The Okhrana: How Tsarist Russia Invented the Surveillance State the KGB Inherited
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
They tell you the modern surveillance state began in Moscow in 1917 — that Lenin invented it, that the KGB built the entire thing from scratch. That's too small of a story.
The real surveillance state was built thirty-six years earlier, by a Russian son who watched his father die in the snow. He created an institution called the Okhrana — the Department for the Protection of Public Safety and Order — and operated it out of an ordinary-looking building on a canal in St. Petersburg called Fontanka 16. Over the next thirty-six years, his secret police invented every technique that would later define the Cheka, the NKVD, the KGB, the Stasi, and almost every modern intelligence service. Mail interception. Agent provocateurs. Police-controlled unions. Forged documents for narrative management. Double agents inside revolutionary movements who reported back to the state.
This isn't conspiracy. It isn't ideology. It's architecture — and the architecture survives the regime that built it.
In this video:
→ Why Alexander III's response to his father's assassination created the prototype for every modern police state
→ How the Okhrana intercepted the entire Russian mail system before wiretaps existed
→ The agent provocateur invention — and the moment the state realized infiltration was more powerful than arrest
→ Zubatovshchina: police-run unions, the original "controlled opposition" architecture
→ The two greatest double agents in the history of political infiltration — Yevno Azef and Roman Malinovsky
→ How the Bolsheviks studied the Okhrana files and built every Soviet intelligence service on the same blueprint
Subscribe to Hidden Forces in History for civilizational autopsies of the empires, institutions, and patterns shaping the world we live in now.
CHAPTERS:
00:00 The Surveillance State Begins With a Bomb
01:21 March 1881: Alexander III's Decision
02:43 Fontanka 16
03:35 Perlustration: The Mail Was the First Internet
06:08 The Invention of the Agent Provocateur
08:36 Zubatovshchina: When the Police Built the Unions
10:38 Bloody Sunday: The System Creates the Revolution
11:30 The Paris Office: From Surveillance to Narrative Management
13:12 Azef and Malinovsky: The Provocateur System at Scale
15:22 1917: The Bolsheviks Inherit the Blueprint
17:19 Same Playbook, Different Century