Alexander I (1801-1825)
Catherine the Great’s beloved grandson came to power after the assassination of his father Paul I, a crime he more than likely knew about before it happened. The events that handed him the throne would haunt Alexander I for the rest of his life. Among non-Russians, this idealistic czar—whose reign provided the backdrop for Tolstoy’s epic “War and Peace”—is perhaps best remembered for his complex relationship with Napoleon Bonaparte. As a young man, Alexander greatly admired the dynamic French leader, but their relationship soon soured. By 1812 Napoleon’s massive continental army was poised to invade Russia. In what many consider his finest hour, Alexander rallied his people to the defense of the motherland and, with the fortuitous help of the brutal Russian winter,
turned back Napoleon’s army before it reached Moscow. The czar then took his troops on a ridiculously long victory march across Europe and arrived in Paris just in time to take part in the 1814 Treaty of Paris, which put Russia at the political center of Europe.
On the home front, Alexander had a far more complicated record. A reformer in the early part of his reign, he soon realized (like other leaders before and after him) that governing the unruly Russian empire was far easier to do with a strong fist. He began to renege on many of his more liberal policies and increasingly withdrew from public life until his death in November 1825. Even in death, the czar proved an enigma: Rumors swirled that he had faked his demise, secretly abdicated and scurried off to live the life of a religious hermit. To this day, many people claim that one of the Orthodox Church’s most famous saints was actually Alexander. This belief was strengthened when Soviet officials opened his grave in the early 20th century and—supposedly, at least—found an empty casket.