When The Russian Duma was called into existence, in 1906 by Tsar Nicholas II, only a small section of the Russian intelligentsia greeted the event as a fulfillment of its liberal aspirations, and as the beginning of a new era in Russia. The rest of the country was either indifferent, or fundamentally hostile to any compromise with the Crown, or else disappointed by the half-hearted nature of the reforms.
Diehard supporters of autocracy were unwilling to cooperate with any of these groups. Eleven years later, when the Duma was abolished, new, more important events claimed the attention of the scholar, and radically modified the way of life of all sections of the Russian people. As a result, the Duma was soon forgotten, and it passed on into history as a mere incident in the history of the Romanov autocracy.