*FrontMatter, pg. i*Introduction, pg. v*Contents, pg. xiii*I. The Imperial Administration and the Officials, pg. 3*II. The Zemstvo and Local Self-Govemment, pg. 27*III. The Imperial Duma, pg. 49*IV. The Reform of the Law Courts, pg. 67*V. Social Classes, pg. 92*VI. The Noblesse, pg. 99*VII. Landed Proprietors of the Old School, pg. 117*VIII. Proprietors of the Modern School, pg. 140*IX. The Landed Proprietors Since the Emancipation, pg. 160*X. The Towns and the Mercantile Classes, pg. 175*XI. Moscow and the Slavophils, pg. 194*XII. St. Petersburg and European Influence, pg. 218*XIII. Lord Novgorod the Great, pg. 238*XIV. A Peasant Family of the Old Type, pg. 253*XV. The Mir, or Village Community, pg. 266*XVI. The Serfs, pg. 288*XVII. The Emancipation of the Serfs, pg. 312*XVIII. The Emancipated Peasantry, pg. 338*XIX. The Village Priest, pg. 371*XX. Among the Heretics, pg. 392*XXI. The Dissenters, pg. 407*XXII. Church and State, pg. 428*XXIII. Revolutionary Nihilism and the Reaction, pg. 443*XXXV. Socialist Propaganda, Revolutionaiy Agitation, and Terrorism, pg. 464*XXV. Industrial Progress and the Proletariat, pg. 495
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