- Source: Sergei Ivanovich Zarudny
Sergei Ivanovich Zarudny (Ukrainian: Сергій Іванович Зарудний, romanized: Serhiy Ivanovych Zarudnyi; Russian: Сергей Иванович Зарудный; March 29 [O.S. March 17], 1821 – December 30 [O.S. December 18], 1887 ) was a legal scholar, lawyer, senator, and privy councillor in the Russian Empire, mostly during the reign of Alexander II. He was a supporter of the emancipation reform of 1861, which freed serfs; and played a key role in writing the Russian Judicial Reform Act of 1864, which established an independent judiciary and extended the right to a trial by jury to all defendants.
He was born in the village of Kolodiazne in the Russian Empire (now in Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine), and died near Nice, France.
Sources
"Sergey Ivanovich Zarudny". State Administration in Russia, deduhova.ru/statesman/ (in Russian). Retrieved March 11, 2023. English translation of the above. "Butkov, notifying Zarudny of the subsequent highest gratitude for his efforts in drafting the [Emancipation] decree on February 19 [1861], added that he was 'especially pleased to hand over the highest resolution to Zarudny, as one of the most active participants in the work.' Zarudny valued the gold 'peasant' medal he received at that time above all other awards. ... The closest witness to Zarudny's works [on judicial reform], V.P. Butkov, handing over to him on November 22, 1864 the first copy of the just-printed judicial statutes, indicated in the inscriptions on it that 'the first copy should rightfully belong to Sergey Ivanovich, as the person to whom the new judicial reform in Russia owes its existence more than others.'"
Dzhanshiyev, Grigory Avetovich (1894). "Zarudny, Sergey Ivanovich". Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian). Vol. 12. pp. 309–312. Retrieved March 11, 2023 – via Wikisource. English translation of the above.
Rumyantsev, Vyacheslav Alekseevich (February 22, 2016). "Sergei Ivanovich Zarudny and Judicial reform in 1864". Journal of the National Academy of Legal Sciences of Ukraine (in Ukrainian) (1). Retrieved March 11, 2023. [English abstract, Ukrainian PDF]
Vernadsky, George (1969). "Chapter 10: The Russian Empire in the Second Half of the 19th Century". A History of Russia (6th rev. ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 221. ISBN 0-300-00247-5. Retrieved March 13, 2023 – via Google Books. Of no less significance was the judicial reform of 1864, of which Serge Zarudny was the chief promoter. Its basic points were the improvement of court procedure, introduction of the jury system and justices of the peace, and the organization of lawyers into a formal bar. The new courts proved equitable and efficient, and in this respect Russia could be compared favorably with the most progressive European countries. ... Most of the characteristics created by the reforms of Alexander II lasted until 1905, and some until 1917.
See also
Alexander Sergeyevich Zarudny (1863–1934) – Sergei's oldest son, a lawyer who defended clients in the trials by jury made possible by the 1864 judicial reform his father chiefly wrote; later a Minister of Justice during the [first] Russian Republic.
Emancipation reform of 1861
Judicial reform of Alexander II
Reform movement#Russia 1860s