Iakov Ivanovich Rostovtsev (born Jan. 9, 1804, [Dec. 28, 1803, Old Style], St. Petersburg, Russia—died Feb. 18 [Feb. 6], 1860) was a leader in the formulation of the statutes emancipating the Russian serfs.
Rostovtsev was a career military man. He was a young officer at the time of the Decembrist uprising in 1825. After being invited by several Decembrist officers to participate in the plot, he informed Tsar Nicholas I of the intended rebellion without naming names.
During the 1840s and ’50s Rostovtsev held staff posts concerned with military education and the administration of the cadet corps. After the Russian government publicly announced in 1857 its intention to reform serfdom, General Rostovtsev was named to the secret committee to deliberate the means of reform. His report to the tsar was based on research and his foreign travels rather than on personal familiarity with the problems of the peasantry, but the report was carefully reasoned and caused him to be made chairman of the Editing Commission that would draft the preliminary statutes for emancipation. In this capacity he won the trust of Tsar Alexander II, who delegated broad responsibility to him. Rostovtsev led this group as it formulated the government’s new policy regarding the peasantry and was largely responsible for the emancipation statutes of Feb. 19, 1861, issued a year after his death. His own concept of the principles to be followed in the reforms was based on the notions of complete and immediate abolition of the landowner’s power over the serf, the administrative and judicial autonomy of peasant communes, and state aid to enable the freed peasants to purchase land allotments.
After his death Rostovtsev was succeeded as chairman of the commission by the conservative Prince V.N. Panin.