Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Catherine the Great
Episode Date: June 4, 2025Catherine the Great was one of the most influential rulers in Russian history, transforming the Russian Empire into a major European power through territorial expansion, internal reforms, and cultural... patronage. Her reign marked the pinnacle of Enlightened Absolutism in Russia, as she embraced Western philosophical ideals while consolidating autocratic rule. She modernized administration, promoted education and the arts, and extended Russia’s borders through diplomacy and military conquest. Yet, she was unlike every other Russian ruler in one important aspect…and it wasn’t the fact that she was a woman. Learn more about Catherine the Great and how she managed to change Russia on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. ***5th Anniversary Celebration RSVP*** Sponsors Newspapers.com Get 20% off your subscription to Newspapers.com Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Stitch Fix Go to stitchfix.com/everywhere to have a stylist help you look your best Tourist Office of Spain Plan your next adventure at Spain.info Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase and to view important disclosures. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Catherine the Great was one of the most influential rulers in Russian history,
transforming the Russian Empire into a major European power through territorial expansion,
internal reforms, and cultural patronage.
Her reign marked the pinnacle of enlightened absolutism in Russia as she embraced Western
philosophical ideas while consolidating autocratic rule.
Yet she was unlike every other Russian ruler in one important aspect, and it wasn't the fact
that she was a woman.
Learn more about Catherine the Great and how she managed.
to change Russia on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may
have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The woman known as Catherine the Great was born Zorn,
Zofi Federica Augusta von Anhalt-Zerps Dornberg on May 2nd 1729 in Stett in Prussia, which is now modern-day
Stetschen Poland.
And this tells you the first two things you need to know about Catherine the Great.
The first is that her name was not Catherine at birth, and the second is that she wasn't
Russian.
One of the most famous leaders in Russian history wasn't ethnically Russian, she was German.
Her father, Christian August of Anhalt Zerbst, was a Prussian general and a member of the petty German nobility.
Her mother, Johanna Elizabeth, of Holstein-Gatorp, was an ambitious and distantly related to the ruling houses of Europe,
which would prove instrumental in Sophie's path to power.
The young Sophie received an education typical of German nobility of her time, learning French,
which was the language of European diplomacy in the 18th century, as well as German and later Russian.
She was also instructed in dancing, music, and the social graces expected of aristocratic women.
However, what set Sophie apart was her intellectual curiosity and voracious appetite for reading,
particularly works of philosophy and political theory.
At the age of 14, Sophie was selected by the Russian leader, Empress Elizabeth,
to marry Grand Duke Peter of Holstein Gottrop, heir to the Russian throne, and the grandson of Peter the Great.
This invitation represented a calculated political move by Elizabeth, who sought to strengthen
Russia's ties with the German states while ensuring the succession remained within her family
line.
Upon arriving in Russia, Sophie demonstrated remarkable adaptability and political acumen that would
serve her throughout her life.
She immediately began learning the Russian language and customs, converted from Lutheranism
to the Russian Orthodox Church, and took the name Yachtaterina Alexievna.
The transformation was not merely ceremonial, but represented a genuine commitment to becoming
Russian rather than remaining a foreign princess.
She married Peter in 1745 and became the Grand Duchess Catherine.
Their marriage was fraught from the beginning.
Peter was emotionally unstable and immature, and the two quickly grew apart.
When Empress Elizabeth died in 1762, Peter ascended to the throne as Emperor Peter III.
Catherine, meanwhile, had spent almost 18 years as Grand Duchess cultivating support amongst
the military, political elite, and the Orthodox Church.
She also engaged in extensive self-education, reading works by Enlightenment philosophers
like Voltaire, Dieterot, and Montesquieu.
This intellectual development was crucial because it provided her with the theoretical framework
she would later use to justify and implement her reforms as Empress.
Catherine's ascension to the throne came through one of history's most successful palace coups.
When Peter III became emperor in January of 1762, his erratic behavior and pro-Prussian policies
quickly alienated the military, the nobility, and the Orthodox Church.
He withdrew Russia from the seven years' war, just as victory seemed within reach,
and returned conquered territories to Prussia, and planned to attack Denmark to reclaim his native Holstein.
Catherine recognized that Peter's reign threatened Russia's stability and her own survival.
Working with key conspirators, including her lover Grigory Orlov and his brothers,
she carefully orchestrated Peter's overthrow.
On July 9, 1762, while Peter was away from the capital,
Catherine appeared before the Ismolovsky Guards Regiment in St. Petersburg and proclaimed herself Empress.
As a side note, the official title of rulers of Russia at this time was Emperor or Emperor,
Empress, not Tsar or Zarina. The older term Tsar had officially been changed to Emperor in 1721 to make it align with other monarchs in Europe.
Although the term czar continued to be used informally until 1917 when the monarchy collapsed.
The coup succeeded because Catherine had spent years building relationships and demonstrating her commitment to Russian interests.
The military clergy and nobility saw her as a preferable alternative to the increasingly unscited.
stable Peter the 3rd. Peter abdicated, was arrested, and died a little more than a week later
under mysterious circumstances, possibly murdered, although Catherine publicly denied any part in his
death. On September 22nd, 1762, Catherine was crowned Empress of Russia as Catherine II,
despite not being of Russian blood or even a direct error.
Catherine's reign lasted 34 years, one of the longest in Russian history.
It's widely regarded as the golden age of the Russian Empire, marked by military expansion,
administrative reform, and a flourishing of the arts and enlightenment ideas.
Catherine saw herself as an enlightened despot and was heavily influenced by Western philosophers
with whom she corresponded with on a regular basis.
Catherine's most ambitious project was the creation of a new legal code for Russia.
In 1767, she convened the Legislative Commission, bringing together representatives
from various social classes to help draft comprehensive legal reforms.
Her instruction to this commission outlined principles drawn from Enlightenment philosophy,
emphasizing the rule of law, proportional punishment, and individual rights.
Though the commission ultimately failed to produce a completely new code,
the process itself was revolutionary for Russia.
For the first time in Russian history, representatives from merchants,
state peasants, and even some ethnic minority groups were given a voice in governance.
Catherine utilized the Commission's discussions to more effectively understand the empire's diverse needs and challenges.
She also restructured provincial administration through the provincial reform of 1775,
dividing the empire into 50 provinces of roughly equal size.
This reform created more efficient local government and established new institutions for education, public health, and social welfare.
The reform represented a significant step towards modern administrative practices,
helping to integrate Russia's vast territories under a single centralized control.
Catherine understood that Russia's development required not just political reform but cultural transformation.
She established Russia's first state schools for both boys and girls, founded the hermitage as a center for art and culture,
and supported the development of Russian literature and theater.
Her correspondence with Voltaire and other French philosophers brought enlightenment ideas directly into Russian intellectual life.
She established the Free Economic Society, Russia's first economic organization, and encouraged
agricultural innovation and manufacturing development.
Catherine also founded Russia's first medical schools and hospitals, recognizing that public health
was essential for national strength.
Catherine's military campaign significantly expanded Russian territory and influence.
Her two wars against the Ottoman Empire secured Russia's access to the Black Sea and established
Russian influence in the Balkans.
The annexation of Crimea in 1783 gave Russia control of this strategically crucial peninsula
and marked the beginning of Russian dominance in the Black Sea region.
These territorial gains were not mere military conquests, but represented careful strategic planning.
Catherine understood that Russia needed secure borders and access to warm water ports for economic development.
Her expansion southward towards the Black Sea opened up new trade routes and brought fertile agricultural land.
lands under Russian control.
Catherine also played a central role in the partitions of Poland, which led to the eventual
dissolution of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.
She initially installed her former lover, Stanislaw Poitatsky, as King of Poland in 1764,
expecting him to act as a compliant ally.
However, Poland's attempts at independence alarmed Catherine, who saw them as a threat to Russian influence.
In response, she supported conservative Polish nobles through the Confess
Federation of Targovica and used their resistance to reform as a pretext for military intervention.
In 1772, Russia, along with Prussia and Austria, carried out the first partition of Poland,
seizing large territories under the guise of maintaining stability.
After the 1794 uprising by Tadius Kuziosko, a hero in the American Revolution,
Catherine responded decisively. She crushed the rebellion and subsequently collaborated again with
Austria and Prussia in the second partition of Poland in 1793 and the third partition in
1975, which effectively erased Poland from the map for over a century.
As you can probably guess, at the core of Catherine's rule were some very serious contradictions.
Despite claiming to be an enlightened monarch expousing the values of the Enlightenment,
her actions often fell far short.
While she spoke eloquently about human rights and legal equality,
She simultaneously expanded serfdom and increased noble privileges at peasant expense.
The most serious challenge to Catherine's rule came from Emilien Pugachev's rebellion from 1773 to 1775,
which exposed the deep social tensions within Russian society.
Pugachev, a Cossack, claiming to be the deceased Peter III, led a massive uprising of serfs,
Cossacks, and ethnic minorities against imperial authority.
The rebellion scale and brutality shocked Catherine, which forced her to confront the contradictions
in her own reform program. While she was advocating for things like legal equality and human
dignity, her policies had actually made things worse for Russia's peasant majority.
The suppression of the rebellion required significant military effort and demonstrated that
the Enlightenment ideas alone could not resolve Russia's fundamental social problems.
Catherine's response to the Pugachev rebellion revealed the practical
limitations of her enlightened despotism. Rather than addressing the underlying causes of peasant
discontent, she chose to strengthen the nobility's control over serfs through the charter to the
nobility in 1785. This document formerly codified noble privileges while making surf conditions
even more restrictive. This decision reflected Catherine's understanding that her power
ultimately depended upon the support of the nobility and not the peasants. While she seemed to
genuinely believe in enlightened principles, at least in theory, she also recognized that
fully implementing them would threaten the social order that maintained her authority.
Catherine's personal life was as complex and carefully managed as her public policy.
Her marriage to Peter III had been loveless and politically arranged, but produced one
legitimate heir, her son Paul.
As Emperor Shee conducted several significant romantic relationships that also served political
purposes, which included at least one illegitimate daughter. Her most important relationships were
with Grigory Orlov, who helped engineer her rise to power, and later with Grigory Potemkin,
who became her closest advisor and partner in Southern expansion policies. Potemkin, in particular,
combined romantic partnership with genuine political collaboration, helping Catherine develop
and implement her most ambitious territorial administrative reforms. Catherine the Great died on November 17th,
1796 at the age of 67, due to complications from a stroke.
Her 42-year-old son became Emperor Paul I.
Paul had a very contentious relationship with his mother,
and she had kept him out of politics for most of his life,
which meant that when he ascended to the throne,
he was woefully unprepared.
He had a very short reign and spent much of it undoing the reforms made by his mother.
He was assassinated in 1801, and his son, Alexander,
had a hand in his murder.
Catherine's legacy is mixed.
On the one hand, she transformed Russia from a relatively backward European power
into a major international force capable of competing with established powers like
Austria, France, and Britain.
Her territorial expansion brought approximately 200,000 square miles under Russian control,
almost the size of France, and established Russia as the dominant power in both Eastern Europe
and the Black Sea.
Catherine's cultural and educational initiatives laid the foundation for Russia's 19th century
literary and artistic achievements. The school she established, the cultural institutions she founded,
and the intellectual climate she fostered, created conditions that would later produce figures
such as Alexander Pushkin, Leo Tolstoy, and Fyodor Dostoevsky.
On the other hand, her failure to address Serfdom's fundamental injustices also contributed to the social
tensions that would eventually accumulate in the 1917 revolution nearly a century later.
Her strengthening of noble privileges at the expense of peasants created social contradictions
that her successors would struggle unsuccessfully to resolve.
But ultimately, the story of Catherine the Great is that of a minor German princess
who went on to become the ruler of one of the largest countries in the world,
a country that she wasn't even a native of.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Oaken and Cameron Kiefer.
I have a special announcement.
July 1st will be the fifth anniversary of Everything Everywhere Daily.
And as such, I'm going to be hosting a small event on the evening of Saturday, July 19th.
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I realize this show is.
as a global audience and the vast majority of you will not be able to attend. However, if you're
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