UVAROV, SERGEY SEMYONOVICH°

UVAROV, SERGEY SEMYONOVICH°
UVAROV, SERGEY SEMYONOVICH° (1786–1855), minister of education in Russia (1833–49), and president of the Academy of Sciences. In 1846 he was granted the title of count. Uvarov originated the political slogan Pravoslaviye, Samoderzhaviye, Narodnost ("Orthodoxy (i.e., of the Eastern Church), Autocracy, Nationhood"), a slogan which was accepted by the Russian "Slavophiles," who adopted it as the catchword of their program. As the minister of education, along with his other duties, Uvarov concerned himself with Jewish education, considering it part of the Jewish problem in general. In a memorandum to Czar nicholas i , he noted that many governments who had tried for generations to solve the Jewish problem through persecution and coercion had finally abandoned these methods for an approach based on wielding   influence by reason. He concluded that it was incumbent upon the Russian government to adopt the latter method, and stated that nations could not be exterminated, especially a nation which during its modern history "stood at Mount Golgotha." The Jews were to be "reformed" and through education brought closer to the general population. In order to achieve this, Uvarov proposed the establishment of a network of Jewish government schools at various levels, in the pale of settlement , to be maintained by the special taxes paid by the Jews. In 1841 he invited max lilienthal to act as adviser and director of the program. Uvarov and Lilienthal planned to invite 200 teachers from abroad to assist them in their endeavors and also called upon Jewish scholars and intellectuals abroad (including I.M. Jost , L. Philippson , A. Geiger , I.N. Mannheimer , S.D. Luzzatto , and others) to come to Russia to participate in the fulfillment of the program. In 1842 a "Committee of Rabbis" (or "Committee for the Education of the Jews") was convened in order to give an official cachet to the project; its members were R. mendel schneersohn of Lubavich, R. Isaac b. Ḥayyim Volozhiner , Y.Y. Halperin, a banker of Berdichev, and bezalel stern , the director of the Jewish school in Odessa. In 1844 the bill providing for the establishment of Jewish government schools was ratified. With certain amendments which were made during the 1870s, it remained in force until the end of the czarist regime. Uvarov considered that the Talmud was the source of all evil, and a corrupting influence on the Jews, and he attempted to minimize this by reducing the hours given to its instruction. He did not entirely prohibit the study of the Talmud so as not to turn the Jews against his educational endeavors. Uvarov sought to gain the sympathy of moses montefiore and I.A. Cremieux , and although he invited them to attend the above conference they did not do so. In 1846 Montefiore visited Russia and met Uvarov. Uvarov was anxious to prove to Montefiore that he intended only to promote the welfare of the Jews and he complained to Montefiore about the religious fanaticism and ignorance of the Jews of Russia. Uvarov's attitude toward contemporary Hebrew literature was, however, favorable, and the maskilim in Russia welcomed his program. -BIBLIOGRAPHY: Dubnow, Hist Russ, index; Klausner, Sifrut, 2–4 (1952–532), Russian index in each volume; M.G. Morgulis, Voprosy yevreyskoy zhizni (1889); P.S. Marek, Ocherki po istorii prosveshcheniya yevreyev v Rosii (1909). (Baruch Shohetman)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

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  • Uvarov, Sergey (Semyonovich), Count — born Sept. 5, 1786, Moscow, Russia died Sept. 16, 1855, Moscow Russian administrator. Uvarov served as a diplomat (1806–10), head of the St. Petersburg educational district (1811–22), and deputy minister of education (1832) before being named… …   Universalium

  • Uvarov, Sergey Semyonovich, Count — ▪ Russian statesman (Graf) born Aug. 25 [Sept. 5, New Style], 1786, Moscow, Russia died Sept. 4 [Sept. 16], 1855, Moscow       Russian statesman and administrator, an influential minister of education during the reign of Tsar Nicholas I.… …   Universalium

  • Sergey — (as used in expressions) Bubka Sergey Diaghilev Sergey Pavlovich Eisenstein Sergey Mikhaylovich Kirov Sergey Mironovich Sergey Mironovich Kostrikov Korolyov Sergey Pavlovich Sergey Aleksandrovich Kusevitsky Obraztsov Sergey Vladimirovich… …   Universalium

  • Semyonovich — (as used in expressions) Tsvet Mikhail Semyonovich Uvarov Sergey Semyonovich Count Vygotsky Lev Semyonovich * * * …   Universalium

  • Russia — /rush euh/, n. 1. Also called Russian Empire. Russian, Rossiya. a former empire in E Europe and N and W Asia: overthrown by the Russian Revolution 1917. Cap.: St. Petersburg (1703 1917). 2. See Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. 3. See Russian… …   Universalium

  • Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality — ▪ Russian slogan Russian  Pravoslaviye, Samoderzhaviye, I Narodnost,         in Russian history, slogan created in 1832 by Count Sergey S. Uvarov (Uvarov, Sergey Semyonovich, Count), minister of education 1833–49, that came to represent the… …   Universalium

  • Nicholas I — 1. Saint ( Nicholas the Great ), died A.D. 867, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 858 867. 2. 1796 1855, czar of Russia 1825 55. * * * Russian Nikolay Pavlovich born July 6, 1796, Tsarkoye Selo, near St. Petersburg, Russia died March 2, 1855, St.… …   Universalium

  • count — count1 /kownt/, v.t. 1. to check over (the separate units or groups of a collection) one by one to determine the total number; add up; enumerate: He counted his tickets and found he had ten. 2. to reckon up; calculate; compute. 3. to list or name …   Universalium

  • Ουβάροφ, Σεργκέι Σεμιόνοβιτς — (Count Sergey Semyonovich Uvarov, 1786 – 1855). Ρώσος πολιτικός και συγγραφέας. Διετέλεσε αρχικά επιθεωρητής εκπαίδευσης στην περιφέρεια της Αγίας Πετρούπολης. Ήταν μέλος της λογοτεχνικής εταιρείας Αρζαμάς και, από το 1818 έως τον θάνατό του,… …   Dictionary of Greek

  • Военная галерея — Г. Чернецов, 1827 …   Википедия

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