ARTICLE OF THE DAY

01/06/2026

The Revived Tsar

Pugachev's revolt

Pugachev, in the guise of a self-styled tsar, listens to the complaints of the peasants - Wikicommons

Emelyan Ivanovich Pugachev (in Russian: Емелья́н Ива́нович Пугачёв) (1740 – 1775), Italianized as Pugacioff, was a Cossack who, weary of the injustices suffered by peasants under the Tsarist Empire of Catherine II, led a massive popular uprising aimed at securing fairer conditions for Russia’s rural working masses.

A populist avant la lettre, Pugachev was born in the Don region into a family of small landowners. Possessing a free, rebellious, and strong-willed spirit, he was naturally drawn to a military career, as were most Cossacks, the elite cavalry corps of the Russian army. With the outbreak of the Seven Years’ War (1756–1763), he enlisted and served in the First Russo-Turkish War and subsequent campaigns in Prussia, eventually earning the rank of podporuchik (second lieutenant). Later, he was sent home due to a war injury and lived as a wanderer across the Russian steppes and among the monasteries of the “Old Believers,” occasionally imprisoned for being mistaken as a deserter. During this time, Pugachev became acutely aware of the peasants’ harsh living conditions and the oppressive systems imposed by the Tsarist regime and the Orthodox Church.

In 1773, Pugachev made a startling proclamation, claiming to be the resurrected Tsar Peter III (who had been murdered in 1762 by his wife, the reigning Empress Catherine “the Great”). He began recruiting his former comrades and the Cossacks of the Don and Volga regions, surrounding himself with an aura of mysticism and asserting his right to the Russian throne. In a short time, he attracted not only deserters and old supporters of the Tsar but also peasants and impoverished citizens yearning for a government more attuned to their needs. That same year, he even managed to capture the city of Kazan, expanding his control from the Volga to the Urals. Acting as Tsar and issuing decrees, Pugachev launched a full-scale rebellion against Catherine II, achieving several remarkable victories.

“From me, such rewards and honors shall come, in money, in bread, and in promotion [...]” he declared solemnly in his proclamations. But by 1775, he was captured, brought to Moscow, and publicly executed, beheaded and quartered as an enemy of the State.

The Pugachev Rebellion marked the first major conflict between Russia’s peasant masses and the Tsarist regime in pursuit of better living conditions, paving the way for the later Revolutions of 1905 and 1917.



Bibliography:

Alexander Pushkin, The History of Pugachev, Phoenix, 2001

Author:

Marco Locatelli, graduate in Historical Sciences at the University of Milan

Publication date:
01/06/2026
Translator:
Salvatore Ciccarello