The major trouble that faced the Caucasus at the time of the Great Reforms tended to be that it was, and continues to be, one of the most culturally and linguistically varied geographic locations on earth. In a strict geographic sense the Caucasus is part of Asia; however, its cultural and historic ties are much closer to Europe. Until the Great Reforms, "The Caucasus had never been unified except as a geographic concept applied to the territory between the Black and Caspian Seas, bordered on the north where the inland sea of the steppe breaks against a mountain barrier on the south, rather more vaguely, by the plateau of what is now northern Iraq and Iran."1 For the region, as with the rest of Russia, perhaps the most important event that occurred during the Great Reforms was the abolition of serfdom. .
When Alexander II signed the fact of emancipation in 1861 he unwittingly set into motion what would eventually be a complete reorganization of Russia's power structure. Essentially, emancipation was what ultimately demanded the reforms that were to follow; institutions needed to be set into place that were capable of working these newly freed peasants into a productive society. The lands in the Caucasus remained under the control of landowners until the conclusion of the redemption bargain. After this, peasants made use of farmsteads and grounds for their duties; this was the permanent-obliging condition. Non-farming serfs in wealthy households became free but without any repayment; however after only two years they had to serve the owner or else pay a quitrent. Those who had been serf workers under the government were transferred to quitrent and were given the right of the repayment. State peasants in the Caucasus were considered personally free but had to pay a labor tax in order to preserve their rights to work. All of this reorganization of the peasantry eventually demanded a reorganization of the ruling class as well.
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