登陆注册
15687700000300

第300章 CHAPTER XXXVIII(3)

To protect an open frontier against the incursions of nomadic tribes three methods are possible: the construction of a great wall, the establishment of a strong military cordon, and the permanent subjugation of the marauders. The first of these expedients, adopted by the Romans in Britain and by the Chinese on their northwestern frontier, is enormously expensive, and was utterly impossible in a country like Southern Russia, where there is no stone for building purposes; the second was constantly tried, and constantly found wanting; the third alone proved practicable and efficient. Though the Government has long since recognised that the acquisition of barren, thinly populated steppes is a burden rather than an advantage, it has been induced to go on making annexations for the purpose of self-defence, as well as for other reasons.

In consequence of this active part which the Government took in the extension of the territory, the process of political expansion sometimes got greatly ahead of the colonisation. After the Turkish wars and consequent annexations in the time of Catherine II., for example, a great part of Southern Russia was almost uninhabited, and the deficiency had to be corrected, as we have seen, by organised emigration. At the present day, in the Asiatic provinces, there are still immense tracts of unoccupied land, some of which are being gradually colonised.

If we turn now from the East to the West we shall find that the expansion in this direction was of an entirely different kind. The country lying to the westward of the early Russo-Slavonian settlements had a poor soil and a comparatively dense population, and consequently held out little inducement to emigration. Besides this, it was inhabited by warlike agricultural races, who were not only capable of defending their own territory, but even strongly disposed to make encroachments on their eastern neighbours.

Russian expansion to the westward was, therefore, not a spontaneous movement of the agricultural population, but the work of the Government, acting slowly and laboriously by means of diplomacy and military force; it had, however, a certain historical justification.

No sooner had Russia freed herself, in the fifteenth century, from the Tartar domination, than her political independence, and even her national existence, were threatened from the West. Her western neighbours, were like herself, animated with that tendency to national expansion which I have above described; and for a time it seemed doubtful who should ultimately possess the vast plains of Eastern Europe. The chief competitors were the Tsars of Moscow and the Kings of Poland, and the latter appeared to have the better chance. In close connection with Western Europe, they had been able to adopt many of the improvements which had recently been made in the art of war, and they already possessed the rich valley of the Dnieper. Once, with the help of the free Cossacks, they succeeded in overrunning the whole of Muscovy, and a son of the Polish king was elected Tsar in Moscow. By attempting to accomplish their purpose in a too hasty and reckless fashion, they raised a storm of religious and patriotic fanaticism, which very soon drove them out of their newly acquired possessions. The country remained, however, in a very precarious position, and its more intelligent rulers perceived plainly that, in order to carry on the struggle successfully, they must import something of that Western civilisation which gave such an advantage to their opponents.

Some steps had already been taken in that direction. In the year 1553 an English navigator, whilst seeking for a short route to China and India, had accidentally discovered the port of Archangel on the White Sea, and since that time the Tsars had kept up an intermittent diplomatic and commercial intercourse with England.

But this route was at all times tedious and dangerous, and during a great part of the year it was closed by the ice. In view of these difficulties the Tsars tried to import "cunning foreign artificers," by way of the Baltic; but their efforts were hampered by the Livonian Order, who at that time held the east coast, and who considered, like the Europeans on the coast of Africa at the present day, that the barbarous natives of the interior should not be supplied with arms and ammunition. All the other routes to the West traversed likewise the territory of rivals, who might at any time become avowed enemies. Under these circumstances the Tsars naturally desired to break through the barrier which hemmed them in, and the acquisition of the eastern coast of the Baltic became one of the chief objects of Russia's foreign policy.

After Poland, Russia's most formidable rival was Sweden. That power early acquired a large amount of territory to the east of the Baltic--including the mouths of the Neva, where St. Petersburg now stands--and long harboured ambitious schemes of further conquest.

In the troublous times when the Poles overran the Tsardom of Muscovy, she took advantage of the occasion to annex a considerable amount of territory, and her expansion in this direction went on in intermittent fashion until it was finally stopped by Peter the Great.

In comparison with these two rivals Russia was weak in all that regarded the art of war; but she had two immense advantages: she had a very large population, and a strong, stable Government that could concentrate the national forces for any definite purpose.

All that she required for success in the competition was an army on the European model. Peter the Great created such an army, and won the prize. After this the political disintegration of Poland proceeded rapidly, and when that unhappy country fell to pieces Russia naturally took for herself the lion's share of the spoil.

同类推荐
  • 摩诃止观贯义

    摩诃止观贯义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 摩诃止观辅行助览

    摩诃止观辅行助览

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 黄帝阴符经注

    黄帝阴符经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 六十种曲焚香记

    六十种曲焚香记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上清大洞真经

    上清大洞真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 风影拳师

    风影拳师

    一代魔修拳师再次启程!穿越又重生!?时局涌动,龙蛇杂起。历经沧桑的魔修又怎样凭借着来世记忆再创辉煌?他说;“凭君莫话封侯事,一将功成万骨枯”他说:“生活当中最令人反感的不是假仁义,而是人活着太无聊。”他还说;“很奇怪,令我反感的不是这个世界的丑陋,而是这个是所带的漂亮面具。”
  • 佛说维摩诘经

    佛说维摩诘经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 遇见我的傲慢网球王子

    遇见我的傲慢网球王子

    希望大家喜欢这个作品,不过他与原作的差异比较大。越前龙马这个傲慢的网球王子,当你遇到一个和你半斤八两的傲慢小女生时……一场网球赛事就此开幕。看好的读者请留下意见,我会改进(鞠躬ing)当然啦~~希望大家多多推荐o(∩_∩)o...
  • 良缘传奇

    良缘传奇

    极品宅男,自从校园的恋情失败后,便患上了婚姻恐惧症。为了躲避婚姻,和一在外务工的死党哥们蜗居五年。最终仍是没能逃过相亲的命运。而故事则从相亲开始拉开序幕…………
  • 求仙求仙,仙路三千

    求仙求仙,仙路三千

    当命尽时,练就一身的功夫没了,千锤百炼的历练没了,浩瀚渊博的学识没了,缠绕交织的记忆没了,五感失了,言语丧了,思想空了,不断苦苦追逐的一生,又能留下什么?在耳听为据眼见为凭的科学世代,一日市中心磁爆意外,留下东北百里无人辐射废墟,十年后,废墟里辐射不减反增,其中深埋的传说和秘密,将透过林宏几个高中生,以现代的眼光,重新看待,重新揭发史前人类对灵魂极端崇拜的生命观。…那些从废墟里头出来的,嘴里总幽幽唱唱一首古民谣:…三十担米,四石乘书,五路彩衣,牲礼无数,那路嚷着,“求仙求仙,仙路三千”……
  • 穿越时空的逗比杀手

    穿越时空的逗比杀手

    逗比杀手奇葩穿越,看姐姐我如何玩玄术,不是可以变武器吗,谁还要剑啊?拿把枪出来跟你斗如何?为什么?这还用问吗?因为我可以直接秒杀你啊!宫斗太无趣,不过你要玩姐姐我一定奉陪到底。这男的妖孽,是我喜欢的类型,我要定了。这个小正太我也喜欢。虾米?他是我失散多年的弟弟?作者,剧情要不要这么狗血,你够了!
  • 太上道祖

    太上道祖

    入世修行的形意拳少年宗师李小白一觉醒来发现这个世界变得不一样了,熟悉的高中传授的不再是单纯的文化知识,居然还有武道!而他暗恋了三年的大长腿校花是全校第一高手,打遍全校无敌手!绰号灭绝师太的年级主任竟然真的有倚天剑!于是曾经的少年宗师变成了修炼不出真气的学渣,这让李小白极度崩溃。不过李小白却发现在这个新的世界里,他家祖传的先天功居然有了用武之地……先天之后,天下无敌!我是道祖,不服来战!
  • 隔世化仙

    隔世化仙

    魔主打破空间结界,大举进攻人界。洛云生于这样的乱世,父亲战死沙场,母亲莫名失踪,尚在襁褓之中的洛云封印于沉渊谷。后世被救醒,发现丹田完全损毁不能修炼,随后得到神秘人的帮助,开始自己的成仙之路,这不平凡的旅途,他将会掀起怎样的波澜?
  • 换命

    换命

    花花草草,彼此相知和风暖火.你你我我,四目相望无言诉说.无意冷落,我不知所措承受寂寞,你一语不说.怨灵缠身,我失魂落魄.眉心紧锁,你不再沉默.为黑暗吞噬,是我命中注定的结果,求光明四溢,是你灵魂唤出的诸佛.无恩无惠,为何赠命予我?不怨不悔,只因一句承诺.沥尽万滴鲜血,写下生死一如的誓言;紧握一串菩提,牵起阴阳两岸的你我......
  • 复仇降临天使

    复仇降临天使

    【本书以完结,谢谢大家的支持喔!】黑暗的来临变成复仇天使的降临,她们睁开那血红的双眼。她们恨,把她们推下悬崖的爸爸。在无数的黑夜里,黑色的羽毛滑落,等待的是刺杀。复仇天使逼近学院,当遇到仇人的女儿时,遇到自己的真命天子时,她们该如何进行那黑暗中的复仇呢?