Everything about Obshchina totally explained
Obshchina (literally: "commune") were peasant communities, as opposed to individual farmsteads, or
khutors, in
Imperial Russia. The term derives from the word
obshchiy,
common. This institution was effectively destroyed by the
Stolypin agrarian reforms (1906–1914), the
Russian Revolution and subsequent
collectivization of the USSR.
Even after the
emancipation of the serfs in
1861, a peasant in his everyday work normally had little independence from obshchina, governed at the village level (
mir) by the full assembly of the community (
skhod). Among its duties were control and redistribution of the common land and forest (if such existed), levying recruits for military service, and imposing punishments for minor crimes. Obshchina was also held responsible for taxes underpaid by members, as well as for their crimes. This type of
shared
responsibility was known as
krugovaya poruka, although the exact meaning of this expression has changed over time.
The
nineteenth-century Russian philosophers attached signal importance to obshchina as a unique feature distinguishing Russia from other countries.
Alexander Herzen, for example, hailed this pre-
capitalist institution as a germ of the future
socialist society. His
Slavophile opponent
Aleksey Khomyakov regarded obshchina as symbolic of the spiritual unity and internal co-operation of Russian society and worked out a sophisticated "Philosophy of Obshchina" which he called
sobornost.
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