Thus, the Czarist government relied heavily on imported engines and airframes from France and Britain.
In 1839-1841 the Czarist government expelled these communities to the newly-conquered South Caucasus, mainly to what is now Azerbaijan.
Following a more liberal approach by the Czarist government, freedoms such as the first magazine written by and for women was in seen in 1911.
Because its performances were in Hebrew and it dealt with issues of the Jewish people, it met with persecution by the Czarist government.
He was a gentle, unobtrusive creature and it was hard to believe that the Czarist government had really feared his revolutionary activities.
The leaflets listed continuing Russian occupation of the Caucasus and heavy taxes imposed by the Czarist government as main arguments for secession.
Due to the strict censorship of the Russian Czarist government, the activities of the library were suspended.
The Czarist government implemented programs that ensured the Jews remained isolated.
In the years between 1821 and 1872, the Russian Czarist government maintained a monopoly over the Apsheron peninsula's oil fields.
Other studies have been written on the censorship of the Czarist government in Russia in the nineteenth century.