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Definition: Duma from The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide

In Russia, before 1917, an elected assembly that met four times following the short-lived 1905 revolution. With progressive demands the government could not accept, the Duma was largely powerless. After the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II, the Duma directed the formation of a provisional government.


duma

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(dō'mä), Russian name for a representative body, particularly applied to the Imperial Duma established as a result of the Russian Revolution of 1905. The parliamentary organization of 1906, largely the work of Count Witte , provided for a state council (an upper house, with some members appointed by the czar and others elected by the nobility, the zemstvos , the clergy, trade and industry, and the university faculties) and for the Duma (a lower house elected by a system of suffrage that was neither equal nor direct); no law was to be passed without the consent of the Duma. When Czar Nicholas II found that a majority of opposition candidates had been elected in 1906, he dissolved the Duma after 10 weeks. The second Duma (1907), even more hostile to the government, was also dissolved. The third Duma (1907–12) was the product of an electoral change that made it the tool of the government. It did, however, extend the peasants' rights and enact some labor laws. The fourth Duma (1912–17) had…
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Full text Article duma

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(dō'mä), Russian name for a representative body, particularly applied to the Imperial Duma established as a result of the Russian Revolution of 1905. The parliamentary organization of 1906, largely the work of Count Witte , provided for a state council (an upper house, with some members appointed by…
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Full text Article Duma

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Elected legislative body that, with the State Council, constituted the imperial Russian legislature (1906–17). It had only limited power to control spending and initiate legislation, and the four Dumas that convened (1906, 1907, 1907–12, 1912–17) rarely enjoyed the cooperation of the ministers or…
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Full text Article Dumas, Henry

From Encyclopedia of African-American Literature
(b. 1934–d. 1968) American poet, short story writer Henry Dumas's preteen years spent in his native state of Arkansas, combined with his experience of living in Harlem as a young adult, are key elements in his work as a writer. But more important to Dumas's legacy is the story of his tragic death at…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre

From Chambers Biographical Dictionary
known as Dumas fils 1824-95 French writer He was born in Paris, the illegitimate son of Alexandre Dumas , and at the age of 16, after a course of training at the Institution Goubaux and the Collège Bourbon, he joined the literary society to which his father belonged. "Dumas fils" began by writing…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Alexandre Dumas. Credit:Gramstorff Bros.
(born July 24, 1802, Villers-Cotterêts, Aisne, France—died Dec. 5, 1870, Puys, near Dieppe) French playwright and novelist. Dumas’s first success was as a writer of melodramatic plays, including Napoléon Bonaparte (1831) and Antony (1831). His immensely popular novels, set in colourful historical…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre

From Chambers Biographical Dictionary
in full Alexandre Dumas Davy de la Pailleterie known as Dumas père 1802-70 French novelist and playwright Dumas was born in Villers-Cotterêts, the son of General Alexandre Davy-Dumas and Marie Labouret, the daughter of a tavern keeper and landowner. He moved to Paris in 1823, working as a clerk and…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
French writer, known as Dumas père (the father). His popular historical romances were the reworked output of a ‘fiction-factory’ of collaborators. They include Les Trois Mousquetaires/The Three Musketeers (1844) and its sequels. He is best known for Le Comte de Monte Cristo/The Count of Monte Cristo…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre (Dumas père) (1802–70)

From The Oxford Companion to Theatre and Performance
French novelist and playwright, father of *Dumas fils . Of major *romantic French dramatists— *Hugo , *Vigny , *Musset , and Dumas père —it was only the last who possessed a genuine sense of theatre. He was hugely stimulated by the visit of the English actors under J. P. *Kemble and Edmund *Kean in…
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Full text Article Dumas, Alexandre (Dumas fils) (1824–95)

From The Oxford Companion to Theatre and Performance
French writer, illegitimate son of *Dumas père . Regarded as leader of the ‘ école du bon sens ’: writers with a firm moral tone about contemporary society, especially relations between the sexes. The son's first play, however, had more in common with the *romantic drama of his father, with its…
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Best known for his novels The Three Musketeers...
Alexandre Dumas (Davy de la Pailleterie), a prominent French novelist and playwright best remembered for his novels The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo , was born on July 24, 1802, in Villers-Cotterets, France, the son of Thomas Alexandre Dumas Davy de la Pailleterie, a general in…
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