「tsarist」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 82件
ordania considered any confrontation with the | Tsarist administration political suicide and Tseretel |
ions of the Russian Empire: the chiefs of the | Tsarist administrations passed their legal powers to |
ies provided by the powers to their erstwhile | Tsarist allies and to provide for the safe conduct of |
Russia: the | Tsarist and Soviet Legacy (1995) |
minated by Russian colonists in Tashkent made | Tsarist and Soviet rule appear identical. |
ing the World War I, he served in the Russian | Tsarist army in various NCO and officers' posts. |
lion (with the Russian Armenians) against the | tsarist army in the event of a Caucasus front opening |
lion (with the Russian Armenians) against the | tsarist army in the event of an Caucasus front openin |
sacks and worked as a fencing teacher for the | Tsarist army. |
cated in Kozelsk and showed resistance to the | tsarist army. |
On June 12, 1903, the | tsarist authorities passed an edict to bring all Arme |
In 1895 he was imprisoned by | Tsarist authorities in the Warsaw Citadel, and in 189 |
Arrested by the | tsarist authorities, he managed to escape from Kaunas |
e of opposition from the local Russophile and | tsarist authorities. |
an Empire, where he became a militant against | Tsarist autocracy and exchanged ideas with radical yo |
, a deep and growing dissatisfaction with the | tsarist autocracy, its resistance to reform, and hand |
akoff (Russian: Сергей Курнаков), is a former | tsarist cavalry officer who had immigrated to the U.S |
istributed books which had been banned by the | Tsarist censors. |
eir positions on the southern front, allowing | Tsarist Cossack forces to overrun the southern Ukrain |
Armenian opposition because it perceived the | tsarist edict as a threat to the Armenian national ex |
During the | Tsarist era, the Malachite Room served as not only a |
town joined the Red Army after serving in the | Tsarist forces when going back to Pishpek, fighting f |
le Eastern theatre of World War I as Russian ( | tsarist) forces were pulling out and the Caucasus Cam |
Their grandson was the | Tsarist General Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich of Ru |
amed after Mikhail Illarionovich Kutuzov, the | Tsarist General credited with saving Russia from defe |
south to the Caucasus, where he joined other | Tsarist generals. |
with their inefficient and corrupt | Tsarist government |
Her parents had been imprisoned under the | tsarist government for revolutionary involvements. |
The magazine was banned by the | tsarist government on the eve of the First World War, |
a Gazeta (1830-1831), which was banned by the | Tsarist government after information laid by Faddei B |
to clashes with radicals (like Lenin) and the | Tsarist government alike. |
The Russian | Tsarist government was a minor party to the Sykes-Pic |
ntinuing the war in the same fashion that the | Tsarist Government had, had little proof of this and |
ikhachev's proximity to the right wing of the | tsarist government, as well as his own considerable f |
Seyn 1862 - 1918 - A Political Biography of a | tsarist Imperialist as Administrator of Finland, Hels |
then abandoned by a Russian - symbolic of the | tsarist imposition of serfdom in Ukraine and refers t |
l struggle between various social groups, the | tsarist legal system, the stern life of a soldier dur |
oined many members of the Jewish community in | Tsarist Lithuania in migrating westward from Voronova |
Earlier a | Tsarist minister of foreign affairs reportedly had co |
ril 1918, which encouraged the destruction of | Tsarist monuments and the rapid production of Soviet- |
February 1931 during the big purge of former | tsarist officers in the Red Army. |
Elisabeth Dmitrieff was the daughter of a | Tsarist official . |
novo" after Konstantin Petrovich Von Kaufman, | tsarist official and Governor of Vilna. |
'monarchists' and desiring to restore the old | Tsarist order. |
In 1865, Morris Wartski, a refugee from the | Tsarist pogroms, who had established, first, a jewell |
The | tsarist regime wanted to replace the Muslim residents |
Korolenko was a strong critic of the | Tsarist regime and in his final years of the Bolshevi |
lution for which they fought to overthrow the | Tsarist regime would be a bourgeois democratic revolu |
After leading raids against the | Tsarist regime, Razin was captured and given amnesty |
nprepared army's failures mirror those of the | Tsarist regime. |
a policy of official anti-semitism under the | Tsarist regime. |
ible for preparing a general uprising against | Tsarist rule in order to reestablish Polish independe |
-1893) - Lithuanian inventor and memoirist in | Tsarist Russia |
The Great Game was played between | Tsarist Russia and Victorian Britain for supremacy in |
wever, following massive anti-Jewish riots in | Tsarist Russia in 1881, and a visit to Western Europe |
within the Pale of Settlement in westernmost | Tsarist Russia in 1905 and centers on the character o |
The interest of | Tsarist Russia and the western powers in the fate of |
lish language (partly banned or restricted in | Tsarist Russia) and the study of Polish history. |
ean Kingdoms Absolutist coalition, (including | Tsarist Russia), he stayed for three years, (1823-182 |
It attempted to obtain support from | Tsarist Russia, Republican China, and Japan. |
Mona May Ratner in Bessarabia, a province in | Tsarist Russia, on October 20, 1914. |
Increased antisemitic pogroms in | Tsarist Russia, starting in the early 1880s, led to a |
who chose to escape the political hegemony of | Tsarist Russia, of which Finland was only a semi-auto |
n Bessarabia, a Romanian speaking province of | Tsarist Russia, the son of an ethnic Jewish peddler. |
tates formed from the outskirts of the former | Tsarist Russia, mainly from the western provinces". |
Orthodox | Tsarist Russia, which was intolerant of Jews, suddenl |
he Dairyman), about a pious Jewish milkman in | Tsarist Russia, and the troubles he has with his six |
one of many nobles of German origin living in | Tsarist Russia. |
ped the Bolsheviks smuggle things to and from | Tsarist Russia. |
g of what became the January Uprising against | Tsarist Russia. |
The | Tsarist Russian Empire was dubbed the "prison of the |
ion of the Uprising, he was imprisoned by the | Tsarist Russian authorities. |
Under | Tsarist Russian surveillance, Dulatuli could not have |
er in Royal Polish ("Tyzenhauz"), Swedish and | Tsarist Russian ("Tизенгаyзен family") service. |
He commanded the 2nd Hussar Regiment of the | Tsarist Russian-German Legion and fought at Borodino. |
nts were short-lived due to harassment by the | Tsarist secret police. |
behest of extreme right-wing elements in the | Tsarist secret police who detested Stolypin because o |
Bogrov, and the suspected involvement of the | Tsarist Secret Police in Stolypin's assassination. |
bruary Revolution of 1917 which overthrew the | tsarist state. |
y the Chechens and Ingush; though it could be | Tsarist tactics during the wars of the 1800s or the c |
al Government would continue the war with the | Tsarist war aims. |
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