On the Organization of the All-Russian Inspection of the Governorates in 1800
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21638/spbu02.2021.104Abstract
The inspection of local government in 1800, the largest ever conducted in Russia, is very modestly presented in historiography. On the one hand, this is due to the predominance of a negative tradition in the study of the epoch of Paul I, despite the "new direction" laid down by M. V. Klochkov. On the other — the source base for studying the issue, formed in the work of A. E. Nolde. It was A. E. Nolde, followed by V. N. Bochkarev, had a decisive influence on the development of the historiography of the issue. In addition to the term "audit" a sustainable historiographical "values" include: limited funding, small number of participants in the inspection; uncertainty regarding the rights of senators; formal pattern of reports; the predominance of positive feedback in them, in order to avoid the consequences of "hot-tempered nature of the monarch"; perfunctory, and therefore "inconclusive" pattern of the inspection, not providing the materials "for any general reform or reorganization of any parts of management". One cannot agree with such interpretations of predecessors, with the definition of inspection the term "audit". The issue with the initiator of the inspection, the reasons for its conducting, the time, the content of instruction. All these problems require further studying the text of the instructions, which is a kind of key to their solution. Reassessment the biased assessments of the first and last all-Russian inspection of 1800 by extracting new information from traditional sources and introducing previously unknown archival materials into scientific circulation is an objective historiographical necessity.
Keywords:
Russian Empire at the turn of the 18th – 19th centuries, Paul I, Senate, local government, audit, inspection
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Articles of "Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. History" are open access distributed under the terms of the License Agreement with Saint Petersburg State University, which permits to the authors unrestricted distribution and self-archiving free of charge.