKO. F. 141. Op. 1. D. 168. L. 332-ob.-333; D. 170. L. 319-413; D. 182. L. 65, 176-177, 287, 358-361, 415-416; D. 184. L. 224-rev.-225, 287-rev.-288, 380, 587-rev.-679; Review of the Kursk province for 1914. Kursk, 1915. S. 36-37; the same for 1915. Kursk, 1916, p. 131.

From the above data, it can be seen that the largest number of fifths in the troops was in 1914 - 89981 people, or 39.4% of the total number mobilized for the war, later this figure decreased: in 1915 - 72054 people, or 31.5%, in 1916 - 61265 people, or 26.8% and in 1917 - 2.3%. This decrease is explained by the reduction of the province's mobilization resources.

According to the categories of those mobilized in the First World War, the lower ranks of the reserve amounted to 57660 people, or 25.2% of the total number of those accepted, the militia warriors of the 1st category - 88592 people, or 38.8%, the warriors of the 2nd category - 69482, or 30.4% and white-ticketers - 5.6%.

According to approximate estimates, during the years of the First World War, in the ranks of the armed forces (together with the personnel army), people from the Kursk province were about 340,000 people.

Simbirsk peasant communism economic

Socio-economic condition of the Simbirsk province during the First World War

On the eve of the First World War, the economy of the Simbirsk Volga region was in a state of recovery. This was facilitated by the changes that took place in the industry and agriculture of the region, caused by general trends economic development Russia. In addition, the Stolypin reforms accelerated this process. As a result, by the beginning of the First World War, the Middle Volga region as a whole and the Simbirsk province in particular turned into a granary of all-Russian importance, supplying grain and products of its processing to the external and internal markets.

In 1914-1917. agriculture, industry and trade of the Simbirsk province experienced the negative impact of mobilization, which seized hundreds of thousands of workers; disorders in the work of transport, inflation. There was a drop in productivity, the sowing wedge decreased, the conditions for supplying agricultural implements and equipment, and fertilizers worsened. But with all the gigantic exports of grain from the province, there was always a surplus to feed both rural and urban population. Although the harvests of the war years (except for 1915) were small compared to previous years, they still corresponded to the demand of the population and the requirements of army supplies. Even in the lean year of 1917, food supplies were sufficient to meet the needs of the population of the region.

During the First World War, the population of the Simbirsk province experienced certain difficulties in supplying food and especially a number of industrial goods. Foodstuffs such as sugar, certain types of meat, fish, and tea have disappeared or have become very expensive in shops and shops. At the same time, a part of non-food consumer goods - ready-made shoes, clothes, fabrics, soap, thread, kerosene, matches - fell into the category of scarce ones. The latter hit the countryside the hardest, because in conditions of inflation and shortages, the peasants did not see much point in saving money, and the amount of urban factory goods available decreased.

The population of the Simbirsk province at first did not turn away from the usual ways of commerce and housekeeping and found ways to cope with the shortage of goods and high prices, although protests were heard among the poor strata against merchants who "profited from the people's grief." The cooperative movement, which before the war was in the Simbirsk province, in comparison with other regions of Russia, was in its infancy, came to the aid of the inhabitants of the city and the countryside. Numerous consumer societies, created as a means of "self-help" in the provision of food and industrial goods, helped to reduce the heat of speculation and ensure an acceptable level of supply of everyday goods. Prices for food products produced in the region gradually increased during the war years. The agrarian specialization of the region prevented them from taking off too quickly, as happened in the capitals and large industrial centers.

The attitude of the inhabitants of the Simbirsk province to food difficulties in 1914-1916. manifested itself only in complaints to the authorities, and also resulted in isolated cases of food pogroms of shops, most often caused by quarrels between buyers and sellers. And in March-October 1917, certain groups of the population had already embarked on the direct path of plundering food stocks, arbitrarily organizing searches in commercial warehouses, shops, and private homes.

The state did a lot to solve the food problem, which threatened the country's defense capability. There are two periods in the solution of the food question. In the period from July 1914 to February 1917, they were based on the old bureaucratic methods of management, somewhat restricting the initiative of individual officials with instructions and prescriptions. But the work of institutions created by the tsarist government, local administration and self-government made it possible to cope with the food problem, never bringing the Simbirsk province to open starvation.

During the years of the First World War in the Middle Volga region, an organization of authorized representatives of the Ministry of Agriculture for the procurement of bread for the army was created and successfully operated. Everything indicates that before February 1917 the work of the commissioners was effective.

From February to October 1917, after allowing a wide range of so-called public figures to manage the food business, the new government destroyed the old system with its own hands. Instead of one more or less clear line of administration, which was developed by the Ministry of Agriculture, the Provisional Government gave the country many bodies responsible for supply. They corresponded to the requirements of revolutionary democracy to attract as much as possible more persons to participate in such an important matter for the entire population, but at the same time they lost the principle of unity of command and began to compete with each other. Before the February Revolution of 1917, at the local level, they tried to pursue a conciliatory, compromise policy with the owners of trade establishments and food enterprises, large landowners. And this policy has borne fruit, allowing successful purchases of food, both for the army and for the civilian population. In 1917, when people came to power, mostly based on the ideas of social and economic equality and not connected, like their predecessors, with the world of commerce, the policy of compromise ended. In 1917, the food authorities sometimes tried to pursue a tough command policy, which collapsed due to the excessive democratization of these bodies and the general situation of uncertainty, the temporary nature of the situation, and the strengthening of food separatism in counties and volosts.

Cooperation between zemstvos and city administrations since 1916 gave positive results and made it possible to largely overcome the emerging food crisis by introducing a strict distribution of products and an agreement with flour millers on a kind of distribution of flour between them for the population.

Thus, the government dealt effectively with the food issue with the support of the population, which trusted this government. And only after the events of February 1917, the population, sensing the precariousness of the new institutions of power, stopped helping it, which was one of the reasons for the collapse of its food policy. In 1914-1917. the population did not make any special claims to the authorities regarding the food supply and, on the whole, remained loyal to it. The most numerous stratum of the population - the peasantry - willingly sold grain to government purchasing agents. But after February 1917, the government was unable to ensure the normal supply of food to the cities, and was forced to begin to use force to take bread from the village. In the city garrisons, special soldier teams were formed to carry out requisitions under the law on the grain monopoly from those who hid grain and flour. But this practically did not give results, since the soldiers often refused to use weapons against the villagers. However, this practice still caused a sharp negative reaction among the peasants, and only increased their desire to hide stocks from accountants.

The food crisis until 1917, as an integral phenomenon, did not manifest itself in the Simbirsk province. Only some of its moments, common to the entire territory of Russia, arose and were successfully overcome in the Simbirsk province. And because the food crisis has not played key role in the folding of the region of the situation that contributed to the February Revolution. The population rejected the old government in connection with the unsuccessful course of the war, heavy losses, and awareness of the inefficiency of governing the country. The revolutionary events of 1917 in the Middle Volga region were caused by other circumstances: the rejection of power by the intelligentsia, discord in the political aspirations of the central authorities and administration and representative bodies, as well as local governments. The inability of the new government after February 1917 to cope with food difficulties was an important component of the aggravation of social contradictions in the state.

For Russia, the First World War became a test not only of the political system, socio-economic structure, but of the whole society as a whole. The blows inflicted by the war on the political and socio-economic systems of the state largely predetermined the turmoil that came in 1917 and the Civil War that followed.

One of these blows was the food issue. From his decision in the regions, the ability to supply the army with everything necessary and feed the population largely depended on the ability to still bring this difficult war to a victorious end. However, the revolutionary upheavals that hit the Russian state brought to naught all efforts to resolve the issue, turning episodic food difficulties into genuine food ones.

Thus, the First World War caused serious economic difficulties in the Simbirsk Volga region, destroying the existing economic ties. Despite some changes in the structure of the economy, in general, the regional economy has retained its agrarian character.

The peasantry, to a greater extent than the urban population, suffered from the realities of wartime, mobilizations, requisitions of livestock, etc. Serious changes have taken place in the social image of the village. Under the influence of the irreversible consequences of the war, the peasant world became more and more differentiated. During the war years, as a result of the impoverishment of the peasant masses, the stratum of the poorest peasants increased noticeably. The proportion of middle peasants has correspondingly decreased. Big number peasant families were included in the category: landless, horseless, without any livestock.

Thus, we can conclude that the revolutionary upheavals of 1917 arose under the influence of a number of economic, political and socio-psychological factors. The peasantry of the Simbirsk Volga region played a leading role in the revolutionary processes in the region.

Physical and psychological fatigue from the war, disappointment in the supreme power and the justice of its policy, anger against the landowners, farmers, townspeople created that tense socio-psychological atmosphere in the countryside, which threatened to explode it in a situation of weakening the state and its repressive functions, which happened after February 1917.

1917 was a turning point in the fate of the Simbirsk peasantry in particular and the peasants of Russia in general. And during the first three revolutionary years, such changes took place that were not even imagined. The autocracy fell, the monarchist worldview gradually left the peasant consciousness, private ownership of land was abolished, the class of landowners was destroyed, and a layer of wealthy peasants was gradually squeezed out.

DI. FADEEV, Ulyanovsk, Russian Federation

SOLDIERS OF THE FIRST WORLD WAR IN SOCIAL CONFLICTS ON THE EXAMPLE OF SIMBIRSK PROVINCE. 1914 - 1917

Fadeev D.I., Ulyanovsk, Russian Federation

Mothers and wives of soldiers of World War I in social conflicts in Simbirsk Governorate

annotation

The object of the study is the social life of the period of the First World War in Russian Empire, the subject of the study is social clashes involving soldiers' wives and mothers in the Simbirsk province, the goal is to determine the position of local soldiers, the motives for their participation in pogroms and social conflicts and the results of these clashes. Chronological framework research: summer 1914 - February 1917; territorial framework: Simbirsk province (the city of Simbirsk, county towns, counties). Research methods were applied: analytical, concrete historical, comparative historical, problem-chronological, generalization method, as well as socio-psychological methods. In the course of the work, scattered materials of the provincial press for 1914-1917 were collected, processed and grouped, as well as archival funds of the office of the Simbirsk governor (F. 76), the Simbirsk provincial gendarmerie department (F. 855) and the Simbirsk district court (F. 1 ). Using the materials of the State Archive of the Ulyanovsk Region (SAUO) as an example, the role of such factors as economic need and the difficulty of obtaining benefits, the high cost and shortage of vital goods, the land issue and the struggle within the peasant class is shown. In a number of cases, the important role of rumors and the opinions of individual men who remained in the rear in changing the mood of the soldiers, as well as the willingness of the people to stand up for offended women, was revealed. However, despite the increased hatred of officials, policemen and merchants during the war, the soldiers of the Simbirsk province did not put forward political demands. The danger of the authorities' inattention to social problems, illegibility in the methods of regulating social relations and harsh punishments against women (with the protracted nature of the war and the struggle between old and new forms of social organization) is noted.

The article describes social life in the Russian Empire during World War I. The author tells about mothers and wives of soldiers (“soldatki”) in Simbirsk Governorate, their participation in riots (“pogroms”) and social conflicts. The purpose of the article is determination of the status of local soldatki, motives and results of their social protests. The article is focused on a period from summer of 1914-to February 1917 and the territory of Simbirsk Governorate. The article is based on sources of Ulyanovsk state archive (GAUO) such as documents of Simbirsk governor`s office, Simbirsk provincial gendarme office, Simbirsk district court and the local press of 1914-1917. The author shows the role of such factors as poverty and difficulty of aid delivery, high prices and shortage of subsistence goods, long period of the war and the old struggle between two social groups of peasants. Also the article demonstrates the growth of the role of some men staying in the rear and rumors for the mind of soldatki. The situation became worse with disregard of authorities to social problems, primitive methods of regulation of social relationships and cruel judgment to women. Despite the hate to officials, police and tradesmen the protests of soldatki of Simbirsk Governorate never became political.

Keywords

Sources, soldiers, World War I, Russian Empire, Simbirsk province, social conflicts, riots.

Primary sources, soldatki, World War I, Russian Empire, Simbirsk Governorate, social conflicts, riots.

During the First World War, the evacuation of refugees from the western regions of the Russian Empire and the mobilization of men led to the concentration of women, children, and the elderly in the provinces. Soldiers' wives and mothers, left without breadwinners, made up a large social group forced to defend their interests often in clashes with the authorities and other groups. The purpose of this article is to determine the features of social conflicts involving soldiers in the Simbirsk province, the motives for their speeches and the consequences for the public life of the province. Chronological and territorial framework - the First World War (imperial period, 1914 - February 1917) in the Simbirsk province.

Yu.I. Kiryanov, who devoted an article to mass demonstrations on the basis of high prices in the Russian Empire during the First World War. Considering the causes and course of non-political conflicts, the author noted that “every new strata of the population, who had previously not shown themselves socially or had weakly shown themselves,” including soldier women, participated here. Barbara Angel, in her article, developed the theme of the participation of soldier women in economic performances, pointing out that total war involved women in social conflicts, selecting fathers, sons and husbands who were intermediaries in their relations with society and the state. Yu.D. Efimov, in his book about Simbirsk during the First World War, highlighted many issues related to the organization of assistance to the families of those called up for war. V.B. Aksyonov considered the problem of war and power in the mass consciousness of the peasants, paying great attention to the soldiers' wives.

In this article, the materials of the State Archive of the Ulyanovsk Region (SAUO) are used as sources: the funds of the Simbirsk District Court, the Office of the Simbirsk Governor and the Simbirsk Provincial Gendarmerie Administration. When comparing archival sources with the conclusions of the researchers, the absence of political slogans among the soldiers of the Simbirsk province was revealed during great importance in the unleashing of conflicts of rumors, as well as the aggravation of the struggle of the female soldiers-communes with the peasants-otrubniks and dissatisfaction with the organization of government assistance.

The harsh measures taken by the authorities against the indignant soldiers did not add loyalty to the latter. So, Chetvertakov's soldiers regretted "that they did not disobey the guard and all came to the police, where [them] were mistaken for the accused." The population sympathized with the soldiers. On the evening of July 4, 1916, when a policeman with a military escort was escorting three women detained for participating in the riots to prison, a passer-by girl turned to the intrigued public with cries of "don't let them go to prison, we'll beat them off, tyrants arrested." Among the soldiers themselves, the authority of the men who remained in the village increased. Often the authority was based on material interest, when the crowd obeyed the volost foreman and dispersed only because the soldiers received state benefits from him. A rumor started in August 1915 by a peasant who returned from the war, s. Sursky Maidan (Alatyrsky district), that all deposits from savings banks will go to military needs. Immediately, the peasant women of this village fled to the volost government to receive their contributions from the treasury. Thus, the outcome of the speeches of the soldiers (from calming down to pogroms and clashes with the authorities) often depended on the views of such an authoritative man.

At the same time, politically, this fertile mass of community soldiers was never used. In the Simbirsk province, dissatisfaction with economic conditions did not lead women to political slogans. But, if the workers and employees who remained in the rear did not dare to speak out, fearing to lose their respite from military service, then the soldiers, who had nothing to lose, were much more often indignant at their socio-economic situation. In the countryside, the old confrontation between community members and cut off workers, as well as community members and the government, which supported the farmers and did not solve the problem of high prices, escalated. The land issue became the main source of conflicts involving soldiers on the territory of the Simbirsk province.

It would seem that the participation of women in the pogroms should have influenced the soldiers and police put forward to suppress the clashes. However, there was no mitigation in the Simbirsk events on July 4, 1916 - the soldiers hated the policemen who sat in the rear when their husbands died at the front, and the rear soldiers quickly isolated themselves from society. So one of the main reasons for the July riot was the violation of the queue by the lower military ranks, pushing the soldiers away from the window for issuing sugar. Soldiers quickly moved away from the ideas of continuing the war until complete victory and advocated an early peace, promising the return of men and possible land increases.

Bibliography

1. Aksenov V.B. War and Power in the Mass Consciousness of Peasants in 1914-1917: Archetypes, Rumors, Interpretations // Russian History. - 2012. - No. 4. - P. 137-145.

2. Efimov Yu.D. Simbirsk during the First World War (1914-1918). – Samara: Samarsk. book. publishing house; Ulyanovsk: Artishok, 2006. - 368 p.

3. Kiryanov Yu.I. Mass performances on the basis of high cost in Russia (1914-February 1917) // Domestic History. - 1993. - No. 3. - S. 3-18.

4. Engel B. Not by Bread Alone: ​​subsistence Riots in Russia during World War I. The Journal of Modern History. - 1997. - Vol. 69, No. 4. - S. 696-721.

1. Aksenov V.B. Vojna i vlast "v massovom soznanii krest" jan v 1914-1917 godah: arhetipy, sluhi, interpretacii. Rossijskaja istorija - Russian history. 2012, No. 4, pp. 137-145. (in Russ.).

2. Efimov Y.D. Simbirsk v gody Pervoj mirovoj vojny (1914-1918) . Samara: Samara publishing house; Ulyanovsk publishing house, 2006, 368 p.

3. Kiryanov Y.I. Massovye vystuplenija na pochve dorogovizny v Rossii (1914-Fevral "1917) . Otechestvennaja istorija - Russian history. 1993, No. 3, pp. 3-18.

4. Engel B. Not by Bread Alone: ​​subsistence Riots in Russia during World War I. The Journal of Modern History. 1997 Vol. 69, No. 4, pp. 696-721.

Fadeev Dmitry Igorevich, post-graduate student of Ulyanovsk state university, Ulyanovsk, Russian Federation, 8-927-804-64-77, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Fadeev Dmitrij Igorevich, graduate student, Ulyanovsk State University, Ulyanovsk, Russian Federation, 8-927-804-64-77, This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

The material is published in full in the Russian historical and archival journal VESTNIK ARCHIVIST. Check out the subscription terms.

  • Specialty HAC RF07.00.02
  • Number of pages 257
Thesis Add to Basket 500p

Chapter I

1.1. Charity management and principles of charitable activity.28

1.2 The economic basis of welfare.51

1.3. The development of charity and the attitude towards it of the Middle Volga society during the First World War.75

Chapter II. Municipal institutions and press organs

21. Cultural - educational and scientific societies.112

22 Periodicals.133

23. Libraries and public readings.145

Chapter III. Artistic institutions.

3.1. Cinematography.159

3.2 Theatres, concerts, circuses.168

3.3. Museums and exhibitions visual arts.181

Recommended list of dissertations

  • Food issue in the Middle Volga region during the First World War 2009, candidate of historical sciences Golubinov, Yaroslav Anatolyevich

  • The attitude of the population of the Volga region to the First World War: Based on the materials of the periodical press of 1914-1917. 2006, candidate of historical sciences Tereshina, Evgenia Pavlovna

  • The artistic intelligentsia of St. Petersburg - Petrograd and the beginning of the First World War: July 1914 - May 1915 2008, candidate of historical sciences Tyukhina, Lyudmila Gennadievna

  • Zemstvo and power in Russia, 1890 - February 1917: Based on the materials of the Samara province 2000, Candidate of Historical Sciences Chirkov, Mikhail Sergeevich

  • Russian provincial intelligentsia in 1907-1914: social structure and activity: on the materials of the Samara province 2007, candidate of historical sciences Krivopalova, Natalia Yurievna

Introduction to the thesis (part of the abstract) on the topic "Culture of the Middle Volga during the First World War, 1914 - early 1918: Based on materials from the Samara and Simbirsk provinces"

Relevance of the research topic.

On the present stage development national culture established worldview stereotypes, spiritual values, mentality of society are changing. Domestic culture is influenced by new socio-economic and political conditions, which cannot but affect the development and content of its individual areas. The problems faced by society in the process of its development contribute to the growth of interests: its past, reassessment of events in historical retrospect. One of such periods in the history of Russia is the period of the First World War with subsequent revolutions, which introduced serious and sometimes fundamental changes in the development of certain areas of culture, in particular in the Middle Volga region.

The First World War led to changes in the socio-political, socio-economic nature, the psychology of society. Philosophical and historical understanding of the role of war in the development of culture, the impact on its state will help to find out how extreme conditions determine the decline or flourishing of culture, the deformation of cultural spheres in a different quality, can the traditional mechanisms of culture support cultural principles in society? The problem of the revival of charity, which is part of the spiritual culture of the society, becomes relevant at this historical period of time. The lessons learned from the analysis of these problems will enable modern society to preserve the best cultural traditions in a socially - political, economic and ideological upheavals.

The chronological framework of the study covers the period from the beginning of 1914 to the spring of 1918. It includes the peaceful pre-war months of 1914, the years of the First World War and the revolution of 1917. This stage was accompanied by socio-political, economic, socio-ideological upheavals that left their mark on the emotional, worldview, intellectual life of society, formed new moral and aesthetic ideals that influenced on the development of various spheres of culture The selected >ronological period allows us to trace the dynamics of the development and transformation of culture under the influence of epoch-making historical events.

The territorial scope of the study covers two provinces of the Middle Volga region, Samara and Simbirsk, which constituted the region Russian state, characterized by common geographical conditions, similarity of economic and socio-cultural features. In a number of cases, for comparison, materials were used from the central Moscow and Petrograd provinces, neighboring to the Middle Volga, Penza province, materials of all-Russian significance, which make it possible to clarify the picture of the development of regional culture against the background of all-Russian

The degree of knowledge of the problem.

In domestic and foreign historiography, there is a huge number of studies on military, economic, social, political history, history international relations the period of the First World War, the history of the culture of the Silver Age However, only in the last decade, scientists have realized the need to analyze the entire range of deformations in the development of Russian wartime culture, identify the reaction of culture to these deformations and determine the degree of influence of war on the pace and nature of the development of culture, in general, and its individual aspects and directions, in particular. This feature determined the thematic rather than chronological approach to the analysis of historiographical writings on the topic of the dissertation.

All literature related directly or indirectly to the topic of the dissertation research can be divided into four groups. Certain aspects of the development of culture during the First World War on an all-Russian scale in the last decade have been of interest to foreign and domestic researchers. These works constitute the first group of literature of the historiographic review.

The impact of the war on the patriotic traditions of Russian society is reflected in a number of articles by F.Kh Yan, EU. Senyavsky, AS. Fedotova, B. Khzlpman1

In these works, researchers consider the problem of the impact of the war on the patriotic mood of Russian society.

1 Jan H.F. Patriotic traditions in Russian culture during World War I // Sat. articles of the Russian Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg. Fund them. M.V. Lomonosov. SPb., 1993. S. 184; Jan H.F. Russian workers, patriotism and the First World War // Workers and intelligentsia of Russia in the era of reforms and revolutions. 1861-February 1917. St. Petersburg: Publishing House of the Russian-Baltic Information Center BLITs, 1997. P. 640; Fedotov A.S. The First World War in Russian literary and artistic almanacs and collections (1914-1916) // Russian culture in the conditions of foreign invasions and wars of the 10th-early 20th century. Sat. scientific papers. M., 1990. Issue. 2. S. 293; Senyavskaya EU. "The image of the enemy" in the minds of the participants in the First World War // Russia and Europe in the ХХ-ХХ centuries. Problems of mutual perception of peoples, societies, cultures. Sat. scientific works. M.: Izd-vo IRI RAN, 1996. S. 75-85; Kheyapman B. The First World War in popular print literature // Russia and the First World War. (Materials of the international scientific colloquium). St. Petersburg branch of the Institute of Russian History of the Russian Academy of Sciences. S.-P.: Publishing House Dmitry Bulann, 1999. S. 303-314. in a ludicrous or satirically terrifying light, and of Russia and its allies as valiant defenders of the fatherland, Hubertus Jahn in these publications notes the evolution in the patriotic moods of Russian society during the First World War, in its initial period associated with foreign policy events, and from the end of 1916 years with domestic political.

The development of cinematography, including during the First World War, was reflected in the monographs of R. Sobolev, E. Teplitz, V. Rosolovskaya, B. S. Likhachev, “History of Soviet Cinema. 1917-1967.1

B. S. Likhachev in his work “The History of Cinema in Russia” explores the process of the formation of cinema in Rossha in the pre-war period, analyzes the repertoire of Russian cinemas, film factories, and the work of leading film actors. The author emphasizes that it was only in the last pre-war years that Russian cinematography began to develop independent film plots, and productions of works by Russian classics appeared.

R. Sobolev in the book “People and Films of Russian Pre-Revolutionary Cinema” notes that it was during the First World War that Russian cinema art flourished due to the absence of foreign competition, the repertoire of cinematographers changed

The works of I. V. Kuptsova, N. I. Smirnov, G. I. Ilyina, and I. S. Smirnov, the collection "Intelligentsia and the Russian

1 Sobolev R. People and films of Russian pre-revolutionary cinema. M.: Art, 1961.; Teplits E. History of cinema art. 1895-1927. Moscow: Progress, 1968.; History of Soviet cinema. 1917-1967 in 4 volumes. M .: Art, 1965. T. 1 .; Rosolovskaya V. Russian cinematography in 1917. Materials for history. M.-L.: Art, 1937.; Likhachev KS. History of cinema in Russia. (1896-1926) M.-L: Academy Publishing House, 1927. Part 1. society at the beginning of the 20th century. 1

The authors of these studies differ in the definition of the concept of "intelligentsia", or do not clearly define it at all, as, for example, N.N. Smirnov. In this article, he concludes that during the war, among the intelligentsia, thoughts appeared about their uselessness, worthlessness, which was not characteristic of it in the pre-war period, the intelligentsia gradually became politicized.

I. V. Kuptsova in the publication “When the guns fire, are the muses silent?” studied the pattern of behavior of the artistic intelligentsia during the First World War from the spiritual patriotic impulse of the first months of the war, through the disappointment of 1915-1916, to a complete revision of the value system

The collective work "The Intelligentsia and Russian Society at the Beginning of the 20th Century" did not touch upon the chronological period of the First World War, however, the influence of the intelligentsia on Russian society in the last decade before the war, the circle of its values ​​was studied.

Some aspects charitable activities during the First World War, developed in the studies of V Ilyinsky, AN Kurtsev, B. Getrell.2

1 Kuptsova IV. When the guns fire, are the muses silent? (Artistic intelligentsia during the First World War) // Clio (St. Petersburg) 1997. No. 1. P. 107; Smirnov KN. War and the Russian intelligentsia // Russia and the First World War.S. 257-270; Ilyina G.I. Artistic intelligentsia in social structure revolutionary Russia // Petrograd intelligentsia in 1917. L,

1990. S. 35-36; Smirnov I.S. From the history of the construction of socialist culture in the first period of Soviet power. (October 1917 - summer 1918). M.: State publishing house of political literature, 1952.; The intelligentsia and Russian society at the beginning of the 20th century, St. Petersburg, 1996.

3 Ilyinsky V. Charitable tokens of the First World War // Russian culture beyond borders. Information collection. M: RSL Publishing House, 1997.; Kurtsev A.N. Refugee // Russia and the First World War.S. 129-146; Getrell K. Refugee and the problem of sex during the First World War // Russia and the First World War.S. 112-128.

Ilyinsky in his work "Charity Tokens of the First World War" comes to the conclusion that the war caused a surge in private charitable giving and various new forms of collecting charitable assistance, one of which was the sale of charitable tokens, studied in the article.

These reports of the Academy of Sciences of Kurtsev and B. Gegrell are devoted to the problem of refugees caused by the First World War and the related problem of providing assistance to refugees by the state and private individuals. However, the authors focus on the study of the problems faced by refugees during the resettlement, and the issues of providing assistance to them have not received any coverage.

The monographs and articles of the AF are devoted to the problems associated with the development of printing in Russia and the Middle Volga region. Berezhny, IV. Wolfson, G.V. Mikheeva, AZ. Okorokova, NF. Rszhatushina.1

In particular, in the work of IV. Wolfson provides valuable information about the number of printing houses in the provinces of the Russian Empire on the eve of the First World War, and in monographs AZ. Okorokov and NF. ROkatupshna gives statistics of periodicals closed in late 1917 - early 1918 by decision of the Soviet authorities.

It should be noted that the problem of the development of national culture during the First World War in the works cited is considered fragmentary, not comprehensively.

1 Coastal AF. Russian legal press during the First World War. L: Leningrad University Press, 1975.; Wolfson I.V. newspaper world. SPb., 1912.; Mikheeva G.V. "White Seal". (White Guard periodicals as an object of bibliography in 1918-1922)// Bibliography. 1992. No. 3-4. pp. 109-115.; Okorokov A.Z. October and the collapse of the Russian bourgeois press. M.: Thought, 1970.; Rokatushi NF. Samara Commissariat for Press Affairs (1917 - 1918) // Great October and the revolutionary movement in the Middle Volga region. Interuniversity collection. Kuibyshev, 1978.

Some areas of culture of the Middle Volga region, Samara and Skmbirsk provinces were reflected in the works of local historians and local historians, which make up the second group of literature on the topic of the dissertation. These works are of interest from the point of view of the study of the problem in the framework of local studies.

Separate aspects of the activities of a number of scientific, educational societies of the Samara province, the local intelligentsia during the First World War were developed in the studies of A.A. Budanova, A.N. Traubov, and KJ. Nayakshina, T.R Krainova, EI. Morgunova, G.N. Dyatgova.1

In this article, A Tregubov and A Budanova studied the formation and activities of the Samara Provincial Archival Commission, the composition of its participants, among which were government officials, merchants, teachers. The authors note that, despite the relatively late, in comparison with other provinces, the formation of the Commission, its leaders, even in wartime conditions, were able to realize part of the tasks assigned.

The work of T.R Krainova presents an overview of the work of the Samara Archaeological Society and the composition of its members, who were the leading part of the Samara intellectual public. However, the authors of these articles do not make generalizations about the role of the intelligentsia in the life of the province and the level of development of scientific institutions in the province, the interest in them from the society and their influence on the level of cultural life in

1 Treguboe A., Budanova A. House of Khovansky // Samara Week. 1999. No. 22. P. 13; Krainova T.V. Samara Archaeological Society (1916-1919) // Local History Notes. Issue. VII Samara, 1995. S. 134-135; Nayakshin K.Ya. Essays on the history of the Kuibyshev region, the former Samara province. Kuibyshev, 1962.; Morgunova E.I. Zemstvo intelligentsia in the Samara province in 1917-1918 // Regional Studies Notes. Issue. VIL Samara, 1995, pp. 127-129; Dyatlova G. Cultural life of Samara and zemstvo in 1917 // Samara zemstvo collection. Issue. 3rd. 1996. S. 32-34. edge.

EI Morgunova in the article "Zemstvo intelligentsia in the Samara province in 1917-1918" and G.N. Dyatlova in the publication "Cultural life and Zemstvo of Samara in 1917" conclude that the zemstvo intelligentsia of the Samara province in the development of education in rural areas terrain.

An extremely small number of works cover the history of the emergence and themes of the work of art institutions in the Samara province. These include articles and monographs by NI Volodin, AA Budanova, EM Tsretova.1

Of particular interest is the book by VI Vozhshchina "From the history of the artistic life of the city of Kuibyshev. The end of the 19th - the beginning of the 20th century." It is interesting because it gives a complete picture of the history of artistic life in Samara in the specified period of time. The work shows portraits of people who took an active part in the artistic life of the city, and actually created it. The book is provided with reference material on the chronology and number of art exhibitions; held on the territory of the Volga region, including during the First World War

AA Budanova in the article "The development of cinematography in the Samara province in 1898 - 1917" reveals the chronological axis - the statistical history of the creation of cinema on the territory of the Samara province in the specified period of time. However, there is no information about the repertoire of Samara cinemas in the work.

1 Budanova A. A. The development of cinematography in the Samara province in 1898-1917 // Regional Studies Notes. Issue. VIII Samara, 1996. S. 130-132; Volodin V.I. K. P. Golovkin and Samara artists // Konstantin Pavlovich Golovkin. Samara, 1992, pp. 46-51; He is. From the history of the artistic life of the city of Kuibyshev Late XIX - early XX century. M.: Publishing house of the Soviet artist, 1979.; Tsvetova E.M. Reborn Olympus. Samara, 1991.

In the work of EM Tsvetova, based on the study of the activities of the musical section of the Samara Society of People's Universities and the People's Conservatory, the opinion about the absence of musical culture in the Samara province at the beginning of the 20th century is refuted.

Unfortunately, in these works only particular issues of the history of the region are studied, a holistic picture of the development of its cultural life is not presented, the features of the history of certain areas of culture during the First World War are not highlighted.

The background of events on which culture developed during the First World War, on an empire scale and within the framework of the Middle Volga region, allows us to recreate works on the socio-economic, political history, cultural history of Russia from the beginning of the 20th century to 19171, studies on the socio- economic and political history of the Middle Volga2 . The author of the dissertation included them in the third

1 History of Russian art M.: Publishing House of the Academy of Sciences, 1961. T.XX; Shulgin B.C., Koshmai JIB., ZyuzniaMR. Culture of Russia IX-XX centuries. Moscow: Prostor, 1996.; Russia and the First World War. S.-P., 1999.; Biniggok V.I. Kaminsky JLC. Public nutrition and public health (during the war of 1914-1918). With a preface by N.A. Semashko. M. -JL: State. Ed. Dep. Military Lit, 1929.; Kerzhentsev V. Culture and Soviet power. M .: Publishing house of the Central Executive Committee of Workers, Peasants and Soldiers' deputies, 1919 .; Lobacheva G.V. The collapse of the monarchical ideal in social psychology on the eve of February 1917 // Problems of philosophy, history, culture Interuniversity scientific collection. Saratov: Publishing House of SSTU, 1993.

2 History of the Samara Volga region from ancient times to the present day. The second half of the 19th - early 20th centuries, Moscow: Nauka, 2000; Culture of the Samara province of the period of imperialism Methodological recommendations for students - trainees and teachers - trainees. Kuibyshev: Publishing house of KSPI im. V.V. Kuibysheva, 1986.; Nayakshin K.Ya. Essays on the history of the Kuibyshev region, the former Samara province. Kuibyshev, 1962.; Land of Samara. Essays on the history of the Samara region from ancient times to the victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution. Kuibyshev, 1990.; Monuments of history and culture of the Kuibyshev region. Kuibyshev, 1984.; Samara-Kuibyshev: Chronicle of events. Kuibyshev, 1987.; Samara Chronicle: Essays on the history of the Samfsky region from ancient times to the beginning of the 20th century: In 3 books / Ed. PS. Kabytova, LV. Khramkova Book Two. Samara: Samara University Publishing House, 1993.; Lobanova NG. Stavropol and Stavropol district of the 18th - 20th centuries. Collection of documents and articles. Togliatti, 1998. group of literature on the topic of dissertation research.

In the collection "History of Russian Art", the work of VS. Shulgina, LV Koshman, MR. Zyuzin "Culture of Russia in the 9th - 20th centuries" characterizes the development of Russian culture during the "Silver Age", such areas as musical creativity, fine arts. The second of these works provides an overview of the management system of cultural institutions in Russia, including, during the First World War, a brief description of the changes that have taken place in the management of culture in connection with the coming to power of the Provisional and Soviet governments.

Monograph KY. Nayakshina "Essays on the history of the Kuibyshev region, the former Samara province", along with economic, social and political history, highlights the issue of the management structure, including cultural institutions, on the territory of the Samara province, in particular during the First World War and the revolution of 1917

The collective works “Samara Chronicle”, “Samara Land”, History of the Samara GVolzhye from ancient times to the present day” presents the socio-economic and political history of the Samara province during the First World War, which allows us to draw conclusions about the relationship between the level of cultural development of the province and the level of household living conditions.

A number of areas of charitable activities, artistic life, and the history of architecture in Russia have been developed in dissertations of the last decade, complementing the picture of the general historical background of the Russian Empire at the beginning of the 20th century. They constitute the fourth group of literature on the topic of this study.1

In dissertations on artistic culture, the events of cultural life are analyzed only within the framework of the culture of the Silver Age, mainly before 1914, and the features of the development of culture during the First World War are not analyzed, with the exception of the indicated studies of the DR. Khairutdinova on the culture of Kazan and T. I. Troshina on the history of Arkhangelsk In this dissertation, T. B. Kononova traces the process of managing charity and the principles of charitable activities on an all-Russian scale, but the question of society's attitude to charity, which is one of the aspects of spiritual culture A in the work, is omitted MV Firsova and the process of evolution of charity is studied

Concluding the isgoriographic review, it should be noted that in

1 Amirkhamov R. U. Problems of the development of Russian culture in the Tatar periodical press (1905-1917): Diss. cand. no. Sciences. Kazan, 1997., Belyaeva E.Yu. Samara everyday culture of the second half of the 19th - early 20th centuries: Diss. cand. no. Sciences. Samara, 1995.; Berdova O.V. Cultural life of Kostroma and Kostroma province Based on materials from the local periodical press of the late XIX - early XX centuries: Diss. cand. no. Sciences M, 1998.; Gorbunova E.Yu. Charity in Russia and its role in social and cultural life at the turn of the XIX - XX centuries: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. M,

1996.; Kononova T.K. The history of Russian charity and its connection with state structures of social security: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. M.,

1997.; Kiryanova KV. Culture of the provincial cities of the Middle Volga region in the late XIX - early XX centuries: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. Penza, 1998.; Sleptsova E.P. Cultural life of the Russian province of the late XIX - early XX century (on the example of the Oryol province): Diss. cand. no. Sciences. Bryansk, 1996.; Tarasova N.I. Cultural and artistic life of the Russian provinces in the late XX - early XX century (based on the materials of the periodical press of the Central Black Earth Region): Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. S.-Pb., 1998.; Troshina T.I. Arkhangelsk during the First World War: (economic and socio-cultural processes). Abstract cand. ist. Sciences. Arkhangelsk, 2000.; Firsov M.V. Social work in Russia: theory, history, social practice: Diss. no dr. Sciences. M. „ 1997.; Khairutdiyova DR. Cultural life of Kazan during the First World War: Diss. cand. no. Sciences. Kazan, 1997.; Shchebenkov V.G. Culture of Russian Primorye (60s of the XIX century - February 1917): Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. L, 1966.; Yastrebov AE. Cultural image of the provincial provincial city of the Central Chernozem region in the late XX - early XX century (Orel, Kursk, Voronezh): Diss. cand. no. Sciences. Orel, 1999. Historiography on the topic of dissertation research does not contain works in which a comprehensive study of the culture of the period of the First World War would be carried out, both on an all-Russian scale and within the framework of the Middle Volga provinces.

The object of the dissertation research is the spiritual culture of society during the First World War

The subject of the dissertation research is the activities of divine-creating, scientific, cultural and educational societies, public libraries, the repertoire of cinema, theaters, concert programs, the work of press organs, museums, exhibitions of fine arts

The aim of the work is to study the culture of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War and the features of its development during the war years.

To study the management structure, economic base, principles of charitable activities and the development of philanthropy during the First World War,

To analyze the theatrical and cinematic repertoire, concert activities, the work of museums and exhibitions of fine arts in the territory of the Middle Volga provinces in the period 1914-1918;

Find out the directions and specifics of the activities of cultural, educational and scientific institutions and press organs and the dynamics of their numbers during the war years

Methodology and basic concepts of the study, The work uses traditional methods scientific knowledge, namely: comparative - comparative, problem - chronological, historical - logical, kyutorge allow you to work with various kinds of sources, seeking to recreate the most objective picture of the era under study and the processes of cultural life.

Due to the fact that the authors of the dissertation use a number of concepts in the study of the problems posed, which have an ambiguous interpretation in modern historical, philological, philosophical literature, she considered it necessary, without going into discussion, to explain what meaning of one or another terminological concept will be accepted in this work.

Under the term "culture", which is the main concept in this study, according to A. Ya. Flier, the author means a systemic complex of specific and more or less normalized ways and forms of social integration, organization, regulation, cognition, communication, evaluation, inherent in any stable community of people. self-identification, figurative reflections and interpretations; mechanisms of socialization of the individual, having the ability for social and historical self-reproduction, adaptive variability and progressive self-development along the path of structural and functional complication. This complex is objectified in a habitat created by people, consisting of symbolic products (knowledge, ideas, and so on), evaluation criteria, a set of social “conventions”, technologies for the existence of activities, produced material objects.1 The greatest interest, from the point of view of this study, for the author will represent a functional feature of culture as a system, consisting in

1 Flier A.Ya. Culture // Culturology. XX century. Dictionary. St. Petersburg: Universitetskaya kniga, 1997, pp. 203-209. the ability to self-renewal, the constant generation of new forms and ways of satisfying the interests and needs of people, adapting culture to the changing conditions of being, generated by the creative initiative of individuals or the logic of technology development in a specialized field of activity, and the communicative and symbolic nature of culture, which, from the point of view of Yu .M Lotman, most important for the study of spiritual culture1

Under the spiritual culture, the study of which the author of the study focuses on, is understood the sphere of human activity, covering various aspects of the spiritual life of a person and society, including forms of social consciousness (political, legal, moral, aesthetic, and so on) and their embodiment in the monuments of human activities.2

The concepts of "culture of behavior" and "social culture" are closely related. The sociological concept of "social culture" is used by the author, according to the definition of KM Khzrunzheiko, as a designation of a system of ideas about the world, values, norms and rules of behavior common to people associated with a certain way of life and serving to streamline experience and social regulation within the whole society and social groups3 Under the culture of behavior, the author understands the process of transferring the internal moral attitudes of the individual into the external sphere of activity.4

Exploring within the framework of social culture and culture of behavior

1 Lotman Yu.M. Conversations about Russian culture. SPb.: Art - SPB., 1994. S. 5-6.

3 Culturology Brief Dictionary. Ed. KF.Kefeli. Ed. 2nd. St. Petersburg: LLP Petropolis, 1995. P. 17.

3 Khorunzhenko K.M. Culturology encyclopedic Dictionary. 2550 dictionary entries. Rostov-on-Don.: Phoenix, 1997. S. 236.

4 Culturology Brief Dictionary. .FROM. 17. development of charity and a system of public charity, the author agrees with the opinion of T.B. Kononova about; that the concept of “state charity” and “public charity” for the period under study were synonymous.1 However, the author is closer to the definition of public charity given by M.V. , was synonymous with charity.2

The concept that characterizes the state of public consciousness, mentality, is understood by the author of the dissertation as a certain way of thinking, a certain attitude towards the perception of certain phenomena, a certain degree of commitment to food, a certain openness to the perception of external influences, a “national character”. The concept of "spiritual values" used by the author in the work is interconnected with this concept. It is used to denote the positive or negative significance for society of any ideas, principles, norms of relationships3

The concepts ((intellectual part of society" and "intelligentsia" in relation to the period of the beginning of the 20th century, including the First World War, are interconnected and, from the author's point of view, are synonyms. With these terms, the author of the study will denote that part of the Middle Volga society during the First World War, which was actively interested in science, art;

1 Kononova T.B. The history of Russian charity and its relationship with state social security structures: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences. M., 1997. S. 25.

3 Firsov M.V. Social work in Russia: theory, history, social practice: Diss. Dr. ist. Sciences. M., 1997. S. 186.

3 Philosophy, political science, economics. Dictionary. Yaroslavl: Academy of Development, 1997. S. 187. about

The source base of research on the topic of the dissertation is extensive, represented by various types of sources, among which are materials from 7 funds of the State Archives Russian Federation(GARF), 6 funds of the Russian State Archive of Literature and Art (RGALI), 15 funds of the State Archive of the Samara Region (SASO), 4 funds of the State Archive of the Ulyanovsk Region (SAUO), 45 units of published sources, 40 titles of periodicals These sources were counted by the author can be divided into the following groups

1. Legislative and regulatory acts and materials of official office work from the archival funds of the State Archives of the Russian Federation, the State Archives of the Samara Region, the State Archives of the Ulyanovsk Region.

1.1. Materials of the central authorities stored in 7 funds of the central archive (GARF. F. 1787 - Provisional Office of the Special Commission for the Liquidation of the Main Directorate for the Press; F. 1803 - State Committee on public education under the Ministry of Education of the Provisional Government, F. 1813 - Committee for the charity of Lesh children who died in the line of duty; F.2315 - Ministry of Education of the Provisional Government (1915 - 1917), F6787 - Ministry of State Charity of the Provisional Government (1917-1918); F.6834 - Special Conference on Arts under the Commissioner of the Provisional Government over the former Ministry of the Court and Allotments (1911 - 1917); F.9505 - Central Committee for Social and Political Education).

These funds contain materials characterizing the management structure of art institutions under the tsarist and

Provisional governments (F. - 1803, F. 2315, F. - 6834), the structure of management of the press (F. - 1787) and charity (F. - 1803, F-2315, F. - 6787) on the territory of Russia, materials that allow to judge the influence of the Provisional Government on the ideology of society (F-9505), revealing the principles of charitable activities on the part of the state (F.-6787), containing information on the financing of philanthropic activities by central and local authorities (F. 1803, F-1813, F. - 2315).

1.2 Materials of local authorities stored in 7 funds of local archives (GAOO: F. 1 - Samara provincial government; F. 106 - Samara Teachers' Institute; f. 153 - Samara City Administration; F. 170 Samara City Duma; F. 177 - Samara Provincial Committee of Guardianship of People's Sobriety, F. 178 - Samara City Committee of Guardianship of People's Sobriety, GAUO: F.99 - Director of Public Schools of the Simbirsk Province).

Documents from local archives make it possible to draw conclusions about the structure of local governing bodies of art institutions and institutions engaged in charitable activities (SAOO: F-1, F.-153, F-170), characterize the directions and results of the activities of a number of charitable and cultural and educational institutions (TACQ f- 106, F- 177, GAUO F.- 99). Based on these materials, we can talk about the role of local authorities in the development of culture on the territory of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War.

1.3. Record keeping materials of local charitable and artistic, cultural, educational and scientific institutions and societies:

Located in 6 funds of the central archives (RGALI F.2341

Collection of materials from the Leningrad House of Stage Veterans Lebedev Nikolai Dmitrievich; F.2492 - Theatrical agency YEN Rassokhina; F.2620 - Collection of archives of figures of the theater artist Glazunova Yulia Sergeevna; F.2660 - Collection of archives of theater workers Lebedev ND; F.2663 - Mhaas Mark Izrailevich; F.2761-Samarin - Elsky Joseph Konstantinovich);

Located in 13 funds of local archives (GASO: F.416 - Samara Pedagogical Commission; F.429 - Samara Archaeological Society; F.518 - Samara Provincial Scientific Archival Commission; F.674 - Samara Alexander Public Library; F. - Samara Zemsky Committee Union for Assistance to Sick and Wounded Soldiers; F.749 - Samara United Latvian-Lithuanian Committee for Assistance to Refugees; F.751 - Board of the Samara Society of Reasonable Entertainment, F.796 - Society for Promoting the Opening of Higher Educational Institutions in Samara, F.- R.558 - Samara Scientific Local History Society; F.-R.780 - Samara Provincial Archival Bureau; GAUO: F.36 - Simbirsk Provincial Branch of the Committee of Grand Duchess Tatyana Nikolaevna for Assistance to Victims of Military Disasters; F145 - Simbirsk Local Committee of the All-Russian Union Cities to help sick and wounded soldiers; F.732 - Simbirsk Provincial Scientific Archival Commission).

Melon archival sources characterize during the First World War the repertoire of the city Samara theater (RGALI F-2341, F.-2620, F-2660, F-2663, F.-2761), the repertoire of the Samara miniature theater "Olympus" (RGALI-F - 2492), give an idea of ​​the creation, work, composition of the participants in scientific institutions operating on the territory of the provinces during the First World War (GASO: F. - 429, F. -518, F.-R. - 558, F.-R .- 780, GAUO: F.- 732), contain materials on the activities of local cultural and educational institutions, their role in the life of the Middle Volga society, solve the intelligentsia in the cultural life of the Middle Volga provinces (GAOO: F- 674, F- 751 , F- 796), information about the activities of local charitable institutions and societies engaged in charitable activities and the results of this activity (TACO: F.- 416, F.- 689, F- 749, GAUO: F.- 36, F- 145). Esh sources allow us to trace the evolution of the development of culture during the First World War and the features of the development of its various directions in the territory of the Middle Volga provinces.

2. Documentary - statistical sources.

2.1. Statistical reference books: Movement of prices for consumer goods during the war (Samara, 1918), Zemstvo-statistical reference book for the Samara province for 1914 (Samara, 1914), Kudryavtsev N.P. People's libraries - reading rooms (zemstvo ^ volost and private circles) in villages and paid in the cities of the Simbirsk province in 1900-1901 (Simbirsk, 1904), Review of the Samara province for 1913 (Samara, 1915), Review of the Samara province for 1914 (Samara, 1916), Review of the Simbirsk province for 1914 ( Simbirsk, 1915), Commemorative book of the Samara province for 1915 (Samara, 1915), Samara provincial zemstvo. Bulletins of the information bureau (Samara, 1914), Collection of statistical information about institutions for closed charity for children, including the orphan population (Pg., 1916), Otravochnaya book and address - calendar of the Simbirsk province for 1914 (Oshbirsk, 1914), Otravochnaya book and address - calendar of the Simbirsk province for 1916 (Simbirsk, 1916), Statistical yearbook for the Simbirsk province for 1914 (Simbirsk, 1916), Statistical yearbook for the Simbirsk province for 1915 (Simbirsk, 1917).

2.2. Reports of charitable, scientific, educational societies on their activities: Gurekich L.A. Review of the activities of city guardians of the poor for the first year of the war 1914-1915 (Pg., 1915), Monetary report of the Bugulma district zemstvo of the Samara province for 1914 (Bugulma, 1915), Zhbankov DN Short review the activities of mutual aid societies for teaching and teaching (S.-P5., 1900), the personnel of the Committee of Her Imperial Majesty Princess Tatyana Nikolaevna for providing temporary assistance to victims of hostilities and its local branches (Pg., 1916), Nikolaev NF. Historical outline activities of the Samara Regional Committee for Assistance to Sick and Wounded Soldiers for the period up to January 1, 1916 (Samara, 1917), Report of the Head of the Department of the Chancellery of the Council of Ministers of the NC Di - Segni, sent by the Chairman of the Romanov Committee Gmomzi, on the results of an inspection of some orphanages receiving benefits from the committee of orphanages (Pg ., 1915), Report on the activities of the Society for Assistance to Students' Children of Employees and Former Employees on the Samara-Zlatoust railway, as well as those who are dependent on their relatives serving students for 1914 (Samara, 1915), Report on summer kindergartens of the Samara Society of People's Universities in 1913 (Samara, 1913), Report on the income, expenditure and balance of funds of the Samara Joint Committee from January 1 to May 1, 1916 (Samara, 1916), Report of the Society for the Mutual Aid of Students and Teachers of the Samara Province for 1913-1914 (Samara, 1914), Okhgovich AP Proceedings of the Samara Physics and Mathematics Circle (Samara, 1917), Uchenyu Zapiski Samara University (Samara, 1918).

2.3. Collections of legislative acts: Cultural construction in the USSR. 1917-1927. Development of a unified state policy in the field of culture Documents and materials (M, 1989), Victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution in the Samara province.

Documents and materials (Kuibyshev, 1957), Russia. Laws and regulations. Temporary regulation on military censorship (Pg., 1914), Collection of guiding circulars of the military censorship commission at the headquarters of the Kazan military district (Kazan, 1915), Proceedings of the congress for public charity convened by the Ministry of Internal Affairs on May 11-16, 1914 (Pg., 1914).

Documentary - statistical sources were subjected to a critical study by the author, which allows us to give them the following characteristics.

Statistical reference books contain information about the dynamics of growth in prices for food and consumer goods during the First World War. Their comparison with figures characterizing financial and in-kind charitable assistance to those in need allows us to draw conclusions about the weight of this activity. Statistical yearbooks and commemorative books provide information on the number of charitable institutions in the Middle Volga provinces and the change in their number during the First World War. The same sources provide some information on the number of cultural and educational institutions in the Samara and Oshbirsk provinces.

Reports of charitable, scientific, enlightenment societies on their activities include information about material base of these associations, the composition of their members, directions and principles of work, allow, with a critical comparison between themselves and with other types of sources, to draw conclusions about the direction of charitable and cultural and educational activities on the territory of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War, the level of development of a number of areas of culture , to study the trends in the evolution of charitable activities, the work of educational associations on the territory of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War, to find out the attitude of the society of these provinces to charity, the need of society for education and enlightenment.

Collections of legislative acts characterize the attitude of the authorities to various manifestations of public consciousness, the desire of the authorities to influence society and the desired result of this impact.

3. Materials of the periodical press.

3.1. All-Russian art publications: “Art” (Pg.), “Art. Journal of Theatre, Literature and Painting” (M), “Art and Life. Artistic and Pedagogical Journal "(Pg.), "Russian Illustration" (M), "Album of War Heroes" (M), "Bulletin of Cinematography" (M), "Art News" (Saratov), ​​"Scenes Theater Weekly" (M ), "Almanac" (M), " Great War"(M), "Tskhshetar culture" (M).

The listed publications contain cartoons, satirical notes, photographs from the theater of operations, the repertoire of Russian film companies, public responses to theatrical and cinematographic production. This material allows, in its critical evaluation and comparison with other types of sources, to draw conclusions about the impact of war on the consciousness of society, to highlight the features of the emerging mass consciousness, ways of its influence on culture, ways of government influence on the consciousness of society.

3.2. General information regional publications: City Bulletin (Samara), Voice of Samara (Samara), Volzhskoe Slovo (Samara), Volga Day (Samara), News of the Day (Samara), Samara Provincial Gazette ( Samara), “Morning of Syzran” (Syzran), “Syzran Rumor”, “Odervdzhiy Courier”, “Simbirsk Gubernskie Vedomosti”.

The materials printed in the periodicals recreate a vivid picture of the era against which the culture of the Middle Volga provinces developed, and with regional features. The same publications contain information on legislative orders of the government related to the problems under study, information on cultural, educational, scientific, charitable societies and organizations, statistical information on the number of refugees, on the amounts of assistance provided to them, appeals from charitable organizations to society, responses to theatrical performances and concert performances, messages about cultural and entertainment programs presented on the territory of any settlement

3.3. Publications of societies and institutions "People's Life" (Samara), "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities" (Samara), "Proletariat and Education" (Samara), "G | zizrenie and charity in Russia" (Pg.), "Bulletin of the Penza Zemstvo "(Penza)," Simbirsk host "(Simbirsk)," Zemskaya life "(Samara)," Free teaching) (0> lie), "Samara diocesan statements" (SamaraX "Simbirsk diocesan statements" (Simbirsk).

These sources include information about the work of charitable, cultural and educational, scientific societies, zemstvo institutions, church departments, published in the periodical press in the form of reports on the work done, which contain statistical information. This type of sources supplements the information of published documentary-statistical sources.

3.4. Special publications of a political orientation: “News of the Buguruslan Committee of Non-native Power”, “News of the Buzuluk Uyezd Executive Committee of the Council of Workers' and Peasants' Deputies”, “News of the Samara Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies”, “News of the Syzran Soviet of Workers' and Soldiers' Deputies”, “Commune ".

Publications of a political orientation, when critically selecting information and comparing it with information from other types of sources, give an idea of ​​the ideological principles of a particular political system in relation to culture, contain information about the development of charity and culture in the Middle Volga provinces during the period of the Provisional and Soviet governments.

4. Encyclopedias, dictionaries, reference books, contain information about the meaning of the main terminological concepts associated with cultural phenomena, a list of publications of the periodical press of Russia during the First World War1

Scientific novelty of the research

In the dissertation, the author for the first time made an attempt to comprehensively analyze the development of the spiritual culture of the society of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War in its entirety. The evolution of culture is traced during 1914-early 1918. Interrelations between the development of culture and society are revealed.

1 Belyaeva L.N., Zinovieva MK., Nikidyurov MM. Bibliography of Russian periodicals. 1901-1916. Under the general editorship. V.M. Barashnkova, S.D. Golubeva, N.Ya. Morachevsky. L .: Publishing house of GPB im. ME Saltykov - Shchedrin, 1958. T. 1 .; 1959. T. 2.; 1960. T. 3.; Berkutov IM. A brief comparative guide to all the museums of the Middle Volga region. Samara, 1930.; Brockhaus F.A., Efron I.A. Encyclopedic Dictionary. Reprint ed. M: Terra, 1992. T. 55.; Culturology. Brief reference book, ed. I.F. Kefeli. Ed. 2nd. St. Petersburg: LLP TK Petropolis, 1995.; Culturology. XX century. Dictionary. St. Petersburg: University book, 1997.; Levashova Z.P., Sinitsyna K.V. Russian military periodical press. 1702-1916. Bibliographic index. M: Publishing House of the Ministry of Culture of the RSFSR. State. Order of Lenin Library of the USSR. IN AND. Lenin Military Department, 1959.; Periodical press of the Middle - Volga region for 1838-1928. Bibliographic reference book. Ed. HELL. Mikhailova Samara: Publishing House of the Middle Volga Commune, 1929.; Khorunzhenko K.M Culturology. Encyclopedic Dictionary. 2550 dictionary entries. Rostov - on - Don: Phoenix Publishing House, 1997. state influence on culture in connection with the outbreak of war, and through culture and on society, culture change under the influence of war and its reflection on public consciousness, the influence of public consciousness on various areas of culture Sherva within the framework of the Middle Volga region, the development of charitable activities during the years of the First World War is considered. The paper analyzes the repertoire of the Middle Volga theaters and cinema. Many sources are introduced into scientific circulation for the first time.

The dissertation is of practical importance, since the conclusions and content of the work can be used in further research on the history of culture during the First World War, for the preparation of lecture courses on the history of the region, special courses and electives on cultural issues.

The structure of the work is determined by the purpose and objectives of the study. The thesis consists of an introduction, three chapters, a conclusion, a list of sources and literature, applications.

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Dissertation conclusion on the topic "Patriotic history", Semenova, Ekaterina Yurievna

The First World War, at least in the period 1914-1916, played a decisive role in the spiritual life of society, forming specific ideological positions and emotional relationships. The main features of the worldview, formed under the influence of the First World War, were: patriotism, fraternal attitude towards the peoples - allies in the war, hostility towards the representatives of the people associated with the state - the enemy during the First World War, compassion, the desire to definitely take part in helping one's neighbor. who suffered from hostilities, from the hardships of wartime, stereotyping of thinking developed under the influence of sources of mass propaganda, the brightness of emotional experiences (for example, hatred, joy, tragedy).

The military theme was reflected in the intellectual and artistic consciousness of society through reading periodicals and temporary publications (newspapers, magazines, brochures, posters), listening to lectures (at folk readings, public lectures), watching artistic spectacles (films, performances, concerts) , the themes and plots of which were related to the war. In periodical and temporary publications, circus and comic performances, satire against Germany and its allies becomes commonplace with the outbreak of the First World War, in the theater and film repertoire there are performances based on the plot of military theme By artistic means with the use of films, posters, and popular prints, the exploits of the Russian and allied armies were affixed.

During the First World War, a specific, mass, intellectual and artistic consciousness of the Middle Volga society was formed. It was characterized by the awareness of the unity of the national community within one or more states, the nation within the framework of one state, several peoples within the framework of military power, persistent empathy, which coexisted with the mood of chauvinism and hatred, the habit of tragedy, craving for entertainment, allowing you to forget about the reality of what is happening.

The intellectual forces of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War acutely felt the need for socially useful activities that would be aimed at educating society, cultural organization of leisure, scientific research , it was necessary during the period of military upheavals to engage in any activity that would benefit society at the present time, or could bring it in a historical perspective, required from the "intellectuals" themselves mental efforts, creative and scientific searches, which were for them the same detente, which was for the rest of society cinema, theater and other spectacles Nlenno during the First World War on the territory of the Middle Volga provinces, mainly on the territory of the Samara province, more than a dozen societies and circles of a scientific and cultural-educational orientation arise, whose activities were aimed both on the members of the associations themselves, and on the general strata of the local society

A number of mechanisms of traditional culture during the First World War were able to mobilize society in new historical conditions. These mechanisms include: periodicals (of which there were 44 in Samara and Simbirsk provinces in 1913, 43 in 1914, and 43 in 1915; 35, in 1916 - 30, in 1917 - 74, at the beginning of 1918 - 112), theaters (which in the territory of the Middle Volga provinces worked only in provincial and county cities, not counting the numerous urban and rural amateur and touring theaters) , cinema (representing cinema - products in three dozen cinemas of the provinces), cultural and educational societies (of which there were 32 by the beginning of the war, and 12 were created on the territory of the Samara province during the war years), charitable institutions (the number of which before the war was about 120 establishments, and during the war years increased by several dozen). These mechanisms of culture adapted their repertoire and their activities to wartime conditions, coordinated them with the aspirations of society in wartime conditions.

Thanks to the traditional mechanisms of culture during the First World War, the Middle Volga society adapted to the extreme conditions of life. Publications of periodicals and newsreels informed the population about events at the front, formed a sense of decisiveness, calmness, confidence in the victorious actions of Russian and allied troops, and a patriotic mood. The activities of charitable societies and organizations sharpened the feeling of solidarity, unity, community in the face of the troubles caused by the war. Cinematographic and theatrical arts, concert performances, fine art exhibitions proved that life goes on even during the war, created the spiritual mood of the society of the Middle Volga provinces through emotional relaxation.

Under the influence of cultural institutions in wartime conditions, a mass culture was formed that covered most of the society of Be constituent parts were cinema - a repertoire that included a variety of genres, among which stood out military chronicle, drama and tragedy, theatrical repertoire, represented by classical and modern plays, vaudeville, farces, concert and circus performances, a culture of social behavior, which was characterized by the perception and dissemination of enlightenment, the participation of society in charitable activities. The role of the intelligentsia in the formation of mass culture was not always decisive, since the institution of social culture and the traditions of charity had their origins in the pre-war era, were associated with the political and economic conditions of the period of the First World War Biggest Influence during the First World War, the intelligentsia of the Middle Volga provinces contributed to the formation of theatrical and educational areas of culture, determining the content and being an active conductor of these areas of culture

The intelligentsia of the Middle Volga provinces sought to maintain cultural traditions at a fairly high level. The proof of such a conclusion is the highly artistic repertoire of the Samara city theater, the literary, musical, educational and educational orientation of the societies that operated on the territory of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War, the periodic organization of exhibitions of works of fine art, the active organizing activities of the participants in the museum circle at the Samara city public museum, topics and dynamics of lectures, cultural and educational activities of the rural intelligentsia.

During the First World War, culture developed more dynamically on the territory of the Samara province. This phenomenon was associated with a number of factors. These included the activities of the Zemstvo, which allocated significant funds for the development of education in the province, favorable conditions for economic development, which contributed to the prosperity of trade, a number of industries, and the well-being of groups of the population employed in these areas of activity. This made it possible to use finances for the development of culture. The role of a number of representatives of the intelligentsia in the development of cultural principles in the territory of the region should also be taken into account.

In the evolution of the culture of the Middle Volga region during the First World War, a number of stages can be traced, which, in the opinion of the author of this study, are limited by certain phonological limits and can be characterized by the following features:

1914-1915 - the rise of the patriotic mood of society, painted in national - chauvinistic shades, a surge in charity, an increase in interest in cinema, the popularity of political satire, the beginning of the formation of wartime mass culture, a high level of politicization of culture;

1916 - early 1917, the flourishing of scientific and cultural and educational activities in the territory of the Middle Volga provinces, the peak of drama in cinema, the deformation of ideas about patriotism, the growth of interest in theatrical art;

Spring - autumn 1917: the maximum freedom and development of culture for the entire period of the war, the search for new creative directions, the beginning of the reorganization of institutions for managing culture and charity, the novelty of plots in artistic culture;

Autumn 1917 - spring 1918: the development of culture at a fairly high level by inertia, by the end of the period, a gradual strengthening of control over the manifestations of culture by the state begins, the weakening of the "degree of mass culture" and the strengthening of tendencies for the manifestation of group culture.

The culture of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War experienced the culmination of its development since the beginning of the 20th century; , which was still going by inertia from the end of 1917 to the spring of 1918, was interrupted, a new stage in the history of culture began, connected, to a large extent, with the activities of the Soviet government

The culture of the Middle Volga provinces during the First World War, including the spiritual culture of society, public consciousness, the events of the war were closely interconnected culture The events of the First World War were the initial link in this system, which gave impetus to the development of manifestations of culture and consciousness of society

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152. Nayakshin K Ya. Essays on the history of the Kuibyshev region, the former Samara province. Kuibyshev. 1962, 622 p.

153. Hams AZ. October and the collapse of the Russian bourgeois press M: Izd-vo Mysl. 1970, -414 p.

154. Monuments of history and culture of the Kuibyshev region. Kuibyshev. 1984, - 315 p.

155. Rokatushin NF. Samara Commissariat for Press Affairs (1917-1918) // Great October and the revolutionary movement in the Middle Volga region. Interuniversity collection. Kuibyshev, 1978, pp. 114-119.

156. Rosolovskaya V Russian cinematography in 1917. Materials for history. M-L.: Art. 1937, 200 pp.

157. Samara chronicle: Essays on the history of the Samara region from ancient times to the beginning of the 20th century: In 3 books. / ed. PS. Kabytova, L. V. Khramkova Samara: Samara University Publishing House. Book. 2nd. 1993, - 190 p.

158. Samara Kuibyshev: Chronicle of events. Kuibyshev. 1987, - 345 p.

159. Senyavskaya EU. "The Image of the Enemy" in the Consciousness of the Participants of the First World War // Russia and Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries. Collection of scientific papers. M: Publishing House of IRIRAN, 1996. S. 75 85.

160. Smirnov I S. From the history of the construction of socialist culture in the first period of Soviet power (October 1917-summer 1918). M: Mrs. Publishing House of Political Literature Izd e 2 - e. 1952, - 322 p.

161. Smirnov N.N. War and the Russian intelligentsia // Russia and the First World War, St. Petersburg, 1999. S. 257 270.

162. Sobolev R. People and films of Russian pre-revolutionary cinema. M: Art. 1961, 175 p.

163. Teplitz E History of cinema art 1895 1927. M: Progress. 1968, - 336 p.

164. Tregubov A, Budanova A House of Khovansky // Samara week. 1999. No. 22. S. 13.

165. Fedotov AS. The First World War in Russian Literary and Artistic Almanacs and Collections (1914-1916) // Russian Culture under the Conditions of Foreign Invasions and Wars in the 10th and early 20th centuries. Collection of scientific papers. M, 1990. Issue. 2nd, - 293 p.

166. Hellman B. The First World War in popular literature // Russians First World War S.-Po., 1999. S. 303 314.

167. Tsvetova EM Revived "Olympus". Samara, 1991. 230 p.

168. Shulgin VS., Koshman L.V., Zyuzina MR. Culture of Russia IX-XX centuries: Textbook. M: Space. 1996, 390 p.

169. Jan HF. Patriotic traditions in the culture of the period of World War I SEB.: Publishing House of the Russian Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg. Fund them. MV. Lomonosov 1993, -184 p.

170. Jan HF. Russian workers, patriotism and the First World War // Workers and intelligentsia of Russia in the era of reforms and revolutions. 1861-February 1917. S.-P: Publishing House of the Russian-Baltic Information Center BLITs 1997, 640 p.1. Dissertations.

171. Amirkhamov R.U. Problems of Russian culture in the Tatar periodical press, 1905-1917: Diss. doc. ist. Sciences 07.SYu.02 - Kazan, 1997 498 p.

172. Belyaeva EY. Samara bioculture of the second half of the 19th-early 20th century Diss. cand. ist. Sciences 07.00.02. Samara, 1995 - 260 p.

173. Berdova O. V. Cultural life of Kostroma and the Kostroma province based on materials from the periodical press of the late 19th and early 20th centuries: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences: 07.00.02. - M, 1998 - 341 p.

174. Gorbunova EY. Charity in Russia and its role in social and cultural life at the turn of the 19th - 20th centuries: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences: 07.00.02 - M, 1996 - 316 p.

175. Kiryanova NV. Culture of the provincial towns of the Middle Volga region in the late 19th early 20th centuries: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences 07.00.02. - Penza, 1998-285 p.

176. Kononova T.B. The history of Russian charity and its relationship with state social security structures: Diss. cand. ist. Sciences: 07.00.02. M, 1997 - 323 p.

177. Sleptsova E P Cultural life of the Russian province of the late XIX - early XX century (On the example of the Oryol province): Diss. cand. ist. Sciences 07.00.02. Bryansk, 1996 - 282 p.

178. Tarasova NI Cultural and artistic life of the Russian provinces in the late XIX-early XX century (based on the materials of the periodical press of the Central Black Earth Region): Diss. cand. ist. Sciences 07.00.02. - S.-Sh, 1998 - 297 p.

179. Troshina T. And Arkhangelsk during the First World War:

180. Economic and socio-cultural processes). Abstract cand. ist. Sciences. Arkhangelsk 2000, - 23 p.

181. Firsov MB. Social work in Russia: theory, history, social practice Diss. d raist. Sciences 07.00.02 - M, 1997 - 323.

182. Khairutdinova DR. Cultural life of Kazan during the First World War Diss. cand. ist. Sciences: 07. SYu. 02 Kazan, 1997 - 218 p.

183. Shrbenko V. G. Culture of the Russian Black Sea region (60s of the XX century, February 1917): Diss. Candidate of History Sciences 07.00.02 - L., 1966 -375 p.

184. Hawks AE Cultural image of the provincial provincial town of the Central Chernozem region in the late XIX early XX centuries (Orel, Kursk; Voronezh): Diss. Candidate of History Sciences 07.00.02 - Orel, 1999 - 284 p.

185. Distribution of public charity institutions for orphans in rural areas in the Samara province by type of charitable activity at the beginning of 1914.1

186. Distribution of charitable institutions by type of activity Number of charitable institutions Number of children in charitable institutions

187. Shelters "with food and shelter" 3 66

188. Literacy shelters 2 68

189. Craft shelters 9,313

190. Houses of industriousness with handicraft sheets 6 148

191. Dormitories for students primary schools 2 46b. Institutions for children with. physical and mental disabilities 2 60

192. Compiled according to the book: "Collection of statistical data on institutions of closed charity for children, including orphans of the rural population." Pg., 1916. S. 1, 18-19.

193. The terrible year of the war resounded heavily on the outskirts of Russia

194. The undressed and hungry unfortunate people fled from their ruined shelter.

195. Don't leave him with your support.

196. Give him a feasible share of your harvest.

197. Know that every grain you give will satisfy the fierce hunger of your brothers who suffered for you and all great Russia. F.-36. Op. 1. D 1. L. 12.14.

198. Circular orders of the All-Russian Union of Cities to help sick and wounded soldiers (donation department) of October 24, 1916 and January 18, 1917.1

200. Starting to make Christmas gifts, the Main Committee of the All-Russian Union of Cities appeals to you with an appeal to help him complete this work for the joy of our army.

201. Let us not look at the difficult conditions of our inner life, we will deny ourselves much more, but let us please our army.

202. Donate to gifts for the army.”

204. Food prices in the Syzrap district of the Simbirsk province in 1914-1915 and in the Samara province in 1917.1

205. Name of the agricultural product (indicating the quantity) Prices for products (in kopecks) 1914 1915 1917

206. Rye (pood) 65-83 94-112 230

207. Oats (pood) 69-90 104-123 240

208. Captivated (pood) 89-99 117-138 326

209. Millet (pood) 68-91 109-141 265

210. Peas (pood) 87-98 124-154 300

211. Sunflower (pood) 104-143 161-203

212. Flaxseed (pood) 113-141 132-175

213. Potato (pood) 14-33 30-49

214. List of various collections of donations carried out by the Simbirsk branch of the Committee of the Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna for assistance to victims of military disasters during the First World War.

215. Cup collection from street sales (badges, flowers, tokens, etc.).

216. Street sale of open letters and charity stamps.

217. One day sale of newspapers.

218. Printing appeals for assistance in local bodies (on posters, in transport, etc.)

221. Books with receipts and coupons for collecting donations.

222. All-Russian plate collection in Orthodox churches and churches of other faiths.9. Sale of tokens.10. Circle collection.

223. Provision by entrepreneurs and cinema owners of one day of collection in favor of charitable institutions.

224. Arrangement of public spectacles and amusements.13. Truck collection on carts

225. Settlement of "the first bucket of grain of the forthcoming harvest."15. Collection of things.16. Collection of tobacco

226. Sale of art products.18. Lotteries.

227. Monthly percentage deductions from salaries.

228. Charitable collection from tram tickets

229. Interest deductions in clubs and public meetings for playing cards, skittles, etc.

230. Distribution of popular picture brochures.

231. Voluntary self-taxation.24. Collection "Cup of tea".

232. School picking of berries, mushrooms, flowers, which are then sold.

233. Falling student notebooks with drawings

234. Taxation of owners of own crews.

235. Taxation of bottles and glasses produced in factories

236. Sweet tax on candies and spices.

237. Collecting bread crumbs for stew

238. Compiled according to the source: GAUO. F.-36. Op. 1. D 1. L. 2-6.

239. Educational societies of the Samara and Simbirsk provinces (to the beginning of 1914).

240. Profile Company name Total number of general activities of companies number of companies by profile of activities

241. Samara Simbirsk Samara

242. Compiled according to the books: "Memorial book of the Samara province for 1915". Samara. 1915, pp. 75-84, 103-122, 134-135, 151, 168, 185-187; "Reference book and address calendar of the Simbirsk province for 1914". Simbirsk. 1914. S. 139-140.

243. The social orientation of the educational societies of the Samara and Simbirsk provinces (by the beginning of 1914).

244. Guber- Societies of the "closed" type of the Society, orienting their activities in the interests of the society of the Middle Volga provinces

245. Sa- 1. Provincial branch of the Russian 1. Samara Society of the Mars-Technical Society of People's Universities. 2. Samara branch of the Russian Samara Society for the Encouragement

246. Imperial musical rhenium education development. Society

247. Samara branch of the Council 3. Provincial and county poper-Russian Imperial theater about the people's tresral society.

248. Samara Society of Reasonable 4. Melekesskoe voluntary entertainment. fire society.

249. Z. Samara River Yacht Club. 5. Novouzensk Society

250. Samara Branch of the Russian Forestry Society of Horticulture Fans of the Empire7. Samara Photographic Society.

251. Melekes Society of Proper Hunting9, Society of Ryolovs of Buguruslan

252. Guber- Societies of the "closed" type of the Society, orienting their activities in the interests of the society of the Middle Volga provinces

253. P. Sim- 1. Simbirsk Family Pedagogical Society. 2 Society of Doctors in the City 2 Simbirsk Society of Rural

254. Simbirsk. economy

255. Simbirsk District Board - 3. Simbirsk Society of the Imperial Russian Distribution of the Commercial Society for Water Rescue. some knowledge.

256. Simbirsk branch of the Imperial

257. Simbirsk Society for the Protection of Animals

258. Simbirsk Society for Encouragement

259. Simbirsk photographic 7. Buinsk city free society. New Fire Society.

260. Provincial Scientific Archival 8. Karsun free city commission of some fire-fighting society.

261. Simbirsk hunting society.

262. Compiled from the books: "Memorial book of the Samara province for 1915". pp. 75-187; Reference book and address-calendar of the Snmbnr province for 1914. S. 140.

263. The work of summer kindergartens of the section of summer kindergartens UNU1913-191bgg.).

264. The work of the musical section of SONU (for the period of summer 1914-winter 1916) .1

265. Season Concerts Lectures Musical evenings Number of performances in hospitals Total

266. Summer November 16, 1914 to December 14, 18 and 30 18 221914- works of Bo- 1914 December spring homeland, Gleger, "Personality and 1915 Tom, Tchaikovsky's work of the year A. G. Rubinstein"

267. Spring 18 January 1915 according to - 22 241915 - works of P. I. Tchaikovsky; 1915 April 30, 1915 according to the year to the works of Russian composers.

268. Compiled according to sources: "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities". Samara, 1915. S. 10-12; "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities". Samara, 1916. S. 12-13.

269. Season Concerts Lectures Muses - Number of All-Scale Performances - Evenings of Lazarettes

270. Subjects of the lectures of the district lectures of the SONU (January-March 1915 and March-Trepe 1916).

271. Compiled according to sources: "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities". Samara, 1916, p. 12; Volga Day. 1916. No. 48. S. 3; No. 51, p. 3; No. 58, p. 3; No. 62, p. 3; No. 83. P. 3.

272. Work, departments of the section on scientific visual aids in 1913-19151

273. Period Department of Scientific Cinematography Department of Photographic Aids Museum Department

274. Number of screenings Number of screenings attended Number of slides given out Number of slides given out Number of excursions Number of exhibits given out September 1, 1913-September 1, 1914 62,11,981 30,934 September 141, 1914-September 1, 1915 54,9870 15,472 8 26

275. Compiled according to sources: "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities". Samara, 1915. S. 1-5; "Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities". Samara, 1916. S. 1-3.

276. Activities of reasonable entertainment societies in Samara in March-July 1914.1

277. Compiled by: GASO. F.-751. Op. 1. D. 5. L. 1-5.

278. Enlightenment societies and krhonki of the Samara province, which began work at the beginning of 1914 and during the First World War.

279. Profile Name of society Date Number of workers - creation of established societies

280. Music circle in January 19151. Samara pedagogical institute.

281. Profile Name of society Date Number of workers - creation of established societies

282. I. Enlightenment 1. Sports circle at the end of 1917 at the Pedagogical Institute. Societies, 2 Sports circle of students-acting EC Sidorov on the basis of a club organization 1.. Scientific 1. Samara provincial scientist April 24, 1914 4

283. Society archival commission.

286. Historical end of 1917 Society at the Samara Pedagogical Institute.

287. Compiled by: GASO. F.-177. Op 1. D 85. L. 12-13; F.-429. Op. 1. D. 3. L. 1; F.-518. Op. 1. D. 1. L. 2; Okhtovich A.G. Proceedings of the Samara Physics and Mathematics Circle.S. one; Scientific notes of the Samara University.S. 26; Volga day. 1916. No. 43. C. 3.

288. The social orientation of educational societies formed in the Samara province at the beginning of 1914 and during the First World War.

289. Closed "on-" Open "societies Societies and circles, organizations and circles and circles that became "closed", then switched to "open" activities

290. Samara 1. Society of sobriety 1. Society of reasonable provincial scientific (1915) entertainment (1914) archival commission 1914)

291. Samara Physical Society "People's 2. Samara Archaeological and Mathematical House" (1917) Society (1916) cue circle (1917)

292. Sports club

293. Pedagogical Middle Volga Literature (1916) Institute (1917) Union of Consumer Societies (1917)

294. Ietoriko fi- 4. Sports kruzhoklologicheskoe ob- E K Sidorovashchestvo at the Samarsas Pedagogical Institute.

295. Closed "societies and circles" Open "societies and circles Societies and circles that arose as "closed", then switched to "open" activities

296. Music circle at the Samara Pedagogical Institute (1918)

297. Distribution of the organs of the periodical press of the Samara and Simbirsk provinces according to the place of publication (in 1913 - early 1918) .3

298. Years Published in the provincial city Published in other settlements Total publications

299. Samara province Simbirskaya province Total Samara province Simbirskaya province Total1913 26 10 36 4 4 441914 26 10 36 5 2 7 431915 18 27 3 5 8 351916 20 8 28 1 1 2 301917 42 42 16 16 16 741918 65 18 83 83 15 14 29 112

300. The direction of the periodicals of the Samara and Sgshbirsk provinces in 1913-1918 and the dynamics of their numbers.

301. Orientation of periodicals Number of periodicals (by years)1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1 ) | 1 | 1 1 | | 1 1 |

302. General information 11 7 18 10 4 14 7 5 12 6 3 9 7 6 13 20 4 24

303. Economic 6 2 8 8 2 10 6 1 7 6 2 8 6 3 9 9 2 11

304. Literary and artistic 5 2 7 1 1 2 - 2 2 1 - 1 4 2 6 5 1 6

305. Educational 1 1 1 - 1 1 - 1 1 - 1

306. Socio-political 1 1 4 - 4 2 2 4 3 - 3 20 12 32 38 19 57

307. Medical 3 2 5 4 3 7 2 2 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 1

308. Religious 1 1 2 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 1 2 1 4 5 1 1

309. Other 2 2 2 - 2 2 - 2 2 1 3 5 1 6 7 5 12

310. Orientation of periodicals Number of periodicals (by years)1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1 I

311. Total editions Y 3 * Y AND 9 N 3 (Y Y Y * Y * 58 th a

312. The number of public libraries - reading rooms and points of public readings in the Samara province in 1913-1917.1

313. Year Number of libraries-reading rooms Number of reading rooms Number of public reading points

314. Statistical indicators changes in the attendance of the Aleksandrovskaya city public library and the library of the Samara Society of People's Universities in 1913-1916.3

315. Year Number of visitors to the Alexander Public Library Number of library visitors SONU1913 34124 and 1572 subscriptions 1914 36887 and 1900 subscriptions 19051915 5431916 31526 and 2287 subscriptions 1492

316. Compiled according to sources: SASO. F.-674. Op. 1. D. 7. L. 1-9; Volga day. 1916. No. 62. S. 3; Proceedings of the Samara Society of People's Universities. 1915. S. 3-9.

317. An open letter from Colonel A Prozorov to the Journal of Cinematography.1

318. An open letter to some y.g. cinematographers.

319. Finally, you laugh at the heroes, at our miracle heroes. After all, if Kryuchkov, a simple Cossack, saw his "feat", he would only be surprised at how simple and stupid his whole "work" is.

320. After all, this, GG, is sheer stiltedness, poverty, a mockery of the bright feat of people who lay down their lives for your well-being! Gentlemen, it's just not fair to play on this. But the worst is next.

322. Repertoire joint-stock company cinema factories AO. Drankov for the 1916 season!1. Movie name Genre 1. Alsace drama 1. Unkillable drama 1. Drama blood1. Omni-blooded drama

323. A monster with green eyes drama1. All the drama in the past

324. Resurrected legend historical

325. Alim, the Crimean historical robber1. Everything in life is drama

326. One who receives drams in the face. Clever comedy. Maria Evening Tragedy1. Revenge of the Handmaid Tragedy

327. Crime of Dr. Stokes drama

328. Vain beauty melodrama Daughter Nana melodrama1. Daughter of Anna Karenina drama1. Evil spirits drama1. The death of the fantasy world. Crime bohemia drama1. vampire horror

329. Compiled according to the magazine: "Art". 1916. No. 1. S. 24; No. 3. S. 22.

330. The percentage of films of various genres that were shown in the cinemas of Samara and Syzran in 1917.

331. Compiled according to the newspapers: "Syzran Courier". 1917. Nos. 1-6; Volga Day. 1917. No. KyZ-164.

332. Repertoire of the Samara electro-theater "Coliseum" in July 1917.11. Movie name Genre

333. English on the battlefield chronicle

334. One million dowry dram

335. Things of bygone days comedy

336. Exercise field near the front Chronicle

337. In the kingdom of oil and millions of drams1. The price of life cinema novel1. The Secret of the Drama Doll1. Demon of temptation comedy

338. Family life of a drama star

339. Will we live to see tomorrow vaudeville1. Dying roses melodrama1. hellish wedding drama

340. Rescue jitsu jitsu comedy

341. The Portuguese army is preparing a chronicle. The thieving groom comedy1. Mirage Heart Drama

342. Shurochka or Mipgurochka comedy

343. Noisy formidable judgment drama

344. Little rascal Italian comedy

345. Liberation of the city of Rua chronicle1. comedy

346. Compiled according to the newspaper: "Volga Day". 1917. Nos. 140-164.

347. Repertoire of the Samara city theater for January 1918 /

349. Gaudeamus Ya Andreev melodrama 1

350. Princess Din Shklyar fairy tale 14. Meshdrama novel 1

351. The sinking bell fairy tale 2

352. House of Kochergins - E Chirkov drama 3

353. Frost Red Nas fairy tale 1

354. Thunderstorm A Ostrovsky drama 2

355. Binstock's melodrama

356. Night of magical dreams Bogdanovsky fairy tale 1

357. Vasilisa Milentevna fairy tale 2

358. Drama 1 behind the monastery wall

359. Orca A Tolstoy melodrama 1

360. A woman with a past Sosnov comedy 1

361. Nailed Vinnichenko drama 216. Falcons and Ravens drama 2

362. Vova adapted Mirovich comedy 1

363. Compiled according to the source: RGALI. F.-2761. Op. 1. D 5. L. 10-13.

365. A well-tailored tailcoat comedy 221. A glass of water comedy 122 Keen comedy 223. Two Pro comedy 1

366. Puss in Boots Ш Feather fairy tale 225. King Ar Lasin comedy 2

367. Les A Ostrovsky comedy 127. Seventeen-year-old force 1

368. Repertoire of the Syzran Theater - Hermitage Garden for May 1916.1

370. Spring stream Kosorotov drama2. 5&mka drama3. The price of life. drama4. blood drama

371. Laughter, and only an evening of humor. Inspector N Gogol comedy7. Drama Cougar

372. Days of our life Ya Andreev drama9. Shgan fly farce10. Lullaby

373. Guilty without guilt comedy12 Woman and wine force13. The old man and the girl farce14. Bed Napoleon force15. Father 16. Happy day 17. Tenants 18. Don't be jealous

374. Insidiousness and love Schiller drama20. Windbreakers - Farce

375. Compiled according to the newspaper: "Syzran Courier". 1916. 72-117.

377. Autumn violins Surguchev drama

378. An evening of fleeting impressions an evening of humor

379. Big divertissement evening of humor

380. Repertoire of the Samara modern theater of miniatures "Otit" for October 19161

381. Date of show Title of performances of miniatures Genre of the song of the program October 11 1. The weapon of a man Comedy2 Call Musical performance

383. Humorous stories Evening of humor4. Please, I'll dress Farce

384. Compiled by: RGALI. F.-2492. Op. 3. D 157. L. 52-60.

385. Date of show Title of performances of miniatures Genre of the play of the program October 18 1. Youth Comedy

386. Lubok "Vanka Tanka" IIrzh3. Dance "Tremuguard" Dance4. Parrot and groom Operetta October 21 1. Palmist Comedy2. Russian songs Song3. Sailor dance Dance

387. Monkeys or girlish innocence Operetta October 22 1. Wrong place, or A&B. Songs Song3. Sailor dance Dance4. Theodore marries Operetta27 October 1.Oyster Comedy2. Lyric song. Song

388. Humorous story. An evening of humor4.Ki-ka-poo. Comedy5. Comic Duets Dance

389. Repertoire of the Syzran "New Theater of Miniatures" for September 1917. 1 show Name of the performance Genre 1. 1. Farewell party Drama2 Lena's pranks Comedy3. Siren Theater Operetta2. 1. King Foot Drama

390. For the Love of Art Comedy

391. Husbands-goats Muz. performance4. Wisdom tooth Operetta3. 1. Vanity-vanity 2. Cabaret divertissement Comedy4. 1. Refugee Reiba Drama

392. Meli Emelya your week Comedy3. The Groom and the Parrot Operetta5. 1. Page of the novel Drama2. Bear Comedy

393. Our Syzran servant Operetta6. 1. Amorous Drama2. Red bows Comedy

394. Love of Lovers Operetta7. 1. Passenger Drama

395. Vet's appointment Comedy3. Someone in Gray Operetta

396. Compiled according to the newspaper: "Syzran Courier". 1917. 140-162.

397. Exhibitions of fine arts, held on the territory of the Samara and Simbirsk provinces during the First World War.1

398. Compiled according to the book: Volodin V.I. From the history of the artistic life of the city of Samara. pp. 152-154.

399. Start date Title Place Quantity Quantity

400. March Exhibition Samara, 150 DD. Burlyuk, 1917 paintings Simbirsk LIMakhne1. DDBurvichlkzha and L.Imakhnevich

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