Some of the insurgents quickly surrendered, particularly those who were content with the partial amnesty and reduction of sentences they received in the aftermath of an assassination attempt on Alexander II of Russia in April that year.
•
They were allowed to write letters to their families, but they were never delivered, as the delivery was stopped by a personal order from tsar Alexander II of Russia.
Siberia | Polish language | political science | political party | Political Science | political | Second Polish Republic | Warsaw Uprising | Political corruption | Polish Navy | Capital (political) | Polish Academy of Sciences | Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference | Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth | Polish people | November Uprising | political parties | Polish resistance movement in World War II | American Political Science Association | Solidarity (Polish trade union) | Political science | Polish American | January Uprising | Whig (British political party) | political economy | Polish United Workers' Party | Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth | Polish literature | political corruption | political correctness |