Milyutin graduated from
Moscow University and joined the Ministry of the Interior in 1835. A man of liberal views who sympathized with the
Slavophile cause, Milyutin helped reform the municipal administration in
St Petersburg,
Moscow, and
Odessa during the 1840s. As an Assistant Minister of Interior since 1859, he succeeded in defending his vision of ambitious liberal reforms against attacks by conservatives and disconcerted nobility. The
Emancipation Manifesto of 1861 was largely drafted by him. Up to the passage of the act, Milyutin had served as Adjunct of the Minister of the interior,
Sergey Lanskoy. However, Milyutin was distrusted by the Czar as "a restless and uncompromising reformer." After passage of this act, though, Milutin was dismissed from office. In regards to the Liberal Party, "As you know, the hopes of the party were dashed to the ground by the dismissal -- one might also say disgrace -- of Nicholas Milutine the day after the [Emancipation] Edict was published..." During the
January Uprising he was dispatched to
Poland in order to implement reforms there. He devised a program which involved the emancipation of the peasantry at the expense of the nationalist landowners and the expulsion of
Roman Catholic priests from schools. Over seven hundred thousand Polish peasants were granted
freehold land to farm as the result of Milyutin's reforms. A Russian university was established at
Warsaw, and all secondary school lessons were required to be given in
Russian, not
Polish. Finally, the property of the Catholic Church was confiscated and sold. Although Milyutin had previously opposed the "direct and outright
Russification" of Poland, according to one biographer, historian
W. Bruce Lincoln, Milyutin's reforms effectively "hastened the coming of stern Russification policies" in Poland. Milyutin resigned his office in December 1866, after having suffered a paralytic stroke, and spent the rest of his life in seclusion. He died on 26 January 1872 in Moscow. ==Cultural references==